James Devaney

James Martin Devaney (31 May 1890 – 14 August 1976) was an Australian poet, novelist, and journalist.

Biography

Born in Bendigo, Victoria, Devaney attended St. Joseph's College, Hunters Hill, entering the Marist Brothers juniorate in 1904.[1] He took his vows in 1915. Under the pen-name 'Fabian', he contributed between 1924 and 1943 a nature column to the Brisbane Courier (renamed The Courier-Mail after 1933).[2]

Works

  • Fabian: Poems, Melbourne: Lothian, 1923
  • The Currency Lass : a Tale of the Convict Days, Sydney: Cornstalk, 1927
  • The Vanished Tribes, Sydney: Cornstalk, 1929
  • The Girl Oona, and Other Tales of the Australian Blacks, Sydney: Cornstalk Publishing Co., 1929
  • The Witch-Doctor, and Other Tales of the Australian Blacks, Sydney: Angus and Robertson, 1930
  • I-rinka the Messenger, and Other Tales of the Australian Blacks, Sydney: Angus and Robertson, 1930
  • Earth Kindred, Melbourne: Frank Wilmot, Coles Library, 1931
  • Debutantes: a poem, Hawthorn East, Victoria: The Hawthorn Press, (1939?)
  • Dark Road, Hawthorn East, Victoria: Hawthorn Press, 1938,
  • Where the Wind Goes, Sydney: Angus and Robertson, 1939
  • Shaw Neilson, Sydney: Angus and Robertson, 1944
  • Washdirt: a novel of old Bendigo, Melbourne: Georgian House, 1946
  • Poems, Sydney: Angus and Robertson, 1950

Notes

  1. Australian Poets and Their Works, by William Wilde, Oxford University Press, 1996
  2. M. D. O'Hagan, 'Devaney, James Martin (1890–1976)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 13, Melbourne University Press, 1993, pp 623–624.


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