Picture of author.

Ion L. Idriess (1889–1979)

Autor(a) de Flynn of the Inland

63 Works 824 Membros 7 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Ion L. Idriess, c. 1940-1941 / by unknown photographer

Séries

Obras de Ion L. Idriess

Flynn of the Inland (1932) 89 cópias
Lasseter's Last Ride (1931) 55 cópias
The Cattle King (1808) 54 cópias
The Desert Column (1933) 50 cópias
The Red Chief (1953) 43 cópias
Drums of Mer (1933) 26 cópias
The silver city (1964) 25 cópias
Lightning Ridge (1940) 25 cópias
Back o' Cairns (1958) 24 cópias
Forty Fathoms Deep (1937) 24 cópias
Horrie the Wog Dog (1945) 20 cópias
The great boomerang (1945) 18 cópias
One wet season (1950) 17 cópias
Men of the jungle (1943) 15 cópias
The Wild White Man of Badu (1950) 15 cópias
Man Tracks (1935) 15 cópias
Isles of despair (1947) 14 cópias
Stone of destiny (1948) 11 cópias
Nemarluk, king of the wilds (1995) 10 cópias
Prospecting for gold (1931) 9 cópias
Outlaws of the Leopolds (1952) 9 cópias
Madman's Island (1941) 8 cópias
The nor'-westers (1954) 8 cópias
The Opium Smugglers (1948) 7 cópias
The Scout (1985) 7 cópias
Coral Sea Calling (1980) 6 cópias
Fortunes in Minerals (1941) 4 cópias
Shoot to kill (2020) 3 cópias
Trapping the Jap (2020) 3 cópias
Our Stone Age Mystery (1964) 3 cópias
The wild North (1960) 2 cópias
Diamond: Stone of Destiny (1970) 1 exemplar(es)
Tracks of destiny 1 exemplar(es)
Guerrilla tactics (2020) 1 exemplar(es)
Our living stone age (1963) 1 exemplar(es)

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome de batismo
Idriess, Ion Llewellyn
Data de nascimento
1889-09-20
Data de falecimento
1979-06-06
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
Australia
Local de nascimento
Waverley, New South Wales, Australia
Local de falecimento
Mona Vale, New South Wales, Australia
Locais de residência
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Ocupação
Sniper - WW1

Membros

Resenhas

The Red Chief is thought to have died around 1745. There are not many (if any) such detailed or accessible Indigenous histories of the period before European settlement. It has long baffled me that this important Australian transcription of an oral history is relatively unknown.

This, my second reading of this gripping story was prompted by the engrossing [b:Rachel: Brumby hunter, medicine woman, bushrangers' ally and troublemaker for good . . . the remarkable pioneering life of Rachel Kennedy|61298029|Rachel Brumby hunter, medicine woman, bushrangers' ally and troublemaker for good . . . the remarkable pioneering life of Rachel Kennedy|Jeff McGill|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1655359396l/61298029._SY75_.jpg|96656745], another historical dimension to the Warrumbungles where I live that included Mary Jane Cain. It is the story of how The Red Chief or Gambu Ganuurru became a chief of the Gamilaraay, of his journey into the Warrumbungles to steal women, his inventive and strategic brilliance, as well as a compelling insight into daily Indigenous life pre-European settlement.

Ion Idriess wrote from the perspective of the times before the Gamilaraay culturally reconstructed, so there are cringeworthy comments about Stone Age Man. Nevertheless, his adaption of the Ewing Papers is accurate enough to be both true to the original and full of page turning tension.

As described in Idriess's Introduction, the Ewing Papers refer to the source of the story as told by Old Joe Bungaree, a local Aboriginal elder. Police Sergeant J. P. (John Peter) Ewing and his youngest son Stanley wrote the notes, or a first recension, in about 1890. Some of the stories were taken down directly by the Sergeant as Joe Bungaree related them, others came from notes made by the Sergeant but afterwards transcribed by Stanley. Stanley drew on his memories, as a boy aged nine, when the chief’s grave was dug up.

The Ewing Papers have their own story. Back in 1975 I just missed seeing them when their custodian had died days before I arrived in Gunnedah. They are now available on-line but are only accessible inside a rabbit hole of intriguing research.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
simonpockley | Feb 25, 2024 |
Written during the depression. A guide for everyman to look for gold and the tools and "machines" needed for its recovery.
 
Marcado
historybuff174 | May 14, 2017 |
Couldn't get into this. Got to pp 46, looked at the rest of the pictures, read an episode that caught my eye, put it down. Of course I didn't like the condescension toward the aboriginal people, but I put that down to the ignorance of the time. And I didn't understand that the white men were regarded as heroes because they were gold-seekers. I guess it had something to do with the nation of Australia needing the gold, but still it was kinda weird and ugly. But my biggest difficulty lay with the writing style - very dry, hardly any dialogue, too many references to things/places not in the reader's knowledge base, more like just a sketched chronicle.… (mais)
 
Marcado
Cheryl_in_CC_NV | 1 outra resenha | Jun 5, 2016 |
the beautiful cover art made this a must buy in the second hand bookstore. Unfortunately, the book jumped around too much and never gained momentum. Some nice passages, but too stop start. Interesting as a history read though. Plenty of casual racism despite Broome being one of Australia's first example of a multicultural society along with the goldfields. Some interesting insights for the time on attitudes towards whales, fisheries management and development.
 
Marcado
kenno82 | May 1, 2015 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
63
Membros
824
Popularidade
#30,963
Avaliação
½ 3.6
Resenhas
7
ISBNs
156
Idiomas
4
Favorito
3

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