Hogarth Press Hogarth Press i(A38590 works by) (Organisation) assertion
Born: Established: 1917 Richmond, Surrey,
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England,
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United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,
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Phoenix Living Poets Chatto and Windus (publisher), Hogarth Press (publisher), series - publisher
1 Hogarth Fiction Hogarth Press (publisher), series - publisher
1 Gaslight Crime Hogarth Press (publisher), series - publisher
1 34 y separately published work icon The Scent of Eucalyptus Barbara Hanrahan , London : Chatto and Windus , 1973 Z521233 1973 single work novel (taught in 2 units)

'Barbara Hanrahan was both a writer and a visual artist, and this magical first novel is an autobiographical evocation of her childhood. A delicious blend of fantasy and realism, it is a powerful, lyrical story of a child's rites of passage through a world where the family home, its garden, and the three women who preside over it, area vital and compelling participants in the shaping of a child's rituals of discovery and awareness.' (UQP)

2 19 y separately published work icon Kewpie Doll Barbara Hanrahan , London : Chatto and Windus , 1984 Z416977 1984 single work novel
2 24 y separately published work icon Crossing the Gap : A Novelist's Essays Christopher Koch , London : Chatto and Windus , 1987 Z492986 1987 selected work essay criticism autobiography

'Essays discuss the author's native island of Tasmania, his experiences in London in the 1950s and California in the early 1960s, and his reflections on other writers, including F. Scott Fitzgerald and Carlos Castaneda'  (Publication summary)

6 257 y separately published work icon Such Is Life : Being Certain Extracts from the Diary of Tom Collins Tom Collins , 1897 (Manuscript version)8613172 8613167 1897 single work novel (taught in 2 units)

Such is Life: Being Certain Extracts from the Diary of Tom Collins. Joseph Furphy's title gives an indication of the complexity of the narrative that will unravel before a persistent reader. In chapter one, the narrator, Tom Collins, joins a group of bullockies to camp for the night a few miles from Runnymede Station. Their conversations reveal many of the issues that arise throughout the rest of the novel: the ownership of, or control of access to, pasture; ideas of providence, fate and superstition; and a concern for federation that flows into descriptions of the coming Australian in later chapters. Each of the characters provides a portrait of bush types that Furphy uses to measure the qualities of squatters and others against popular ideas of the 'gentleman'. Furphy's choice of a narrative structure to create a 'loosely federated' series of yarns is itself a critique of popular narratives populated by stock characters who are driven by action that leads to predictable and uncomplicated conclusions. Tom Collins, the unreliable narrator, adds further complications by claiming to 'read men like signboards' while all the time being unknowingly contradicted by circumstances that become obvious to the reader.

In each subsequent chapter Tom Collins leads the reader through a series of experiences chosen from his diaries. In chapter two, Collins meets the boundary rider Rory O'Halloran and his daughter, Mary, a symbol of the coming Australian whose devotion to her father will have tragic consequences in chapter five. There are many links between chapters like this one that remain invisible to Collins, despite his attempts to understand the 'controlling alternatives' that affect our lives. In chapter three Tom loses his clothes crossing the Murray River and spends the night wandering naked until he is able to steal a pair of pants after diverting attention by setting fire to a haystack. In chapter four Collins helps an ailing Warrigal Alf by deceiving several boundary riders who have impounded Alf's bullocks. In chapter five, among other yarns of lost children, Thompson completes the tragic tale of Mary O'Halloran, connecting with the events of chapter two. Chapters six and seven take Tom Collins back to Runnymede Station where he attempts to avoid an unwelcome union with Maud Beaudesart. He also meets the disfigured boundary rider, Nosey Alf, whose life story Furphy has threaded throughout the narrative, signs not perceived by Tom Collins. When Collins returns to Runnymede at the end of the novel, Furphy ties up more loose narrative threads, but Tom Collins, the narrator, remains oblivious to the end.

In short, Such Is Life 'reflects the preoccupations of [the 1890s]: contemporary capitalism, ardent Australian nationalism, the difficulties of pioneering pastoralism, and speculation about a future Australian civilization. It was instantly seen as a major example of the "radical nationalism" of the time and praised for its realistic representation of life on the frontier in the 1880s. But it was forty years before many readers realized that the novel was also a subtle comment on fiction itself and that within it were hidden stories that revealed a world of "romance" within its "realist" representation of life. Such Is Life can be read as the first experimental novel in Australian literature and the first Australian literary expression of a twentieth-century sensibility of the provisionality of life and reality.' (Julian Croft, 'Joseph Furphy.' in Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 230.)

