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Ion Idriess

Ion Llewellyn Idriess OBE (20 September 1889 – 6 June 1979) was a prolific and influential Australian author.[1] He wrote more than 50 books over 43 years between 1927 and 1969 – an average of one book every 10 months, and twice published three books in one year (1932 and 1940). His first book was Madman's Island, published in 1927 at the age of 38, and his last was written at the age of 79. Called Challenge of the North, it told of Idriess's ideas for developing the north of Australia.[2]

Ion Idriess

Idriess reading his book Lightning Ridge, c. 1940–41
Born
Ion Llewellyn Idriess

(1889-09-20)20 September 1889
Died6 June 1979(1979-06-06) (aged 89)
Notable work

Two of his works, The Cattle King (1936) and Flynn of the Inland (1932) had more than forty reprintings.[2]

Biography edit

Early years edit

Idriess was born in Waverley, a suburb of Sydney, to Juliette Windeyer (who had been born as Juliette Edmunds in 1865 at Binalong) and Walter Owen Idriess (a sheriff's officer born in 1862, who had emigrated from Dolgellau, in Wales). At birth Ion Idriess's name was registered as "Ion Windeyer",[1] although he never seems to have used this name.

From his late teens, he worked in rural New South Wales, particularly in the Narrabri and Moree districts. He travelled extensively around the state, working in a variety of itinerant jobs including employment as a rabbit poisoner, boundary rider, drover, prospecting for gold as well as harvesting sandalwood. He also worked as a shearer and dingo shooter. While working as an opal miner at Lightning Ridge in about 1910, he wrote short pieces for The Bulletin about life on the opal fields.

He later headed north, working in several tin mines around Cairns and Cooktown including his own claim. In 1913 he moved to Cape York Peninsula, where he lived with an Aboriginal clan, learning their customs and lifestyle.

Military service edit

With the outbreak of war, in 1914 he returned to Townsville and enlisted in the 5th Light Horse Regiment, AIF, as a trooper.[3][4] He saw action in Palestine, Sinai and Turkey, being wounded at Beersheba and Gallipoli – where he acted as spotter for noted sniper Billy Sing.[5]

After returning to Australia and recuperating from his wounds, he travelled to remote Cape York, and worked with pearlers and missionaries in the Torres Strait islands and Papua New Guinea where he worked as a gold miner. Other ventures included buffalo shooting in the Northern Territory, and journeys to Central and Western Australia.

Career as a writer edit

 
Ion Idriess in 1950

In 1928 Idriess settled in Sydney where he wrote as a freelance writer. His writing style drew on his experiences as a soldier, prospector, and bushman. He wrote on a multitude of topics, including travel, recollection, biography, history, anthropology and his own ideas on possible future events. His books were generally non-fiction, but written in a narrative, story style. Most of his books were published by Angus & Robertson. Idriess wrote from real life experiences using knowledge he had personally gained by travelling extensively and working at a variety of occupations. "Idriess was no stylist, but his writing was immediate, colourful, well paced and, despite the speed at which it was written, always well structured."[1]

Although he generally wrote under his name, some early articles for The Bulletin were written under the pseudonym of "Gouger". When travelling, Idriess was known as "Jack".

In 1968 he was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for his services to literature.[6][7]

Death and legacy edit

Idriess died at a nursing home in Mona Vale in Sydney on 6 June 1979, at the age of 89.[8]

His work slipped from favour after his death, but has experienced a renewal of interest. In 2017, Nicolas Rothwell said: "As so often in Australian letters, an initial fall into obscurity and the harsh judgments of the literary establishment serve as good indicators of a writer's pre-eminence".[9]

His work was never adapted for the screen although several books were optioned by producers.[10][11]

Bibliography edit

 
Man Tracks (1935)

