The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.
Includes a retrospective piece on J.M. Barrie to mark his 70th birthday.
Also includes 'Mrs. F. Carr Rollett Reviews Recent New Zealand Books' and 'John Drinkwater on Collecting'.
In this issue S.M. MacFarlane recommends, amongst others, Warwaick Depping's Exiles, Insecurity by Monica Ewer, Wild Justice by George A. Birmingham, and Guy Fletcher's The Bran Tub.
Includes the transcript of 'Shakespeare and His Idea of Beauty', an address to the Shakespeare Society of New South Wales by Mr. Justice Piddington.
In addition to the separately indexed correspondence of C.T. Clark 'Views, News and Reviews' includes a photograph of Emil Ludwig and reports on James Joyce's blindnes, the Femina Vie Heureuse Prize, English reviews of Norman Lindsay's Redheap, the sale of the Bronte's home and a memorial for Rupert Brooke.
The report from the Society of Australian Authors includes details of Myra Morris' farewell at the Langham Cafe, 28 April.
Includes the announcements of the formation of a Verse Speaking Association in Melbourne and Ultima Thule as the best Australian novel of 1929.
Contents
* Contents derived from the 1930 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Davidson reports on Thorpe and Serle's unanimously carried motion in protest of 'the murdered English being introduced into Australia by the medium of the American talkies'. it was agreed copies of the motion should be sent to the Prime Minister and the leaders of the Nationalist and Country Parties.
Maurice promotes the cause of the American Modernist poets as a contrast to 'the washy sentimentality and maudlin fumbling of our regular poets in England and Australia'. Includes discussion of William Carlos Williams, e.e. cummings and Wallace Stevens.
(p. 113-115)
A Reader's Notebook,Nettie Palmer,
single work review — Review of
Knocking RoundJ. Le Gay Brereton,
1930selected work criticism biography autobiography prose essay short story ;
RedheapNorman Lindsay,
1930single work novel ;
(p. 118-119)
C.T. Clarke was in the employ of George Robertson in the 1870s when, as a very young man, he and R.P. Raymond 'constituted the publishing department' that produced Marcus Clarke's work. In this letter to the Editor, C.T. Clarke responds to Palmer's piece on the re-issue of For the Term of His Natural Life. Clarke recounts his recollections, in some detail, of the publisher's interactions with Marcus Clarke, including the circumstances of the Bentley first edition.
This short summary introduces the 'best seller lists' previously published under the heading 'What England and America are Reading'. The author regards it as unlikely that a work of popular fiction would make it to the top of the best seller list in England as they do in America.
Wedderspoon reports on this newly formed club for young writers. Mention is made of their monthly magazine The Free Lancer and of plays written by members Duncan-Brown and Oakes being staged at the Community Playhouse .