J. P. McKinney J. P. McKinney i(A355 works by) (a.k.a. Jack P. McKinney; John Phillip McKinney)
Born: Established: 1891 Numurkah, Numurkah area, Yarrawonga - Cobram - Nathalia area, Northern Victoria, Victoria, ; Died: Ceased: 6 Dec 1966 Greenslopes, Greenslopes - Coorparoo area, Brisbane - South & South West, Brisbane, Queensland,
Gender: Male
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BiographyHistory

Jack McKinney was educated at Scotch College, Melbourne, Victoria. He served for four years with the A.I.F. and his novel, Crucible, draws on his experiences in France. Returning to Australia, McKinney worked variously as a jackeroo, boundary-rider, reporter, miner, drover and Queensland farmer. In the early stages of his literary career, McKinney wrote poems and short stories. Following an illness, he began contributing to philosophic journals and also wrote The Challenge of Reason (1950) and The Structure of Modern Thought (1971). Towards the end of his life McKinney began writing plays, many of which appear only in manuscript, including 'Change of Lodgings: A Comedy' [19..], 'Moment of Truth' [19..], 'No Man is an Island' [19..], 'No Pauper was I' [19..] and 'The Shadows We Cast' [19..]. A number of these are held by the Fryer Library, University of Queensland.

McKinney lived for many years at Tamborine Mountain with the poet, Judith Wright, whom he married in 1962. He is the father of Meredith McKinney.

(Major source: Other Banners, 1971).

Most Referenced Works

Notes

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Crucible : An Australian First World War Novel Sydney : Angus and Robertson , 1935 Z192045 1935 single work novel war literature

'Insightful, humorous and confronting, “Crucible” is a delicate portrait of the thoughts and emotions of a young man experiencing a brutal and bewildering war. This prize-winning Australian novel of the First World War recounts the coming of age of a sensitive young Australian soldier on the Western Front. McKinney, whose portrait appears on the book’s cover, fought in France from 1915 to1918 with the First Anzac Cyclist Battalion, and much of the novel is loosely based on his own wartime experiences. It takes the reader to the trenches and their horrors, as well as to life behind the lines in occupied France. The camaraderie, intense friendships and occasional tensions among the Diggers who lived and died together in France is vividly portrayed, and young John Fairbairn finds himself faced with the painful dilemmas of love and betrayal that war so often brings in its train. “Crucible” broke new ground in its use of a narrative technique that slips between traditional third person narration and the immediacy of a sometimes fragmented and intense inner voice. It won the RSL Prize for an Australian War Novel in 1935, the year it was published.' (Publication summary)

1935 winner Returned Soldiers League Prize for Australian War Novel Awarded under an earlier working title, 'Over the Top'.

Known archival holdings

National Library of Australia (ACT)
Last amended 21 Jan 2014 17:44:08
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