1927 to 1945 edit

1945 to 1969 edit

  • In Crocodile Land (1946). Travels across Queensland and the Northern Territory, fishing, hunting and trading.
  • Isles of Despair (1947). Story of a shipwrecked Scotswoman (Barbara Thomson) in the Torres Strait Islands.
  • The Opium Smugglers (1947). Chinese opium smuggling on Cape York.
  • Stone of Destiny (1948). Diamond mining and exploration in Australia. Later edition titled The Diamond – Stone of Destiny.
  • One Wet Season (1949). Experiences in the Kimberley Region.
  • The Wild White Man of Badu (1950). Story of a ruthless man's ambition to establish an empire among the islands of the Torres Strait. Complements the author's previous, related book Isles of Despair.
  • Across the Nullarbor (1951). Story of Idriess's own drive across the Nullarbor from Sydney to Perth and return in a Peugeot 203.
  • Outlaws of the Leopolds (1952). A story told from the aboriginal point of view, set in the then known King Leopold Ranges in Western Australia.
  • The Red Chief (1953). A story of Cumbo Gunnerah, Indigenous Australian life and military strategy in New South Wales before European settlement.
  • The Nor'-westers (1954). Story of pioneering in the Kimberley region.
  • The Vanished People (1955). Social anthropology.
  • The Silver City (1956). A history of Broken Hill.
  • Coral Sea Calling (1957). Tales of northern Australia.
  • Back o' Cairns (1958). Story of gold prospecting in the far north.
  • The Tin Scratchers (1959). Story of tin mining in the far north.
  • The Wild North (1960). Stories of the North of Australia.
  • Tracks of Destiny (1961). History and future possibilities for the development of northern Australia.
  • My Mate Dick (1962). Stories and anecdotes of prospecting in Queensland.
  • Our Living Stone Age (1963). A work of popular anthropology.
  • Our Stone Age Mystery (1964). Part-two to Our Living Stone Age.
  • Challenge of the North (1969). More ideas for developing Australia's north.

Other works edit

Idriess wrote a number other books and pamphlets as well as having several collections of his works published.

The Mining and Prospecting series

A series of four titles which were basically "how-to" works, the first being commissioned by the Australian government as a means of opening up of the "outback" during the depression years.

  • Prospecting for Gold (1931)
  • Cyaniding for Gold (1939)
  • Fortunes in Minerals (1941)
  • Opals and Sapphires (1967)
Pamphlets
  • Must Australia Fight? (1939). A political strategy – basically World War II propaganda.
  • Onward Australia (1945). More propaganda, covering post-war development, and Australia taking its role in the region and the world.
Collections
  • Gems from Ion Idriess (1949). A collection of extracts, published for schools.
  • Ion Idriess's Greatest Stories (1986). A recent, two-volume set of six of the most popular titles.
Volume I: Flynn of the Inland, The Cattle King and Lasseter's Last Ride;
Volume II: The Desert Column, Lightning Ridge and The Silver City.
  • The National Edition (1938, reissued 1941). A set of all of Idriess's works up to 1938 published as a uniform set of 12 hardback volumes.
The Australian Guerilla series

Written as a set of specialist military handbooks for the Australian Army for the World War II.

  • Australian Guerilla – Shoot to Kill (1942). Practical details on accurate shooting.
  • Australian Guerilla – Sniping (1942). Tactics for concealment and stalking, and how to identify an enemy's position by drawing fire.
  • Australian Guerilla – Guerilla Tactics (1942). Bomb making, booby-traps and mines.
  • Australian Guerilla – Trapping the Jap (1943). Particularly aimed at the expected Japanese military invasion of Australia.
  • Australian Guerilla – Lurking Death (1943). Stories of snipers in Gallipoli, Sinai and Palestine
  • Australian Guerilla – The Scout (1943)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Julian Croft (2006). "Idriess, Ion Llewellyn (1889–1979)". Australian Dictionary of Biography, Online Edition. Retrieved 11 May 2007.
  2. ^ a b Keith De La Rue (26 July 2005). "Ion Idriess". Retrieved 12 May 2007.
  3. ^ "IDRIESS Ion Llewellyn : Service Number - 358 : Place of Birth - Waverley NSW : Place of Enlistment - Townsville QLD : Next of Kin - (Father) IDRIESS Walter Owen". National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 11 September 2014.
  4. ^ "Idriess, Ion Llewellyn (Trooper, b.1889 - d.1979)". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 11 September 2014.
  5. ^ . The Australian Light Horse Association. Archived from the original on 12 May 2010.
  6. ^ . It's an Honour. Australian Government. Archived from the original on 2 June 2021.
  7. ^ "Award Extract". Australian Honours Search Facility. Australian Government Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. 1107006. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  8. ^ Sandilands, Ben (9 June 1979). "Last rites for Idriess well attended". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 4.
  9. ^ "Undeserved disdain for an engaging writer", Weekend Australian, 14-15 Jan 2017, Review, p. 15
  10. ^ Vagg, Stephen (25 May 2020). "The A to Z of Non-White Aussie Movies and TV in White Australia". Filmink.
  11. ^ Souter, Gavin (12 October 1974). "Boswell of the Bush". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 11.