1 y separately published work icon England, Half English Colin MacInnes , London : MacGibbon and Kee , 1961 Z1232994 1961 selected work essay
11 66 y separately published work icon The Middle Parts of Fortune : Somme and Ancre, 1916 Frederic Manning , 1929 single work novel war literature

'The drumming of the guns continued, with bursts of great intensity. It was as though a gale streamed overhead, piling up great waves of sound, and hurrying them onwards to crash in surf on the enemy entrenchments. The windless air about them, by its very stillness, made that unearthly music more terrible to hear.

'First published anonymously in 1929 because its language was considered far too frank for public circulation, The Middle Parts of Fortune was hailed by T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound, by Lawrence of Arabia and Ernest Hemingway, as an extraordinary novel. Its author was in fact Frederic Manning, an Australian writer who fought in the Battle of the Somme in 1916, and who told his story of men at war from the perspective of an ordinary soldier.' (Publication summary : Text Classics)

1 2 y separately published work icon All Day Saturday Colin MacInnes , London : MacGibbon and Kee , 1966 Z205020 1966 single work novel
3 2 y separately published work icon June in Her Spring Colin MacInnes , London : MacGibbon and Kee , 1952 Z204921 1952 single work novel
14 66 y separately published work icon The Mystery of a Hansom Cab Fergus Hume , Melbourne : Kemp and Boyce , 1886 Z156928 1886 single work novel (taught in 8 units)

'Set in the charming and deadly streets of Melbourne, this vivid and brilliantly plotted murder thriller tells the story of a crime committed by an unknown assassin. With its panoramic depiction of a bustling yet uneasy city, Hansom Cab has a central place in Australian literary history and, more importantly, it remains highly readable. ' (Publication summary)

3 14 y separately published work icon Madame Midas : A Realistic and Sensational Story of Australian Mining Life Fergus Hume , 1888 New York (City) : American Publishers , 1800-1899 Z104590 1888 single work novel crime
1 11 y separately published work icon The Road to Gundagai Graham McInnes , London : Hamish Hamilton , 1965 Z1020313 1965 single work autobiography This book deals mainly with McInnes's schooldays and culminates with his mother's permanent departure for England in 1930. It is both a sociological study of Melbourne in the 1920s and a vivid re-creation of the joys and fears, humiliations and enthusiasms of childhood. Particularly striking are his portraits of his mother and stepfather, and the intimate, detailed picture of the family's daily life in suburban Malvern.
4 61 y separately published work icon Harland's Half Acre David Malouf , London : Chatto and Windus Hogarth Press , 1984 Z81132 1984 single work novel (taught in 3 units)

'Born on a poor dairy farm in Queensland, Frank Harland's life is centred on his great artistic gift, his passionate love for his father and four brothers and his need to repossess, through a patch of land, his family's past. The story spans Frank's life; from before the First World War, through years as a swaggie in the Great Depression and Brisbane in the forties, to his retirement to a patch of Australian scrub where he at last takes possession of his dream. Solitude and society, possession and dispossession, the obsessive and often violent claims of family life and love, illuminate the imagination of the artist and the larger world of events. This is an ambitious novel, presented simply and poetically; the narrative is absorbing, full of incident, and peopled with characters of formidable humour and power.'

Source: Publisher's blurb (Vintage reprint).

1 1 y separately published work icon The Loveless Letters Rodney Pybus , London : Chatto and Windus Hogarth Press , 1981 Z531823 1981 selected work poetry
1 y separately published work icon The Sword and the Blossom Ray Parkin , London : Hogarth Press , 1968 Z1201042 1968 single work autobiography
1 y separately published work icon Into the Smother : A Journal of the Burma-Siam Railway Ray Parkin , London : Hogarth Press , 1963 Z865512 1963 single work autobiography
1 y separately published work icon Out of the Smoke : The Story of a Sail Ray Parkin , London : Hogarth Press , 1960 Z1201039 1960 single work autobiography
1 y separately published work icon A Room of One's Own (International) assertion Virginia Woolf , London : Hogarth Press , 1929 17261203 1929 single work prose
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