| Author | Mary Gaunt | 
|---|---|
| Country | Australia | 
| Language | English | 
| Genre | Fiction | 
| Publisher | Methuen, London | 
| Publication date | 1898 | 
| Media type | |
| Pages | 304 pp | 
| Preceded by | Kirkham's Find | 
| Followed by | Mistress Betty Carew | 
Deadman's : An Australian Story (1898) is a novel by Australian writer Mary Gaunt.[1]
Story outline
Jocelyn Ruthven is the goldfields commissioner of "Deadman's Creek". Following dubious advice he enters into a disastrous marriage with a young woman but later meets the right one. The novel details the attempts by all parties to extricate themselves from unwanted relationships and enter into others.
Critical reception
A reviewer in The Evening News found a number of faults with the book: "Mary Gaunt is well known in the literary world as a clever Victorian authoress; but Deadman's does not quite sustain her reputation...The story lacks a certain amount of spirit in it. It deals with rough life in a rough country; with people at their best and at their worst; and, somehow, the style is too smooth for the subject. The situations strike you as forced, and you have an uncomfortable idea of knowing before-hand what is coming. The author has done better work, and can do better work."[2]
See also
- Full text of the novel from Project Gutenberg Australia[3]
- 1898 in Australian literature