Issue Details: First known date: 2015... 2015 Thoughts from an Idle Hour
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Often, but not always, about books, writers and writing.'

Notes

  • AustLit content only indexed.

Contents

* Contents derived from the
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Australia,
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2015- version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Will the Real Mary Poppins Please Stand Up?, Tessa Wooldridge , single work criticism

Film adaptations of P. L. Travers' 1934 novel Mary Poppins offer particular interpretations of Travers' fictional character, but do they reflect the author's original manifestation of the erstwhile English nanny?

This blog post examines the inspiration behind the physical portrayal (drawn by Mary Shepard) of Travers' fictional character as well as the behaviours, characteristics and philosophies exhibited by Mary Poppins in the first of the six Mary Poppins story collections.

Note:

Sighted: 11/02/2019

Blending Biography with Family History: Brenda Niall’s Can You Hear the Sea?, Tessa Wooldridge , single work review
— Review of Can You Hear the Sea? My Grandmother's Story Brenda Niall , 2017 single work biography ;
Note:

Sighted: 11/02/2019

Nevermoor : Morality and Values in an Imagined World, Tessa Wooldridge , single work criticism

'Writers of fantasy fiction create not just characters and plots for their novels, they imagine whole new worlds. Worlds with unique geographies and climates; technologies and customs; and even, on occasion, languages ...

'In addition to these tangible elements, fantasy authors need to envision the moral framework that governs their created world and the values that underpin it. What principles will determine issues of right and wrong, of justice, of the exercise of power? Will their world operate within the boundaries of a belief system? Will myths and stories from the imagined world’s past (or from other, known worlds) influence the present?

'In Nevermoor: The Trials of Morrigan Crow, Jessica Townsend begins to reveal the world she has created for her debut series.'

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Sighted: 11/02/2019

Gordon's Story, Tessa Wooldridge , single work short story
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Sighted: 12/02/2019

Tanka: A Brief Introduction, Tessa Wooldridge , single work essay
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Sighted: 12/02/2019

Women, Beauty and Art in Kate Forsyth’s Beauty in Thorns, Tessa Wooldridge , single work criticism

'Kate Forsyth’s Beauty in Thorns begins with an exchange between two of the novel’s major characters – Georgiana (Georgie) Macdonald and the man she will later marry, Edward (Ned) Burne-Jones. Their conversation centres on the tale of Sleeping Beauty.

'The fairy story is key to Forsyth’s narrative. As the novel unfolds, Ned paints the beautiful princess over and over again. First, it is Georgie who poses as the sleeping beauty; then, Elizabeth (Lizzie) Siddal. Later still, Ned’s mistress Maria Zambaco plays the part; and, finally, his daughter Margot poses for Ned’s Briar Rose series.

'Women. Beauty. Art. Motifs that repeat in the novel like a William Morris wallpaper.'

Note:

Sighted: 12/02/2019

G. A. Henty and Australia, Tessa Wooldridge , single work criticism

English author, G. A. Henty, wrote over 90 books - largely of the 'boys-own-adventure' variety. His books were widely read throughout the Australian colonies and appeared in serialised form in many colonial newspapers, especially during the 1890s.

One of Henty's titles, A Final Reckoning, is set predominantly in colonial New South Wales. In this book, 'Henty uses localised colonial terms such as ‘squatter’, ‘ticket-of-leave’, ‘bushranger’, ‘native tracker’ and ‘black gin’. There is [also] a variation of the classic children’s ‘lost in the bush’ tale.'

Note:

Published in three parts. The link (above) goes to Part I. Part II here; Part III here.

Australian History Written for Australian Kids, Tessa Wooldridge , single work single work bibliography

An overview of books for children about Australian history, including standalone titles such as Australians All by Nadia Wheatley and The Big Book of Australian History by Peter Macinnis, as well as series fiction like Our Australian Girl , My Australian Story, and Meet.

Note:

Sighted: 12/02/2019

Rugby League-Themed Books for Children, Tessa Wooldridge , single work single work bibliography

An overview of Australian children's books (fiction, autobiography and biography) about rugby league. Most titles mentioned were published between 2010 and 2016.

Note:

Sighted: 12/02/2019

On Being Ruined by a Fondness for Beer, Tessa Wooldridge , single work biography

An overview of the life of Derwent Moultrie Coleridge (grandson of Samuel Taylor Coleridge).

Derwent Moultrie Coleridge migrated to South Australia in 1851 following a less than illustrious student career at both Oxford and Cambridge universities. He worked at various jobs in South Australia before joining the police force in Victoria and later took up teaching roles at Geelong Grammar School and Brighton Park School.

After a brief sojourn in England, Coleridge took up a position at St Mark’s Collegiate School in Sydney. During the 1860s and 1870s, some of Coleridge's poetry was published in colonial newspapers. (It was also during this period that his propensity for drunkenness saw him incarcerated in Darlinghurst Gaol.)

