1944 in Australian literature
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article presents a list of the historical events and publications of Australian literature during 1944.
- The Ern Malley literary hoax is conceived when Angry Penguins editor Max Harris publishes the poems of the fictitious poet Ern Malley in the Autumn 1944 edition of his magazine. The poems had been concocted in 1943 by Australian writers James McAuley and Harold Stewart.[1]
Books
- Bernard Cronin – The Shadows Mystery[2]
- Zora Cross – This Hectic Age[3]
- Zane Grey – Wilderness Trek: A Novel of Australia[4]
- Nevil Shute – Pastoral
- Christina Stead – For Love Alone
Short stories
- Alan Marshall – "Trees Can Speak"[5]
- Katharine Susannah Prichard – Potch and Colour[6]
Children's and Young Adult fiction
Poetry
- Rosemary Dobson – In a Convex Mirror: Poems[9]
- Geoffrey Dutton – Night Flight and Sunrise[10]
- E. M. England – Queensland Days : Poems[11]
- R. D. Fitzgerald – "The Face of the Waters"[12]
- Mary E. Fullerton – "Emus"
- William Hart-Smith – "Baiamai's Never-Failing Stream"
- Nora Kelly – 1940–1942[13]
- Will Lawson – Bill the Whaler and Other Verse[14]
- James McAuley – "The Blue Horses"[15]
- Ern Malley – The Darkening Ecliptic[16]
- Ian Mudie – Poets at War: An Anthology of Verse by Australian Servicemen (edited)[17]
- Elizabeth Riddell – "The Children March"
- Kenneth Slessor
- "Beach Burial"
- One Hundred Poems: 1919–1939[18]
- Judith Wright
- "Bora Ring"[19]
- "Brother and Sisters"[20]
- "Bullocky"
- "Country Town"
- "Remittance Man"
Biography
- James Devaney – Shaw Neilson[21]
- Miles Franklin and Kate Baker – Joseph Furphy: The Legend of a Man and His Book[22]
- Alan Marshall – These are My People[23]
Awards and honours
Literary
| Award | Author | Title | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|
| ALS Gold Medal[24] | Not awarded | ||
Births
A list, ordered by date of birth (and, if the date is either unspecified or repeated, ordered alphabetically by surname) of births in 1944 of Australian literary figures, authors of written works or literature-related individuals follows, including year of death.
- 3 January – Blanche d'Alpuget, novelist and biographer[25]
- 20 January – Caroline Caddy, poet[26]
- 17 February – Robert Dessaix, novelist and journalist[27]
- 25 March – Tim Thorne, poet (died 2021)[28]
- 22 April – Damien Broderick, novelist and journalist (died 2025)[29]
- 15 May – David Foster, novelist[30]
- 22 May – John Flanagan, novelist (died 2026)[31]
- 23 July – Alex Buzo, playwright (died 2006)[32]
- 27 July – Andrew Burke, poet (died 2023)[33]
- 25 December – Ross Fitzgerald, novelist and historian[34]
- 29 December – Gerard Windsor, novelist[35]
Unknown date
- Bruce Elder, journalist[36]
- Morag Fraser, journalist and critic[37]