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y separately published work icon Love and the Aeroplane : A Tale of To-morrow single work   novel   science fiction   adventure  
Issue Details: First known date: 1910... 1910 Love and the Aeroplane : A Tale of To-morrow
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

Set on a station near the fictitious rural town of Waratah Valley, Love and the Aeroplane is set in a future in which high speed mono-railways (which can travel at 150 miles per hour), biplanes and electrical machinery have effectively ended the need for horses and other work animals. The horse, for example, has been left to survive in the wilderness areas of Australia, but in doing so has become a pest. This has led to the Government declaring them a pest and allowing them to be hunted for money. This forms the foundation for much story's dramatic organisation. The issue which most directly influences the novel's narrative trajectory, however, involves Alice Hardy, whose jealousy leads her into a compromising situation with the region's mail carrier. This sets in motion a series of unanticipated incidents that involve her husband, Tom, and several other characters.

A number of reviewers have criticised the book for being overly melodramatic and pandering to 'popular tastes.' While Graham Stone refers to it, somewhat kindly, as 'a sentimental novel set in an indefinite future Australia with some material progress' (p. 117), the Evening Post critic is less complimentary, writing:

Likely to appeal only to those who are easily catered for, [a] husband and wife, and a couple of villains, together with one or two minor characters, fill up the stage, and with plots, and counterplots, and misunderstandings, the tale is dragged out to the bitter end; the villains are properly disposed of to the satisfaction of the most sensational melodrama-loving reader, and the hero and heroine live, we hope, very happily ever after (9 July 1910, p.13).

The opinion of the Western Mail literary critic is, however, more complimentary: 'Without having claim to be regarded as a great novel, [Love and the Aeroplane] has an all-round attractiveness, certain to secure for it a wide range of popularity and is a highly creditable addition to Australian fiction' (9 July 1910, p.50).'

Notes

  • The mono-rail system in the story is referred to as either gyro-trains or gyro-cars.


  • Further Reference:


  • Steampunk Note : This story functions as proto-steampunk due to its pre World War One publication, the device of the advanced mono-rail trains and focus on the wider effects of technological advance. These are significant features associated with modern steampunk, but written well before steampunk emerged as a category.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Works about this Work

Aerial Romance of the Bush 1910 single work review
— Appears in: The Western Mail , 9 July 1910; (p. 50)

— Review of Love and the Aeroplane : A Tale of To-morrow John Sandes , 1910 single work novel
New Publications 1910 single work review
— Appears in: Evening Post , 9 July 1910; (p. 13)

— Review of Love and the Aeroplane : A Tale of To-morrow John Sandes , 1910 single work novel
Reviews of Books : 'Love and the Aeroplane' 1910 single work review
— Appears in: The Register , 9 July 1910; (p. 4)

— Review of Love and the Aeroplane : A Tale of To-morrow John Sandes , 1910 single work novel
Untitled 1910 single work review
— Appears in: The Bulletin , 7 July vol. 31 no. 1586 1910; (p. 2)

— Review of Love and the Aeroplane : A Tale of To-morrow John Sandes , 1910 single work novel
Reviews of Books : 'Love and the Aeroplane' 1910 single work review
— Appears in: The Register , 9 July 1910; (p. 4)

— Review of Love and the Aeroplane : A Tale of To-morrow John Sandes , 1910 single work novel
New Publications 1910 single work review
— Appears in: Evening Post , 9 July 1910; (p. 13)

— Review of Love and the Aeroplane : A Tale of To-morrow John Sandes , 1910 single work novel
Aerial Romance of the Bush 1910 single work review
— Appears in: The Western Mail , 9 July 1910; (p. 50)

— Review of Love and the Aeroplane : A Tale of To-morrow John Sandes , 1910 single work novel
Untitled 1910 single work review
— Appears in: The Bulletin , 7 July vol. 31 no. 1586 1910; (p. 2)

— Review of Love and the Aeroplane : A Tale of To-morrow John Sandes , 1910 single work novel
Last amended 6 Feb 2017 11:10:37
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