Cino Del Duca Cino Del Duca i(A102974 works by) (Organisation) assertion
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4 y separately published work icon A Mischief Past Estelle Thompson , ( trans. Unknown with title Ironia del Passato ) Milan : Cino Del Duca , 1973 Z1438972 1971 single work novel crime detective
1 y separately published work icon Club della donna Cino Del Duca (publisher), Milan : Cino Del Duca , 1968 Z1800399 1968 series - publisher novel
4 1 y separately published work icon Dust in the Sunlight Catherine Gaskin , ( trans. Unknown with title Polvere nel sole ) Milan : Cino Del Duca , 1968 Z1119039 1950 single work novel
5 1 y separately published work icon With Every Year Catherine Gaskin , ( trans. Unknown with title Anno Dopo Anno ) Milan : Cino Del Duca , 1968 Z1053678 1947 single work novel historical fiction
6 y separately published work icon Edge of Glass Catherine Gaskin , ( trans. Unknown with title Un soffio di cristallo : romanzo ) Milan : Cino Del Duca , 1968 Z1049086 1967 single work novel
5 y separately published work icon Daughter of the House Catherine Gaskin , ( trans. Unknown with title Tutto il resto e amore ) Milan : Cino Del Duca , 1967 Z337327 1952 single work novel
15 17 y separately published work icon The Shiralee D'Arcy Niland , ( trans. Sergio Monteverde with title Il fardello : romanzo ) Milan : Cino Del Duca , 1957 Z248011 1955 single work novel
— Appears in: Reader's Digest Condensed Books 1973;
'Probably no swagman, in life or in fiction, ever had such a strange companion on his wanderings as has Macauley, the central character in D'Arcy Niland's first novel, who tramps through the back towns of New South Wales accompanied by his daughter Buster. Buster, four-year-old bundle of loyalty and fortitude, combines these more adult qualities with a natural childishness...Buster is no joy to Macauley, and he treats her with an uncompromising firmness: she must go on walking when she is nearly exhausted, must stop chattering when he wants to be quiet, must not complain. But Macauley has, too, a certain grudging affection for her, and this affection develops until it is so threatened by circumstances that it must at last be openly admitted.' (Source: dustjacket, 1955 Angus and Robertson edition)
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