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Arts & Culture (32)
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Australian Stories (102)
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Film & Television (3)
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Literary (30)
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Military (8)
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Music (7)
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Political (16)
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Religious (14)
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Of Those Alone
Robert Hutton
London: Sidgwick and Jackson, 1958.The pseudonymous autobiography of Horace Charles Forbes Cheston, published under the name Robert Hutton shortly after the release of the Wolfenden Report. Written at a time when homosexuality was still criminalised and taboo, Of Those Alone offers an unusually candid account of Cheston’s sexual and emotional life. Moving between Paris, California, New York, and the South of France before returning to England, he recounts his affairs, his ill-fated marriage to an American woman, and his descent into alcoholism, concluding with redemption through Alcoholics Anonymous, an organisation he later helped to establish in Britain. One of the earliest openly homosexual autobiographies of the postwar period, it precedes the more widely known works of the 1960s gay liberation era and is quite likely the first memoir of a gay alcoholic writer.
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Memoirs, Illustrative of the Life and Writings of John Evelyn, Esq. F. R. S.
John Evelyn; William Bray
London: Henry Colburn, 1818.Author of the “Sylva,” &c. &c. Comprising His Diary, From the Year 1641 to 1705-6, and a Selection of His Familiar Letters. To Which is Subjoined, The Private Correspondence Between King Charles I. and His Secretary of State, Sir Edward Nicholas, Whilst His Majesty Was in Scotland, 1641, and at Other Times During the Civil War; Also Between Sir Edward Hyde, Afterwards Earl of Clarendon, and Sir Richard Browne, Ambassador to the Court of France, in the Time of King Charles I. and the Usurpation. The Whole Now First Published, From the Original Mss. in Two Volumes. Edited by William Bray. First Edition of John Evelyn’s Diary, published for the first time posthumously over 100 years after his death.
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The Tribal World of Verrier Elwin: An Autobiography
Verrier Elwin
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1964. -
Kagawa San: The Christian Prophet of Japan
Maurice Whitlow
London: The Religious Tract Society, No date.Short biography on the Japanese Evangelical and labour activist, Toyohiko Kagawa (1888-1960). Part of the The Little Library of Biography, c. 1930s.
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Let’s Hear It for the Long-Legged Women
Paul du Feu
Sydney: Angus & Robertson, 1974.Erotic memoir by the husband of feminist writer Germaine Greer. He later married poet Maya Angelou.
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Twenty-Five Years in The Rifle Brigade
William Surtees
Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood and T. Cadell, 1833.A soldier’s account in the 95th Rifle Regiment / Rifle Brigade, including the Peninsula War. The first edition, first printing, in the original unrestored boards.
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The Elder Brother: A Biography of Charles Webster Leadbeater
Gregory Tillett
London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1982.Biography of Theosophist and occult author C. W. Leadbeater.
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Memoirs Legal and Otherwise
Alfred Simpson; Hilda Simpson
Sydney: Surrey Beatty & Sons, 1996. -
Before Porn Was Legal: The Erotica Empire of Beate Uhse
Elizabeth Heineman
Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2011.The story of stunt and Luftwaffe pilot turned sex shop entrepreneur Beate Uhse-Rotermund (1919-2001).
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Pioneering: The Life of the Hon. R. M. Collins
Harry C. Perry
Brisbane: Watson, Ferguson & Co., 1923.With a poetic epigraph by Queensland poet George Essex Evans.
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Through the World’s Eye
Michael Kirby
Sydney: The Federation Press, 2000.Collection of speeches from then Justice of the High Court of Australia Michael Kirby on human rights, the law, and its institutions.
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Chiang Kai-shek
Hollington K. Tong
Taipei: China Publishing Company, 1953.The revised edition of Tong’s biography of the Chinese leader. Tong was a journalist and diplomat, serving as the Ambassador of the Republic of China to Japan when this edition was published later as the Ambassador to the United States. This revised edition, published 16 years after the first edition, condenses the story of Chiang Kai-shek’s life pre-1936, which was covered at length in the two volume first edition, and focuses on the epic years which followed, 1937-1953. This copy inscribed by Tong in Tokyo, 1953, to the polyglot Boris Strjeshevsky, an officer in the Imperial Russian Army that fled to China where he learned English and Chinese and taught Russian to the Chinese, before moving to Japan in 1939 where he learned Japanese and taught languages, before finally moving to Queensland, Australia, where he taught Russian at the University of Queensland.