References edit

  • Beverley Eley (1995). Ion Idriess. ETT Imprint, Sydney.
  • Keith De La Rue (26 July 2005). "Ion Idriess". Retrieved 12 May 2007. (bibliographic details)
  • Garry Gatfield. "Ion Idriess (1889–1979)". Retrieved 12 May 2007. (another partial biography)
  • "Ion Idriess – 'Jack' to his mates". collectingbooksandmagazines.com. Retrieved 13 May 2007. (more details on his books)
  • Ion Idriess at AustLit

idriess, llewellyn, idriess, september, 1889, june, 1979, prolific, influential, australian, author, wrote, more, than, books, over, years, between, 1927, 1969, average, book, every, months, twice, published, three, books, year, 1932, 1940, first, book, madman. Ion Llewellyn Idriess OBE 20 September 1889 6 June 1979 was a prolific and influential Australian author 1 He wrote more than 50 books over 43 years between 1927 and 1969 an average of one book every 10 months and twice published three books in one year 1932 and 1940 His first book was Madman s Island published in 1927 at the age of 38 and his last was written at the age of 79 Called Challenge of the North it told of Idriess s ideas for developing the north of Australia 2 Ion IdriessOBEIdriess reading his book Lightning Ridge c 1940 41BornIon Llewellyn Idriess 1889 09 20 20 September 1889Waverley New South WalesDied6 June 1979 1979 06 06 aged 89 Mona Vale New South Wales AustraliaNotable workMadman s Island Lasseter s Last Ride Flynn of the Inland Forty Fathoms Deep Man Tracks Gold Dust and AshesTwo of his works The Cattle King 1936 and Flynn of the Inland 1932 had more than forty reprintings 2 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Military service 1 3 Career as a writer 2 Death and legacy 3 Bibliography 3 1 1927 to 1945 3 2 1945 to 1969 3 3 Other works 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesBiography editEarly years edit Idriess was born in Waverley a suburb of Sydney to Juliette Windeyer who had been born as Juliette Edmunds in 1865 at Binalong and Walter Owen Idriess a sheriff s officer born in 1862 who had emigrated from Dolgellau in Wales At birth Ion Idriess s name was registered as Ion Windeyer 1 although he never seems to have used this name From his late teens he worked in rural New South Wales particularly in the Narrabri and Moree districts He travelled extensively around the state working in a variety of itinerant jobs including employment as a rabbit poisoner boundary rider drover prospecting for gold as well as harvesting sandalwood He also worked as a shearer and dingo shooter While working as an opal miner at Lightning Ridge in about 1910 he wrote short pieces for The Bulletin about life on the opal fields He later headed north working in several tin mines around Cairns and Cooktown including his own claim In 1913 he moved to Cape York Peninsula where he lived with an Aboriginal clan learning their customs and lifestyle Military service edit With the outbreak of war in 1914 he returned to Townsville and enlisted in the 5th Light Horse Regiment AIF as a trooper 3 4 He saw action in Palestine Sinai and Turkey being wounded at Beersheba and Gallipoli where he acted as spotter for noted sniper Billy Sing 5 After returning to Australia and recuperating from his wounds he travelled to remote Cape York and worked with pearlers and missionaries in the Torres Strait islands and Papua New Guinea where he worked as a gold miner Other ventures included buffalo shooting in the Northern Territory and journeys to Central and Western Australia Career as a writer edit nbsp Ion Idriess in 1950In 1928 Idriess settled in Sydney where he wrote as a freelance writer His writing style drew on his experiences as a soldier prospector and bushman He wrote on a multitude of topics including travel recollection biography history anthropology and his own ideas on possible future events His books were generally non fiction but written in a narrative story style Most of his books were published by Angus amp Robertson Idriess wrote from real life experiences using knowledge he had