y separately published work icon Nation Review newspaper  
Alternative title: Ferret; NR
Issue Details: First known date: 1972... 1972 Nation Review
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Notes

  • Weekly
  • Vol. 2, no. 41 (July 29/Aug.4, 1972)-Aug./Sept. 1981
  • Merger of: Review (Fishermen's Bend, Vic.); and, Nation (Sydney, N.S.W.)
  • Superseded in part by /Split into: Review (Prahran, Vic.); and, Nation (Melbourne, Vic.)
  • May 9 1974 incorporates Living Daylights
  • NR (May - Sept 1981)
  • Publication resumed 1980 in magazine format
  • Publication suspended October 11-December 1979
  • Continues numbering of Review

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Works about this Work

y separately published work icon Gordon Barton : Australia's Maverick Entrepreneur Sam Everingham , Crows Nest : Allen and Unwin , 2009 Z1557632 2009 single work biography

'Gordon Barton is one of the most extraordinary business people Australia has produced. A prominent and provocative commentator with an entirely new vision for Australia, he founded the political party that eventually became the Australian Democrats, owned two radical newspapers including Nation Review, and built a vast commercial empire with interests in transport, mining, insurance, hotels, casinos, and book publishing and retailing.

'Described as the Great Gatsby of his time, Barton's private life was wild and unconventional. He captivated women and counted among his friends the mistress of the whip Madam Lash, the lawyer Sir Lawrence Street, the legendary standover man Tim Bristow and the controversial editor Francis James. At the height of his business success, he generated countless headlines, but died a recluse in Italy having lost the European and Australian transport empires he worked so hard to create.

'To know Gordon Barton is to understand a unique period in Australia's social and political history. Combining deep research with rich personal insight, Sam Everingham brings to life one of Australia's most dynamic and unconventional characters.' (Publisher's blurb)

Published Without Pay, an Author's Ire is Drawn Peter Craven , 1995 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Australian , 1 February 1995; (p. 30)
He Called Canberra Heartbreak Town Norman Abjorensen , 1995 single work obituary (for John Hepworth )
— Appears in: The Canberra Times , 11 February 1995; (p. C4)
Eccentric Writer Pursued Greater Truth John Hindle , 1995 single work obituary (for John Hepworth )
— Appears in: The Australian , 25 January 1995; (p. 16)
y separately published work icon Ferretabilia: Life and Times of Nation Review Richard Walsh , St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 1993 Z1090747 1993 single work prose
y separately published work icon Ferretabilia: Life and Times of Nation Review Richard Walsh , St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 1993 Z1090747 1993 single work prose
y separately published work icon Gordon Barton : Australia's Maverick Entrepreneur Sam Everingham , Crows Nest : Allen and Unwin , 2009 Z1557632 2009 single work biography

'Gordon Barton is one of the most extraordinary business people Australia has produced. A prominent and provocative commentator with an entirely new vision for Australia, he founded the political party that eventually became the Australian Democrats, owned two radical newspapers including Nation Review, and built a vast commercial empire with interests in transport, mining, insurance, hotels, casinos, and book publishing and retailing.

'Described as the Great Gatsby of his time, Barton's private life was wild and unconventional. He captivated women and counted among his friends the mistress of the whip Madam Lash, the lawyer Sir Lawrence Street, the legendary standover man Tim Bristow and the controversial editor Francis James. At the height of his business success, he generated countless headlines, but died a recluse in Italy having lost the European and Australian transport empires he worked so hard to create.

'To know Gordon Barton is to understand a unique period in Australia's social and political history. Combining deep research with rich personal insight, Sam Everingham brings to life one of Australia's most dynamic and unconventional characters.' (Publisher's blurb)

Eccentric Writer Pursued Greater Truth John Hindle , 1995 single work obituary (for John Hepworth )
— Appears in: The Australian , 25 January 1995; (p. 16)
He Called Canberra Heartbreak Town Norman Abjorensen , 1995 single work obituary (for John Hepworth )
— Appears in: The Canberra Times , 11 February 1995; (p. C4)
Published Without Pay, an Author's Ire is Drawn Peter Craven , 1995 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Australian , 1 February 1995; (p. 30)

PeriodicalNewspaper Details

ISSN: 0156-8221
Last amended 17 Oct 2003 15:01:41
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