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C. J. DeGaris Publishing House C. J. DeGaris Publishing House i(A68631 works by) (Organisation) assertion
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1 y separately published work icon As I See Geelong in 1935 C. J. De Garis , Hawthorn : C. J. DeGaris Publishing House , 1925 Z814222 1925 single work
1 y separately published work icon The Victories of Failure : A Business Romance of Fiction, Blended With, and Based on, Fact C. J. De Garis , Melbourne : C. J. DeGaris Publishing House , 1925 Z814142 1925 single work novel
2 47 y separately published work icon Rigby's Romance : A Made in Australia Novel Tom Collins , 1905 1905-1906 Z1170260 1905-1906 single work novel satire

Rigby's Romance is a revised and expanded version of the original chapter five in the Such is Life typescript (1898).

The narrator, Tom Collins, is on his way from Echuca to Yooringa to fulfil a contract to clear a Riverina run of cattle. Hoping to meet his old friend, Jefferson Rigby, Collins is surprised by an encounter with Rigby's former sweetheart, Kate Vanderdecken, who has come to Australia in search of Rigby. Collins arranges an introduction before heading to the banks of the Murray River to fish for a thirty-pound cod he has heard is in the area. He is joined by the bullockies Steve Thompson and Robert Dixon, characters from Such is Life, and several others: a kangaroo-hunter named Smith; a trapper named Furlong; a farmer named Binney and his brother-in-law, the Methodist minister Harold Lushington; and, eventually, Rigby himself. Like The Buln-buln and the Brolga, Rigby's Romance involves a series of yarns told in different styles about politics, ethics, religion and law. All hinge in some way on failed love affairs, but, as is his way, Rigby's love story about a local German publican soon evolves into a long sermon on Christian socialism, and he forgets about the appointment he has made with Kate Vanderdecken.

Furphy expressed a preference for Rigby's Romance later in life. Like The Buln-buln and the Brolga, it can be read as an independent work. In revision, Furphy changed the narrative in significant ways, particularly in his expansion of Rigby's sermons on state socialism. In other cases, he probably transferred text from the original chapter two to fill in details at the beginning of the novel. And so, despite its independence as a work, Rigby's Romance retains many cross-references to the larger original work, most notably the presence of Tom Collins as an unreliable narrator.

1 1 y separately published work icon The White Butterfly and Other Fairy Tales Ethel Jackson Morris , Melbourne : C. J. DeGaris Publishing House , 1921 Z1034873 1921 selected work short story children's fantasy
1 3 y separately published work icon Sport of the Gods Ada A. Holman , Melbourne : C. J. DeGaris Publishing House , 1921 Z299151 1921 single work novel
1 5 y separately published work icon The Lost Valley J. M. Walsh , Melbourne : C. J. DeGaris Publishing House , 1921 Z30381 1921 single work novel crime detective A mystery novel set in Victoria's Western District, The Lost Valley continues colonial Australia's interest in romantic notions of hidden riches and lost civilisations.
1 y separately published work icon Facing the Inevitable G. H. S , Melbourne : C. J. DeGaris Publishing House , 1920-1929 Z1379639 1920-1929 single work essay Autobiographical essay on facing imminent death from cancer. Introduction is by W. Farmer Whyte, editor of the Daily Mail, Brisbane, which had published some articles by the author. The introduction and the text clearly indicate that the work is not fiction although it is listed as such by E. Morris Miller.
1 3 y separately published work icon The Ashes of Achievement Frank A. Russell , Melbourne : C. J. DeGaris Publishing House , 1920 Z112574 1920 single work novel E. Morris Miller's Australian Literature From Its Beginnings to 1935 (1940): 746 describes the work as a 'Romance of a Riverina boy who becomes a successful Australian actor and playwright. Action moves between Melbourne and Sydney, with a break in New York. Several prominent Australian artists are easily recognized under their fictitious names. The early chapters contain a vivid account of the Melbourne Public Schools boat race at the time when Wesley College crews were at their zenith. An interesting portraiture is given of Sugden, the Master of Queen's, under the character of 'Savile'.
1 4 y separately published work icon The Everlastin' Ballads : Ballads of Empire Harold Hansell , Melbourne : C. J. DeGaris Publishing House , 1920 Z505028 1920 selected work poetry war literature
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