personally gained by travelling extensively and working at a variety of occupations Idriess was no stylist but his writing was immediate colourful well paced and despite the speed at which it was written always well structured 1 Although he generally wrote under his name some early articles for The Bulletin were written under the pseudonym of Gouger When travelling Idriess was known as Jack In 1968 he was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for his services to literature 6 7 Death and legacy editIdriess died at a nursing home in Mona Vale in Sydney on 6 June 1979 at the age of 89 8 His work slipped from favour after his death but has experienced a renewal of interest In 2017 Nicolas Rothwell said As so often in Australian letters an initial fall into obscurity and the harsh judgments of the literary establishment serve as good indicators of a writer s pre eminence 9 His work was never adapted for the screen although several books were optioned by producers 10 11 Bibliography edit nbsp Man Tracks 1935 1927 to 1945 edit Madman s Island 1927 Fiction version and Idriess s first book Published by Cornstalk Publications All other Idriess titles were published by Angus and Robertson Madman s Island 1938 Non fiction version Lasseter s Last Ride 1931 Lasseter s Reef gold discovery Flynn of the Inland 1932 Tale of John Flynn founder of the Royal Flying Doctor Service The Desert Column 1932 Diary of an AIF trooper in Gallipoli Sinai and Palestine Men of the Jungle 1932 Gold and tin prospecting in Queensland Gold Dust and Ashes 1933 Story of the New Guinea goldfields at Bulolo Drums of Mer 1933 History and legends of the Torres Strait Islands The Yellow Joss 1934 Collection of short stories Man Tracks 1935 Tracking skills of Indigenous Australian of the Kimberley region The Cattle King 1936 The story of Sir Sidney Kidman Forty Fathoms Deep 1937 Pearl diving community of Broome Western Australia Over the Range 1937 Story of the Kimberleys Lightning Ridge 1940 Based on Idriess s opal prospecting experience at Lightning Ridge Headhunters of the Coral Sea 1940 Story of the Torres Strait Islands The Great Trek 1940 Tale of July 1864 expedition to walk from Rockhampton to Somerset Bay near the tip of Cape York Peninsula to establish a settlement Somerset Nemarluk King of the Wilds 1941 An indigenous Australian outlaw jailed at Fannie Bay Gaol in Darwin The Great Boomerang 1941 A scheme for developing the Australian outback The Silent Service Action 1944 Stories of submarine warfare Written with T M Jones Horrie the Wog dog 1945 Horrie the Wog Dog s adventures with the AIF in Egypt Greece Crete and Palestine Written with Jim Moody 1945 to 1969 edit In Crocodile Land 1946 Travels across Queensland and the Northern Territory fishing hunting and trading Isles of Despair 1947 Story of a shipwrecked Scotswoman Barbara Thomson in the Torres Strait Islands The Opium Smugglers 1947 Chinese opium smuggling on Cape York Stone of Destiny 1948 Diamond mining and exploration in Australia Later edition titled The Diamond Stone of Destiny One Wet Season 1949 Experiences in the Kimberley Region The Wild White Man of Badu 1950 Story of a ruthless man s ambition to establish an empire among the islands of the Torres Strait Complements the author s previous related book Isles of Despair Across the Nullarbor 1951 Story of Idriess s own drive across the Nullarbor from Sydney to Perth and return in a Peugeot 203 Outlaws of the Leopolds 1952 A story told from the aboriginal point of view set in the then known King Leopold Ranges in Western Australia The Red Chief 1953 A story of Cumbo Gunnerah Indigenous Australian life and military strategy in New South Wales before European settlement The Nor westers 1954 Story of pioneering in the Kimberley region The Vanished People 1955 Social anthropology The Silver City 1956 A history of Broken Hill Coral Sea Calling 1957 Tales of northern Australia Back o Cairns 1958 Story of gold prospecting in the far north The Tin Scratchers 1959 Story of tin mining in the far