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Steele Rudd (1868–1935)

Author of On our selection ; and, Our new selection

41+ Works 376 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Steete Rudd, Steele Rudd

Image credit: Wikimedia Commons

Works by Steele Rudd

On our selection ; and, Our new selection (1899) 83 copies, 4 reviews
On Our Selection (1899) 82 copies, 2 reviews
The old homestead (1913) 34 copies
The Rudd family (1926) 31 copies
A city selection (1909) 31 copies
Dad & Dave (1984) 14 copies
Dad and Dave's selection (1988) 9 copies
Sandy's selection (1957) 7 copies
Dad & Dave Stories (1981) 6 copies

Associated Works

Australian Short Stories (1951) — Contributor — 45 copies
Australian Literature: An Anthology of Writing from the Land Down Under (1993) — Contributor — 29 copies, 1 review
Classic Australian Short Stories (1974) — Contributor — 12 copies
A Century of Australian Short Stories (1971) — Contributor — 5 copies

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Reviews

8 reviews
Exceptional writing from the 1890s, an insight into life in the 19th century Australian bush that is uproarious and touching. Rudd's sense of humour is very "outback", and not something that I think many of my generation appreciate. I count myself among that number sometimes! But I'm lucky to have the bush in my blood enough to enjoy this. I ultimately prefer Henry Lawson's Joe Wilson stories because of the added layer of tasty despair that he incorporates. But Rudd was writing in the show more tradition of rural comedy that has persisted for centuries. The tough frontier life, and even just life for those doing it tough in the very real working class of the time (parts of Australia didn't have indoor plumbing until well into the 1970s), was made bearable by that sense of humour, taking the worst of life with a sense of humility and endurance. Beyond the humour, this is an insight into a lifestyle that has all but vanished in our century. show less
A little Australian classic of bush humour. Written by Rudd as recollections of his family's life on their selection in the Darling Downs in the late 19th century.
After allowing for the comic exaggerations of the hardships, there is still an echo of the physical and financial hardships faced by new settlers converting virgin bush into agricultural land with little or no capital.
Brilliant! Real life hardships mixed with classic Australian humour.
Style was definitely lacking. Did not stand the test of time. But interesting to read a view of Australian colonial settlement.

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Statistics

Works
41
Also by
4
Members
376
Popularity
#64,174
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
7
ISBNs
81

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