AustLit
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Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
-
Daily News
2014
single work
companion entry
— Appears in: A Companion to the Australian Media : D 2014; (p. 129)
-
Daily News
2014
single work
companion entry
— Appears in: A Companion to the Australian Media : D 2014; (p. 129)
PeriodicalNewspaper Details
Has serialised
- Mr Jelly's Business, single work novel crime
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The Barrakee Mystery,
single work
novel
crime
'Why was the redoubtable King Henry, an aborigine from Western Australia, killed during a thunderstorm in New South Wales? — What was the feud that led to murder after nineteen long years had passed? — Who was the woman who saw the murder and kept silent? — This first story of Inspector Napoleon Bonaparte, the half-aborigine detective, takes him to a sheep station in the Darling River bush country where he encounters those problems he understands so well – mixed blood and divided loyalties.' (Source: Goodreads website)
- The Disquieting Sex, single work novel
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The Hidden Door,
single work
novel
detective
'People who disappear, either from choice or compulsion, usually leave behind some trace, some thread or other, which an astute detective can seize on and follow to a logical conclusion. No such convenient clue was to be found in the case of the disappearance of four villagers from the little hamlets on the Suffolk coast of England. When Gilbert Larose, the Australian detective, was put on the case, not only was the trail cold, but there was not a shred of evidence to show that there had ever been a trail at all. The men had simply vanished into thin air. But in his usually entertaining and unassuming manner, Larose scents a major mystery, and. with the unswerving assurance of the black tracker, is soon just a step or two behind the criminals.'
Source:
'The Hidden Door', The Advertiser, 9 August 1934, p.156.
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The Tale of a Tomahawk,
single work
short story
A bush story, set on a station in the Carpentaria.