George Robertson and 'John O'Brien'
Posted: Wed Aug 15, 2012 1:48 pm
I'm currently reading "George Robertson - A Publishing Life in Letters". It was first published in 1982, but I haven't got around to it until now.
It's a great read, full of correspondence between George Robertson (of Angus & Robertson) and all his authors - Banjo Paterson, Henry Lawson, Mary Gilmore, C. J. Dennis, Christopher Brennan, John Le Gay Brereton, Leon Gellert, Zara Cross, Norman Lindsay, May Gibbs, 'John O'Brien' - the list just goes on and on.
I was particularly fascinated by the chapter relating to O'Brien/Hartigan.
It goes something like this. GR sent the poems to David McKee Wright to edit. He did the job very thoroughly, and made the comment that they should sell well, but they weren't really poetry. He also thought them very imitative of Paterson and Lawson.
There is also a suggestion that there was a Catholic/Protestant thing at play, although it's a bit confusing. At one point McKee Wright is described as a 'Sinn Feiner', at another point as a Protestant - wouldn't have thought he could be both.
The problem for GR is that MKW was at that time poetry editor for the Bulletin, which meant he would have given it an unfavourable review.
GR manipulates the situation by asking C. J. Dennis if he would write to the Bulletin, asking if he could review 'Around the Boree Log' when it arrives. (To save Dennis time, GR writes the letter. Dennis just has to sign it.)
Dennis replies that he would be happy to review the book, but could GR get somebody else to write the review, and he will just sign that, too?
They almost fall victim to their own slickness. The Bulletin offers to send Dennis a copy of the book. It would have looked a bit suspicious if he said he had already read it, so he had to hold his review back for a seemly period, which meant it going in to one issue later than what GR had wanted. It all worked out well in the end, though, of course, as we all know.
It's a great read, full of correspondence between George Robertson (of Angus & Robertson) and all his authors - Banjo Paterson, Henry Lawson, Mary Gilmore, C. J. Dennis, Christopher Brennan, John Le Gay Brereton, Leon Gellert, Zara Cross, Norman Lindsay, May Gibbs, 'John O'Brien' - the list just goes on and on.
I was particularly fascinated by the chapter relating to O'Brien/Hartigan.
It goes something like this. GR sent the poems to David McKee Wright to edit. He did the job very thoroughly, and made the comment that they should sell well, but they weren't really poetry. He also thought them very imitative of Paterson and Lawson.
There is also a suggestion that there was a Catholic/Protestant thing at play, although it's a bit confusing. At one point McKee Wright is described as a 'Sinn Feiner', at another point as a Protestant - wouldn't have thought he could be both.
The problem for GR is that MKW was at that time poetry editor for the Bulletin, which meant he would have given it an unfavourable review.
GR manipulates the situation by asking C. J. Dennis if he would write to the Bulletin, asking if he could review 'Around the Boree Log' when it arrives. (To save Dennis time, GR writes the letter. Dennis just has to sign it.)
Dennis replies that he would be happy to review the book, but could GR get somebody else to write the review, and he will just sign that, too?
They almost fall victim to their own slickness. The Bulletin offers to send Dennis a copy of the book. It would have looked a bit suspicious if he said he had already read it, so he had to hold his review back for a seemly period, which meant it going in to one issue later than what GR had wanted. It all worked out well in the end, though, of course, as we all know.