Beatrice's Commonsensical Approach

Nonfiction, History, Australia & Oceania, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Beatrice's Commonsensical Approach by Maureen Mitson, Ginninderra Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Maureen Mitson ISBN: 9781760410025
Publisher: Ginninderra Press Publication: July 21, 2015
Imprint: Ginninderra Press Language: English
Author: Maureen Mitson
ISBN: 9781760410025
Publisher: Ginninderra Press
Publication: July 21, 2015
Imprint: Ginninderra Press
Language: English
Two women stepped from the steamship Orient onto Australian soil on a hot December day in 1879. Beatrice Beauchamp epitomises the younger middle-class English woman settler unused to the unpleasant. Yet she combats tragedy, and meets challenge and difference with a level of equanimity not commonly expected from one with a genteel upbringing. We share her despair and her fears as from the first day she must call on a personal strength and resolve previously untested. In that, she finds a staunch supporter in Mary Lee. Mrs Mary Lee has been written into many history books. Her political conviction, dedication and determination in campaigning for women's rights led to her being acknowledged by Premier Kingston as most influential in gaining South Australian women the right to vote and not only that, to take a seat in Parliament. Other states followed suit. Yet, despite all her achievements, little has been known of her personal life... Elizabeth Mansutti, former Chairperson of the SA Writers' Centre, local historian, author, poet, playwright and author of Mary Lee - Let her name be honoured, which inspired this novel, writes, 'Mary Lee was described by a contemporary as "fiery". I suspect that in Beatrice she found an acquaintance of similar ilk, and by framing that partnership in this story the author creates the vehicle for satisfying our curiosity about Mary Lee and her significant social contribution. I think it a clever move that is complemented by the finely drawn descriptions of the colonial society of that period.'
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Two women stepped from the steamship Orient onto Australian soil on a hot December day in 1879. Beatrice Beauchamp epitomises the younger middle-class English woman settler unused to the unpleasant. Yet she combats tragedy, and meets challenge and difference with a level of equanimity not commonly expected from one with a genteel upbringing. We share her despair and her fears as from the first day she must call on a personal strength and resolve previously untested. In that, she finds a staunch supporter in Mary Lee. Mrs Mary Lee has been written into many history books. Her political conviction, dedication and determination in campaigning for women's rights led to her being acknowledged by Premier Kingston as most influential in gaining South Australian women the right to vote and not only that, to take a seat in Parliament. Other states followed suit. Yet, despite all her achievements, little has been known of her personal life... Elizabeth Mansutti, former Chairperson of the SA Writers' Centre, local historian, author, poet, playwright and author of Mary Lee - Let her name be honoured, which inspired this novel, writes, 'Mary Lee was described by a contemporary as "fiery". I suspect that in Beatrice she found an acquaintance of similar ilk, and by framing that partnership in this story the author creates the vehicle for satisfying our curiosity about Mary Lee and her significant social contribution. I think it a clever move that is complemented by the finely drawn descriptions of the colonial society of that period.'

More books from Ginninderra Press

Cover of the book The Painted Lady by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book Life Given by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book Can I Tell You a Secret? by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book Only Constants by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book Landscape of Dreams by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book Face to Face by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book Spirit Eyes by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book Tourist or Pilgrim? by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book In a Subjunctive Mood by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book Afterlives by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book Songs for the Band Unformed by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book William Bede Dalley by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book On Thinking About It by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book No Quarter by Maureen Mitson
Cover of the book Siege of Contraries by Maureen Mitson
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy