Puneet Varma (Editor)

On the Track (short story collection)

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Country
  
Australia

Genre
  
Short story collection

Pages
  
157pp

Author
  
Henry Lawson

Followed by
  
Over the Sliprails

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1900

Originally published
  
1900

Publisher
  
Angus & Robertson

On the Track (short story collection) t0gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRNLPuA2yY1L9IPjn

Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Preceded by
  
Verses, Popular and Humorous

Similar
  
Henry Lawson books, Classical Studies books

On the Track (1900) is a collection of short stories by Australian poet and author Henry Lawson. It was released in hardback by Angus and Robertson in 1900, and features one of the author's better known stories in "Bill, the Ventriloquial Rooster", as well as a number of lesser known works.

Contents

The collection contains nineteen stories which are mostly reprinted from a variety of newspaper and magazine sources, with several published here for the first time.

Contents

  • "The Songs They Used To Sing"
  • "A Vision of Sandy Blight"
  • "Andy Page's Rival"
  • "The Iron-Bark Chip"
  • "Middleton's Peter"
  • "The Mystery of Dave Regan"
  • "Mitchell on Matrimony"
  • "Mitchell on Women"
  • "No Place for a Woman"
  • "Mitchell's Jobs"
  • "Bill, the Ventriloquial Rooster"
  • "Bush Cats"
  • "Meeting Old Mates"
  • "Two Larrikins"
  • "Mr Smellingscheck"
  • "A Rough Shed"
  • "Payable Gold"
  • "An Oversight of Steelman's"
  • "How Steelman Told His Story"
  • Critical reception

    A reviewer in The Freeman's Journal (Sydney) noted that the collection is "a very representative collection of Henry Lawson's inimitable bush sketches. Many of these have appeared from time to time in various Australian journals, including the Freeman, but the collection will not suffer in popular estimation on that account, for it makes up a very interesting volume of Lawson at his best."

    In The Evening News (Sydney) the reviewer was not so impressed: "The stories are written with all Lawson's well-known descriptive power, and one regrets that the author does not occasionally give us some different phase of bush life to the sordid side that, he is so fond of. The unlovely swaggie is not even picturesque, and he is decidedly wearisome. Lawson might, now and then strike a higher note and relieve us from the ever-haunting presence of Bill and Jim with their swags and 'nosebags.' It seems strange that one who can so well appreciate the poetry of the bush in verse persistently ignores it in prose."

    References

    On the Track (short story collection) Wikipedia