Ingram Morgan Ingram Morgan i(A43447 works by) (a.k.a. Captain Ingram Morgan)
Writing name for: Ronald Campbell
Gender: Male
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1 Test Flight Ingram Morgan , 1950-1955 single work children's fiction children's
— Appears in: Cole's Great Boys' Book No. 2 1950-1955; (p. 105-115)
'Mr. William Flint, of the Albatross Air Transport company, reckoned he was the toughest man in the business - until he took a test flight ... with the wrong pilot ... in a cyclone...!' (Note below title)
1 The Mystery of Hurricane Island Ingram Morgan , 1950 single work children's fiction children's adventure
— Appears in: Cole's Great Girls' Book 1950; (p. 158-192)
Kay follows her dream to trace her father using his last known address in the South Seas, but con men who live on the island are intent on claiming her inheritance.
1 Corpus Delicti Ingram Morgan , 1948 single work short story crime thriller mystery detective
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 1 June vol. 83 no. 987 1948; (p. 489-502) Australian Journal Suspense Stories , no. 1 1950-1959; (p. 45-64)
1 Crater Ingram Morgan , 1939 single work short story adventure
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 1 December vol. 75 no. 885 1939; (p. 1560-1563, 1608-1623)
1 Forlorn Island Ingram Morgan , 1939 single work short story adventure
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 1 May vol. 75 no. 878 1939; (p. 568-575)
1 Eureka Stockade : A Tale of Ballarat in the 'Fifties Ingram Morgan , 1938 single work short story historical fiction
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 1 December vol. 74 no. 873 1938; (p. 1622-1630)
1 At Marsden's Bore Ingram Morgan , 1938 single work short story
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , October vol. 74 no. 871 1938; (p. 1307-1311)
1 The Man in the Taxi Ingram Morgan , 1938 single work short story crime
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 1 September vol. 74 no. 870 1938; (p. 1157-1159)
1 Watchman, What of the Night? Ingram Morgan , 1938 single work short story crime
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 1 August vol. 74 no. 869 1938; (p. 1032-1039)
1 Decoy Duck Ingram Morgan , 1938 single work short story crime
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 1 June vol. 74 no. 867 1938; (p. 736-743)
1 Calling All Ships Ingram Morgan , 1938 single work short story adventure
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 2 May vol. 74 no. 866 1938; (p. 576-583, 604-605)
1 But If We Dead Awaken Ingram Morgan , 1938 single work short story
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 1 March vol. 74 no. 864 1938; (p. 285-287,295)
1 Gold Eagles at San Pedro Cay Ingram Morgan , 1938 single work short story adventure romance
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 1 February vol. 74 no. 863 1938; (p. 148-151, 226-239)
1 Perilous Isle Ingram Morgan , 1937 single work novel adventure romance

'Shortly after returning home to Scotland after the War, Ian Douglas abandons his wife and three-year-old daughter, Kay, and giving no reason, goes off to the South Seas. On the death of Mrs Douglas, her brother, Robert Gilchrist, receives a letter from the absent man, giving his address as Tuala Lopa, an island in the Central Pacific. Gilchrist, who considers his brother-in-law to be a scoundrel and wife-deserter, does not reply, even though, before he went, Douglas left a large sum of money in trust for his daughter, to be hers when she is twenty-one.

Attaining her majority, Kay writes to her father, care of the post-master at the island, where he had last been heard of. Now there are only two white men living there - Tate, an unscrupulous trader, and Robert Clay, an American.

Kay's letter falls into Tate's hands, and, with the connivance of Captain Kaufman, master of the brigantine Sapphic, he decides to impersonate the girl's father, with a view to obtaining possession of the money. He writes a letter purporting to be from Ian Douglas, asking her to join him at Tuala Lopa.

On the last stage of the journey she travels on Kaufman's brigantine, meeting the mate, a New Zealander named Riley. Riley, distrusting both Kaufman and Tate, suspects them of some evil design, but cannot make out what it is.

When the brigantine enters the harbour of Tuala Lopa Tate meets Kay, but while they are talking the vessel is boarded by a planter named Ross, from the neighbouring island of Vena, who acuses Kaufman of dropping opium overboard for someone on Vena to pick up. Tate draws Kay aside so that she cannot hear the argument.

When the Sapphic sails that evening, leaving her on Tuala Lopa, the girl feels a little lonely and uneasy. The departure of the brigantine had severed her last link with the world.' (Publisher's abstract)

1 Southern Lights Ingram Morgan , L. Gladstone McPherson (illustrator), 1937 single work short story adventure romance
— Appears in: The Australian Journal , 2 August vol. 73 no. 857 1937; (p. 1055-1063, 1070-1071)
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