Mary Bradford Whiting (International) assertion Mary Bradford Whiting i(A123268 works by) (a.k.a. M. B. Whiting; Mary Bradford-Whiting)
Born: Established: 1864 Essex,
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England,
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United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,
; Died: Ceased: 1935
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon Peggy and Pat : A Tale of the Australian Bush Mary Bradford Whiting , London : Sheldon Press , 1931 Z1583433 1931 single work children's fiction children's Tells the story of two sisters, Peggy and Pat Meredith, who, along with their father, go to live in Australia with their step-brother Ulick on his cattle station.
1 1 y separately published work icon Josee : An Australian Story Mary Bradford Whiting , London : Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge , 1920-1929 Z1583406 1920-1929 single work children's fiction children's

Pam Macintyre (q.v.), in an article in the La Trobe Journal, discusses Josee extensively:

'Whiting's novel Josee: an Australian Story (1890) opens with an evocative picture of working-class, pluralist Melbourne on market night, a Melbourne she never visited...'

Macintyre quotes the novel:

Saturday night is market night all the world over, and in Melbourne, no less than in London, the poorer parts of the town are filled with an eager crowd, buying, selling, shouting, gazing and bargaining. Long sheds of corrugated iron line a wide open space, where people thronged and gas burners flared.

The groups of men, women and children standing around the sheds, were as varied in their appearance as the goods displayed for sale. Irish women with shawls over their heads and tongues that never ceased chattering for a moment; bronzed and bearded bushmen come in from the surrounding districts to make purchases; city waifs and strays, ragged and unkempt as any London street arabs and yellow-faced Chinamen in petticoats and pigtails gliding silently among the throng. (Whiting, 1890: 6)

Later in the article, Macintyre continues: 'In Josee, one of the few novels which depict the working class as other than distasteful, sensationalised background, Duncan, a rough but kind-hearted bushman, is taken reluctantly through the back alleys of Melbourne by a little waif, "down one of the narrowest streets that lead away from the market-place ... [the door] gave access to an uninviting network of dark rooms and passage." (Whiting, 1890: 10) In the dimly lit room, the little girl's mother is dying. Widowed and unable to get a job because of ill-health, she is destitute. She begs Duncan to take the child and her only money - £5. Whiting, revealing attitudes not characteristic of the period, presents this picture of poverty without judging or moralising. The reader is invited to see the woman as a victim of circumstance. Josee avoids the judgemental and voyeuristic tone that often accompanies descriptions of poverty in novels of the period. However, once the reader turns the corner, leaving behind the dank, dim alleys, a different Melbourne is apparent in the 'wide streets, beautiful shops and great public buildings. (Whiting, 1890: 6)'

1 Nora's Love Mary Bradford Whiting , 1908 single work children's fiction children's
1 y separately published work icon Denis O'Neil Mary Bradford Whiting , London : Richard Bentley , 1892 Z1650811 1892 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Wallaby Hill Mary Bradford Whiting , London : Religious Tract Society , 1890-1899 Z1586008 1890-1899 single work children's fiction children's Eliot Warren, 'a consumptive clerk in a London office', comes to Australia for his health and takes a position as a teacher at Wallaby Hill in country New South Wales. Here he encounters a station owner's wayward daughter, Ella Norton, and other characters of the town, who are either are antagonised or positively affected by Warren's religiously upright nature. Eventually Warren is fatally struck by Dick Challis, who is jealous of Warren's influence over Ella, the woman they both love. Challis repents, and undertakes to build a school in Warren's memory.
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