Swan Sonnenschein Swan Sonnenschein i(A80032 works by) (Organisation) assertion (a.k.a. Sonnenschein; Swan Sonnenschein & Co.; Swan Sonnenschein and Co.; S. Sonnenschein &​ Co)
Born: Established: 1878 London,
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England,
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United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,
; Died: Ceased: 1911 London,
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England,
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United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,

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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon Fred Seagood : His Travels and His Triumphs Edward Roper , London : Swan Sonnenschein , 1904 Z1416375 1904 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Archie Wynward of Glen of Imaal Harry Tighe , London : Swan Sonnenschein , 1903 Z1446918 1903 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Remorse : And Other Essays Harry Tighe , London : Swan Sonnenschein , 1902 Z1446906 1902 selected work short story
1 y separately published work icon Angus Faulkener, or, The Sport of Destiny B. Synnot , Melbourne : George Robertson , 1898 Z1427365 1898 single work novel
2 2 y separately published work icon The North Shore Mystery Henry Fletcher , 1895 single work novel crime detective
1 y separately published work icon The Sword of a Sin Alex Montgomery , Melbourne : George Robertson , 1898 Z1090655 1898 single work novel historical fiction
1 2 y separately published work icon The Story of the Australian Bushrangers An Illustrated History of Australian Bushrangers; History of Australian Bushrangers George E. Boxall , London : Swan Sonnenschein , 1899 Z424553 1899 single work non-fiction
1 y separately published work icon Robertson's Library of Australian Authors Swan Sonnenschein (publisher), 1898 London : Swan Sonnenschein , Z1480022 1898 series - publisher
1 y separately published work icon When Passion Flies Gerald Wolf , Melbourne : George Robertson , 1898 Z1427960 1898 single work novel romance
1 y separately published work icon From England to the Back Blocks Roland Graeme , Melbourne : George Robertson , 1898 Z1059786 1898 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Tales of the Isle of Death (Norfolk Island) 'Price Warung' , London : Swan Sonnenschein , 1898 Z948962 1898 selected work short story
1 1 y separately published work icon By Still Harder Fate Nancy Lloyd-Tayler , Melbourne : George Robertson , 1898 Z391605 1898 single work novel
1 1 y separately published work icon The Power of the Purse 'Actinotus' , Melbourne : George Robertson , 1897 Z148663 1897 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Angus Murray Helen Davis , London : Swan Sonnenschein , 1897 Z804953 1897 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon A Run Round the Empire : Being the Log of Two Young People who Circumnavigated the Globe Alex (Alexander) Hill , London : Swan Sonnenschein , 1897 21927419 1897 single work prose travel
1 y separately published work icon Mortgaged Years : An Australian Story R. K. Dee , Melbourne : George Robertson , 1895 Z805555 1895 single work novel
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)
1 2 y separately published work icon Our Alma : An Australian Story Henry Goldsmith , Melbourne : George Robertson , 1894 Z819487 1894 single work novel

'Goldsmith's first novel, Our Alma (1894), is a light-hearted romance of Italian emigrants and goldmining in Victoria, which received favourable reviews in the colonial press. His second novel, Euancondit, which was published the next year, is a settler's tale that contrasts upper class Melbourne society with bush life.' (Source: http://www.apfa.esrc.unimelb.edu.au/biogs/E000097b.htm )

1 y separately published work icon A Living Statue : A Novel Giulia Majeroni , London Melbourne : George Robertson , 1893 Z1183773 1893 single work novel 'An Italian count, devoted to the memory of his first love, meets an operatic singer who is her double. He insists that he might gaze on the actress in silence for two hours each day. She is the 'Living Statue' who eventually wins his love.'
1 y separately published work icon Adventures in Australia Fifty Years Ago : Being a Record of an Wmigrant's Wanderings through the Colonies of New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland During the Years 1839-1844 James Demarr , London : Swan Sonnenschein , 1893 6730666 1893 single work autobiography

"Demarr arrived in New South Wales in 1839 on the immigrant ship Heber, having escaped from the drudgery of farm life in Yorkshire and the 'austere rule' of his father. He intended to gain experience working in Australia, with a view to investing at a later stage. He describes the inadequacy of the the emigrants' guides, which he relied on for provisioning, and gives a graphic description of the hardships of the voyage and the character of his fellow passengers. He travelled extensively in Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland over the next five years, working as a storekeeper in Queanbeyan, as a stockman on a cattle station in the Snowy Mountains, as a shepherd in New England, and as a drover over landing cattle from Sydney to Port Phillip. Demarr writes vividly of the hospitality, transitory friendships and isolation of the bush, of the economic and social conditions of outback Australia, and of the terrors of travelling alone. In Queensland, he was unable to prove he was a free immigrant and was briefly detained as an escaped convict. A man of independent attitudes, he is contemptuous of British law and the transportation system. He expresses great sympathy for the convicts, with whom he often worked, and the Aborigines, concluding that 'what we call the civilisation has been no boon to the black natives of Australia, and to their mind must be associated with gunpowder, poison, hunger, disease and extermination'. Demarr set sail from Sydney for South America and England in 1844" (Walsh and Hooton 52).

Source

Walsh, Kay and Joy Hooton. Australian Autobiographical Narratives : An Annotated Bibliography. Canberra : Australian Scholarly Editions Centre, University College, ADFA and National Library of Australia, 1993.

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