Saturday, April 11, 2015

AUSTRALIAN WRITERS’ WEEK 1927

Women , including  Dorothy Langsford , whose first novel, COO-EE OF GLENOWIE ,   published in 1922,  dealt  with  the  romance between a Digger who returned   from  WWl  with one arm  missing  and a  farm girl, recently  the subject of an article   in   Little Darwin ,  were  prominent  in  the  drive  to  promote  local  talent and  interest  in  reading.   Her   books   and  the   Northern Territory  classics    We of the Never–Never and The Little Black Princess - by  Mrs  Aeneas  Gunn - were selling  exceptionally  well. 

Langsford, daughter of an Adelaide cleric , came to prominence  through “ her wholesome stories of  Australian life.” She  began her writing  career  aged 11   when she climbed into a tree  with  pencil and paper and wrote fairy tales,  which were   published  in  a weekly newspaper and then in  a  booklet.  A novel she wrote abou t a sightless young  man  had  been  translated into Braille.  

Books written  by  Australian writers and  available  that  year  covered  history , anthropology , natural history, myths and legends of the Aborigines, essays ,verse, novels  and stories for children. Mrs  Percival  Stow , whose first husband was  Langloh Parker, learned the dialects of nine tribes  of Aborigines when she was living  on  Bangate Station, NSW, and wrote  about their myths and legends.   Katharine  Susannah  Prichard , of Western Australia, a friend of  Kiwi  activist  writer  Jean   Devanny , who died in Townsville ,  was   also  prominent  at  the  time.