
Rolf Boldrewood (1826–1915)
Author of Robbery Under Arms
About the Author
Disambiguation Notice:
Thomas Alexander Browne wrote under the name Rolf Boldrewood.
Works by Rolf Boldrewood
Plain living : a bush idyll 6 copies
War to the Knife : or Tangata Maori 4 copies
The sealskin cloak 2 copies
Associated Works
Reader's Digest Condensed Books: The Suitcases / Octavia's Hill / Callanish / Robbery Under Arms (1985) — Author — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Browne, Thomas Alexander
- Other names
- Brown, Thomas Alexander
- Birthdate
- 1826-08-06
- Date of death
- 1915-03-11
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- pastoralist
police magistrate
gold commissioner
novelist - Relationships
- Boldrewood, Mrs Rolf (wife)
Boldrewood, Rose (daughter) - Nationality
- Australia
- Places of residence
- London, England, UK
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia - Burial location
- Brighton Cemetery, Melbourne, Australia
- Disambiguation notice
- Thomas Alexander Browne wrote under the name Rolf Boldrewood.
- Associated Place (for map)
- Australia
Members
Reviews
Robbery under Arms; a story of life and adventure in the bush and in the Australian goldfields by Rolf Boldrewood
Like many young countries, the first 100 years of Australia's (colonised) history don't yield much in the way of great fiction. You could do a Top 10 list comfortably without missing anything important. Robbery Under Arms must be on that list.
Is it slow-going? Yes. Is it rambling? Certainly, although in a pleasingly modern way. In fact, "modern" is a word that comfortably fits this book. Despite being written more than 130 years ago, the characters and especially the dialogue feel show more astoundingly up-to-date. This is real speech, not the kind featured in high literature, and it captures the reality of life in 19th century Australia from a working-class - and indeed outlawed class - perspective. Astounding to think that the main roads I travel along each week were the province of bushrangers and far-flung carriages only a little over a century ago.
This is very much a melodrama, no question, but it taps into something more. The 19th century fad for serialised novels had hit by this point, and Boldrewood creates something moving - at least in his male characters - that goes beyond a story of stick-em-up adventures. Very enjoyable. show less
Is it slow-going? Yes. Is it rambling? Certainly, although in a pleasingly modern way. In fact, "modern" is a word that comfortably fits this book. Despite being written more than 130 years ago, the characters and especially the dialogue feel show more astoundingly up-to-date. This is real speech, not the kind featured in high literature, and it captures the reality of life in 19th century Australia from a working-class - and indeed outlawed class - perspective. Astounding to think that the main roads I travel along each week were the province of bushrangers and far-flung carriages only a little over a century ago.
This is very much a melodrama, no question, but it taps into something more. The 19th century fad for serialised novels had hit by this point, and Boldrewood creates something moving - at least in his male characters - that goes beyond a story of stick-em-up adventures. Very enjoyable. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 22
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 490
- Popularity
- #50,415
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 119
- Languages
- 2
- Favorited
- 1