Coleridge tried his hand at acting in the 1870s, but his name appeared in newspapers more often for petty criminal offences than for his prowess on the stage. Coleridge died in December 1880 and is buried at Rookwood Cemetery.

Note:

Published in three parts. The link (above) goes to Part I. Part II here, Part III here.

On Aussie Rules-Themed Books for Children, Tessa Wooldridge , single work single work bibliography

An overview of Australian children's books (fiction and autobiography) about Australian Rules football. The overview covers titles published up to and including 2016.

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Sighted: 12/02/2019

On Autograph Books and Adam Lindsay Gordon, Tessa Wooldridge , single work column

An extract from Adam Lindsay Gordon’s ‘Ye Wearie Wayfarer’ appeared regularly in the autograph books of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Australian children. The often quoted extract was:

'Life is mostly froth and bubble,
Two things stand like stone,
Kindness in another’s trouble,
Courage in your own.'

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Sighted: 12/02/2019

On Childhood Reading, Tessa Wooldridge , single work autobiography

Wooldridge recalls her childhood reading habits. She remembers, in particular, her fondness for Robert Louis Stevenson’s A Child’s Garden of Verses.

Note:

Sighted: 12/02/2019

On Memorising Poetry, Tessa Wooldridge , single work column

In her 2015 Ray Mathew Lecture, novelist and essayist Andrea Goldsmith refers to W. H. Auden’s poem, ‘Musée des Beaux Arts’. The poem entered Goldsmith’s consciousness ‘in the very early days of the novel that would become, Reunion’ and she decided, ‘for reasons unrelated to the nascent work’, to memorise Auden’s poem. Once she had memorised it, she ‘would lie awake at night, silently reciting it over and over, thereby thwarting other more disturbing and anarchic thoughts’.

It was not until long after Goldsmith had finished Reunion that she became aware of the way Auden’s poem had ‘fed into’ her novel—the main characters of her narrative, a quartet of friends, had each turned away ‘quite leisurely’ from the various disasters of their lives.

This column reflects on Goldsmith's experience and the now, largely out-of-fashion, practice of memorising poetry.

(Note: the quotes above are from Goldsmith's lecture. The lecture, 'Private Passions, Public Exposure', is available on the website of the National Library of Australia.)

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Sighted: 12/02/2019

Words for Winter—Australian Children’s Books, Tessa Wooldridge , single work single work bibliography
A 'collection of Australian titles about, or set in, winter. There are picture books, junior fiction titles, books for readers in early adolescence, and poems'. Includes a brief plot summary of the listed books.
Note: Posted: 04/08/2019
Bushfire Books for Children, Tessa Wooldridge , single work bibliography

'Australian authors of children’s books have written about bushfires for many years, but particularly in the decade following the 2009 Black Saturday fires in Victoria. These  books provide a way to open conversations with children who have been affected by the fires.

'This short bibliography provides 'a selection of some of those books about bushfires. The selection is separated into two categories—picture books and junior fiction—with the most recent publications listed first.'

Note: Posted: 02/02/2020
Not a Normal Summer, Tessa Wooldridge , single work short story
Note: Posted: 14/01/2020
A Name and a Voice for the Drover’s Wife, Tessa Wooldridge , single work column

'Leah Purcell’s novel The Drover’s Wife: The Legend of Molly Johnson takes Henry Lawson’s 1892 short story of the same name and infuses it with female wisdom and understanding.

'A story originally set in a parched and lifeless terrain is relocated to the fertile country of the Ngarigo people—the high country of the Snowy Mountains. And the ubiquitous ‘wife’ who features in Lawson’s story is, in Purcell’s reimagining, granted a name and a voice and a properly fleshed-out life.'

This column focuses on the significance of names and storytelling in Purcell's novel.

Note: Posted: 20/03/2020
Children’s Librarians—Igniting the Reading Spark, Tessa Wooldridge , single work biography

This article draws parallels between the career of Bendigo Children's Librarian Miss Euphemia (Pheme) Tanner and the life of Salley Vickers' fictional children's librarian Miss Syliva Blackwell from the 2018 novel The Librarian.

Pheme Tanner was the Children's Librarian at the Bendigo Library from 1946 to 1979. During that time, she encouraged children not only to visit the library for borrowing purposes, but also to contribute to the library's functioning by working there on Saturday mornings. The column's author, Tessa Wooldridge, was among those who took up that opportunity.

More Australian History for Australian Kids … This Time from an Indigenous Perspective, Tessa Wooldridge , single work bibliography
A selection of books for children and young people, written and/or illustrated by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander creators, about Australian history. Titles include Bronwyn Bancroft's Coming Home to CountryBruce Pascoe's Young Dark EmuSally Morgan's Sister Heart, and Anita Heiss's Who Am I? : The Diary of Mary Talence : Sydney, 1937.

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Last amended 3 Feb 2020 08:07:16
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