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Davadi: Fruit, Wine and Religion
Ignatius (Ian) Bonaccorso
Brisbane: Ignatius (Ian) Bonaccorso, 2020.The story of the Catholic Father of the Fruit and Wine Industry of Stanthorpe, Queensland.
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Awakening a Curate’s Library: The Rev. William Arderne Shoults (1839-1887): His Life, His Book Collection, and his Legacy to New Zealand
Donald Jackson Kerr
: The Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand, 2022.“This book is the first to provide an account of the life of Rev. William Arderne Shoults (1839-1887) and his book collecting. It is also the first detailed examination of a true survivor, his book collection of some 5600 items, including medieval manuscripts, incunables, books on ecclesiastical history and primitive church rites and rituals, philology, bibliography, science, travel, and Arabic and Persian texts. The contents cover Shoults’s early years at St. John’s College, Cambridge University, his work in some of the poorer ritualistic parishes of London, his association with the Rev. Joseph Leycester Lyne (1837-1908), the controversial, enthusiastic, revivalist known as ‘Father Ignatius’, his work on Latin hymns, his marriage, and his travel overseas, which included visiting the Vatican Library. After Shoults’s death at 48, his collection was gifted to Selwyn College, Dunedin, arriving in New Zealand in 1893. The survival of this collection is remarkable and it exists as a fine example of what a nineteenth-century curate could collect.” (publisher’s blurb)
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Blow Away the Morning Dew: An Autobiography of a Childhood in the Australian Bush
Ernest Briggs
Brisbane: Ernest Briggs, 1967.The unpublished childhood memoir of Australian poet, broadcaster, and critic Ernest Briggs (1905-1967), prepared in Brisbane in 1967, the year of his death from myocardial infarction. The typescript offers a vivid first-hand account of early 20th-century life in rural New South Wales, particularly around Marsden Park and Riverstone, then bush settlements on Sydney’s north-western fringe. Laced with his verse and literary flourishes, Briggs recalls his early years in a cottage at Marsden Park, the death of his mother when he was three, and the following three years spent at the Ashfield Infants’ Home under the care of Matron Rebecca Marston. Returning home at six, a frail child excused from school by doctor’s order, he spent his days in his father’s bootmaking workshop at Riverstone or exploring the surrounding bush. Family reminiscences extend further back: his father’s recollections of childhood in Ballarat and Clunes, Victoria, and colonial family correspondence from the early to mid-nineteenth century, marking Briggs as a fifth-generation Australian. The memoir also recounts his reluctant return to schooling, the regular corporal punishment, and his growing sense of creative independence. Domestic scenes reveal the artistic atmosphere that shaped his imagination: “Once when a visitor had said, ‘Quite an art-showing youve got here, Charlie,’ my father walked around the room saying, ‘It comes of mixing with artists in my younger days … This is a Burket-Foster; here are a couple by the noted water-colourist Miss Allingham … this is by Uncle Tom Roberts, the first man in Australia to paint extensive oils…” Briggs also recalls excursions with his father into Sydney on public holidays, evocative tours of the city’s landmarks and recollections of its colonial past, as well as chance encounters with actress Nellie Stewart and, later, Dame Nellie Melba during his brief employment as a messenger-boy, moments that helped form his artistic sensibility. Other recollections include trips to Campbelltown, Windsor, Richmond, and Camperdown Cemetery, each described with a historian’s eye and a poet’s nostalgia. A richly detailed and intimate account of childhood, environment, and creative formation, this unpublished typescript provides valuable insight into Briggs’s literary development and into everyday colonial heritage in early twentieth-century New South Wales.
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Memoirs and Reminiscences of the Late Prof. George Bush
George Bush; Woodbury M. Fernald
Boston: Otis Clapp, 1860.Being, for the Most Part, Voluntary Contributions from Different Friends, Who Have Kindly Consented to this Memorial of His Worth.
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Augustus Short: First Bishop of Adelaide: A Chapter of Colonial Church History
Fred T. Whitington
Adelaide: E. S. Wigg & Son, 1887. -
Australian Pioneers and Reminiscences
Nehemiah Bartley
Brisbane: Gordon & Gotch, No date [1896]..(Illustrated), together with portraits of some of the Founders of Australia. By the late Nehemiah Bartley. Edited by J. J. Knight. FERGUSON 6761.
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Mustafa Kemal Araturk
Ilhan Aksit
Istanbul: Aksit, No date.Thoroughly illustrated biography of the founding father of the Republic of Turkiye.
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The Story of the Development of a Youth
Ernst Haeckel
New York and London: Harper & Brothers, 1923.Letters to his Parents, 1852-1856. Translated by G. Barry Gifford.