north The Wild North 1960 Stories of the North of Australia Tracks of Destiny 1961 History and future possibilities for the development of northern Australia My Mate Dick 1962 Stories and anecdotes of prospecting in Queensland Our Living Stone Age 1963 A work of popular anthropology Our Stone Age Mystery 1964 Part two to Our Living Stone Age Challenge of the North 1969 More ideas for developing Australia s north Other works edit Idriess wrote a number other books and pamphlets as well as having several collections of his works published The Mining and Prospecting seriesA series of four titles which were basically how to works the first being commissioned by the Australian government as a means of opening up of the outback during the depression years Prospecting for Gold 1931 Cyaniding for Gold 1939 Fortunes in Minerals 1941 Opals and Sapphires 1967 PamphletsMust Australia Fight 1939 A political strategy basically World War II propaganda Onward Australia 1945 More propaganda covering post war development and Australia taking its role in the region and the world CollectionsGems from Ion Idriess 1949 A collection of extracts published for schools Ion Idriess s Greatest Stories 1986 A recent two volume set of six of the most popular titles Volume I Flynn of the Inland The Cattle King and Lasseter s Last Ride Volume II The Desert Column Lightning Ridge and The Silver City dd The National Edition 1938 reissued 1941 A set of all of Idriess s works up to 1938 published as a uniform set of 12 hardback volumes The Australian Guerilla seriesWritten as a set of specialist military handbooks for the Australian Army for the World War II Australian Guerilla Shoot to Kill 1942 Practical details on accurate shooting Australian Guerilla Sniping 1942 Tactics for concealment and stalking and how to identify an enemy s position by drawing fire Australian Guerilla Guerilla Tactics 1942 Bomb making booby traps and mines Australian Guerilla Trapping the Jap 1943 Particularly aimed at the expected Japanese military invasion of Australia Australian Guerilla Lurking Death 1943 Stories of snipers in Gallipoli Sinai and Palestine Australian Guerilla The Scout 1943 See also editAngus amp Robertson Australian outback literature of the 20th centuryNotes edit a b c Julian Croft 2006 Idriess Ion Llewellyn 1889 1979 Australian Dictionary of Biography Online Edition Retrieved 11 May 2007 a b Keith De La Rue 26 July 2005 Ion Idriess Retrieved 12 May 2007 IDRIESS Ion Llewellyn Service Number 358 Place of Birth Waverley NSW Place of Enlistment Townsville QLD Next of Kin Father IDRIESS Walter Owen National Archives of Australia Retrieved 11 September 2014 Idriess Ion Llewellyn Trooper b 1889 d 1979 Australian War Memorial Retrieved 11 September 2014 Trooper William Eddie Sing The Australian Light Horse Association Archived from the original on 12 May 2010 Honours Search Australian Honours It s an Honour Australian Government Archived from the original on 2 June 2021 Award Extract Australian Honours Search Facility Australian Government Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet 1107006 Retrieved 30 May 2021 Sandilands Ben 9 June 1979 Last rites for Idriess well attended Sydney Morning Herald p 4 Undeserved disdain for an engaging writer Weekend Australian 14 15 Jan 2017 Review p 15 Vagg Stephen 25 May 2020 The A to Z of Non White Aussie Movies and TV in White Australia Filmink Souter Gavin 12 October 1974 Boswell of the Bush Sydney Morning Herald p 11 References editBeverley Eley 1995 Ion Idriess ETT Imprint Sydney Keith De La Rue 26 July 2005 Ion Idriess Retrieved 12 May 2007 bibliographic details Garry Gatfield Ion Idriess 1889 1979 Retrieved 12 May 2007 another partial biography Ion Idriess Jack to his mates collectingbooksandmagazines com Retrieved 13 May 2007 more details on his books Ion Idriess at AustLit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ion Idriess amp oldid 1171870715, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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