George McIver George McIver i(A44453 works by) (a.k.a. G. McIver)
Born: Established: 1859
c
Scotland,
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c
United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,
;
Gender: Male
Arrived in Australia: 1861
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Works By

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1 The Torpedoing of the 'Sussex' i "In London the snow was heavily falling -", George McIver , 1943 single work poetry war literature
— Appears in: The Bunyip and Other Verses 1943; (p. 57-62)
1 The Glengower Massacre i "'Twas somewhere in eighteen-thirty and seven,", George McIver , 1943 single work poetry
— Appears in: The Bunyip and Other Verses 1943; (p. 55-56)
1 The Great War : Finale i "The stars of America are proudly waving -", George McIver , 1943 single work poetry war literature
— Appears in: The Bunyip and Other Verses 1943; (p. 41-42)
1 The Anzacs i "Ye Anzacs of the Aegean Sea", George McIver , 1943 single work poetry war literature
— Appears in: The Bunyip and Other Verses 1943; (p. 30-31)
1 y separately published work icon The Bunyip and Other Verses George McIver , Sydney : Land Newspaper , 1943 Z942431 1943 selected work poetry
1 5 y separately published work icon A Drover's Odyssey George McIver , Sydney : Angus and Robertson , 1935 Z1017836 1935 single work autobiography travel
2 Those Brave Australians i "They came from a far-off southern land,", George McIver , 1915 single work poetry war literature
— Appears in: The Sydney Mail , 23 June 1915; (p. 42)

— Appears in: The Bunyip and Other Verses 1943; (p. 36)
1 5 y separately published work icon Neuroomia : A New Continent : A Manuscript Delivered by the Deep George McIver , Melbourne : George Robertson , 1894 Z942426 1894 single work novel adventure science fiction This work is described by Miller as a 'Utopian study of life on an imaginary South Polar continent, unexpectedly found by a whaler who set out from Hobart in 1889'. In Strange Constellations: A History of Australian Science Fiction, editors Blackford, Ikin and McMullen describe the society in this novel as 'a utopia based upon wishful thinking rather than any specific prescription for sociopolitical reform' (20) and conclude that 'Neuroomia pictures the heady joys of utopia without troubling to outline the sweaty toil needed to attain them' (22)
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