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Outback Penguin : Richard Lane's Barwell diaries / edited by Elizabeth Lane, Fiona Kells, Louise Paton, Stuart Kells; [foreword by Geoffrey Blainey].

By: Contributor(s): Publication details: Carlton, Vic. : Black Inc, 2016.Description: xx, 428 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some colour), portraits, facsimiles, photographs ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781863958172
  • 1863958177
Other title:
  • Richard Lane's Barwell diaries
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 920.71 23
  • 070.5092 23
LOC classification:
  • HD1539.A8 L36 2016
Summary: "Richard Lane was one of three brothers who founded Penguin Books in 1935. But like all great stories, his life didn't start there. After sailing to Adelaide in 1922, Richard began work as a boy migrant ? a farm apprentice living in rural South Australia as part of the 'Barwell Boys' scheme. In Australia, he deepened his appreciation for literature, and understood how important it was to make good writing widely accessible. Richard's diaries ? the honest and moving words of a teenager, so very far away from home, capture vividly his life and loves; the characters he met; the land he worked; the families he depended on; and his coming of age in a new land. A remarkable social record and one of the best first-hand accounts of the child migrant experience, the diaries also capture the ideas and the entrepreneurship that led to the founding of the twentieth century's most famous publishing house. With a foreword by eminent Australian historian Geoffrey Blainey, Richard Lane's diaries are an important document for the history of rural Australia and global publishing."--Dust jacket.
List(s) this item appears in: Australian Biography
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item reserves
Book Melbourne Athenaeum Library Biography 920.71 LAN Available 064696
Total reserves: 0

Illustrations on endpapers.

Includes index.

"Richard Lane was one of three brothers who founded Penguin Books in 1935. But like all great stories, his life didn't start there. After sailing to Adelaide in 1922, Richard began work as a boy migrant ? a farm apprentice living in rural South Australia as part of the 'Barwell Boys' scheme. In Australia, he deepened his appreciation for literature, and understood how important it was to make good writing widely accessible. Richard's diaries ? the honest and moving words of a teenager, so very far away from home, capture vividly his life and loves; the characters he met; the land he worked; the families he depended on; and his coming of age in a new land. A remarkable social record and one of the best first-hand accounts of the child migrant experience, the diaries also capture the ideas and the entrepreneurship that led to the founding of the twentieth century's most famous publishing house. With a foreword by eminent Australian historian Geoffrey Blainey, Richard Lane's diaries are an important document for the history of rural Australia and global publishing."--Dust jacket.

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