Claremont Claremont i(A69728 works by) (Organisation) assertion (a.k.a. Claremont Book)
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1 Australian Classics (Claremont) Claremont , series - publisher
2 y separately published work icon Gasp! Zapt! Splat! : The Explosive, Breathtaking & Electrifying Adventures of a Mad Fish on the Loose Terry Denton , Terry Denton (illustrator), Camberwell : Claremont , 2003 Z1322540 2003 selected work picture book children's humour 'Explosive, breathtaking & electrifying adventures of A mad fish on the loose.'
1 y separately published work icon The Many Adventures of Singenpoo : All Four Stories in One Paul Jennings , Ringwood : Claremont , 2002 Z1028604 2002 selected work novel
1 y separately published work icon Uncollected Volume 3: Every Story from Undone, Uncovered and Unseen Paul Jennings , Ringwood : Penguin , 2000 Z979166 2000 selected work children's fiction children's horror humour
2 7 y separately published work icon My Grandma Lived in Gooligulch Graeme Base , Graeme Base (illustrator), Melbourne : Nelson , 1983 Z846667 1983 single work picture book children's
— Appears in: Graeme Base Collection: Volume 2 2024;

`Grandma lived in Gooligulch, Near Bandywallop East. A fair way north of Murrumbum, (Five hundred miles at least).' Here is a rollicking tale with a distinctly Australian flavour. (Publication summary)

14 59 y separately published work icon Looking for Alibrandi Melina Marchetta , Camberwell : Puffin , 1992 Z88038 1992 single work novel young adult (taught in 4 units) 'Josephine Alibrandi is seventeen, illegitimate, and in her final year at a wealthy Catholic school. This is the year her father comes back into her life, the year she falls in love, the year she discovers the secrets of her family's past and the year she sets herself free.' (Source: Back Cover)
1 4 y separately published work icon The Australopedia : How Australia Works After 200 Years of Other People Living Here Joan Grant (editor), Fitzroy North : McPhee Gribble , 1988 Z994516 1988 reference non-fiction children's A guidebook to Australia in 1988 for children in the 10 - 14 years age group. The work is grouped into chapters which focus on various aspects of life in Australia. The index allows it to be used as a ready reference work.
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.)

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