Author picture

Susanna De Vries

Author of Heroic Women of War

31+ Works 374 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Susanna De Vries

Heroic Women of War (2004) 40 copies
Blue Ribbons Bitter Bread (2000) 30 copies
Great Australian women (2001) 21 copies

Associated Works

To Hell and Back: The Banned Account of Gallipoli (2007) — Biography — 28 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
De Vries, Susanne
Other names
Evans, Susanna
Birthdate
1935
Gender
female
Nationality
Australia

Members

Reviews

I only read the first section on Australian pioneering women owing to time constraints and it being a book club book.
The book gives a vivid idea of what those pioneering women faced, the hardships, desolation, and unbelievable deprivations they faced. My admiration for those women has increased fourfold.
I was encouraged to read that in their interactions with the Aborigines, they treated them as equals and gained their respect.
Well researched and written.
 
Flagged
GeoffSC | Jul 25, 2020 |
Don’t you hate it when a publisher re-publishes a book with a different title so that you unwittingly buy the same book twice? That’s what happened to me with Great Pioneer Women of the Outback which I bought when it was released in 2005. It was then rebadged in 2010 as The Complete Book of Heroic Australian Women, which is a compilation of Great Pioneer Women and another previously published book called Heroic Australian Women In War. But there’s nothing about this Complete Book being a compilation on the Harper Collins website nor on the cover of the book – this IMO rather important information is tucked away on the verso page. I didn’t discover it until I’d finished the book and then scoured the TBR for the ‘other’ book about pioneer Aussie women that I knew had somewhere. I was not best pleased to discover then that I’d already just read it!

I wouldn’t have minded so much if I’d enjoyed the book. It took me ages to read it, plodding dutifully through it over breakfast for what seemed like forever. It felt like a book that had been commissioned for the school market to redress a gender imbalance rather than a book written from the heart. I bet that great slabs of it feature in earnest essays about ‘The Role of Women in Early Settlement’, and ‘The Role of Women in War’.

The first half of the book is about 10 Australian pioneer women, whose stories are known from their letters, journals and books. Georgiana Molloy, Fanny Bussell and Jeannie a.k.a. Mrs Aeneas Gunn, and more. The story of Georgiana Molloy was quite interesting – but that might have been because she was first in the book. Tough as it undoubtedly was for these women, there’s a limit to how much you want to read about tedious journeys over appalling roads, outback isolation, cursed weather, primitive facilities and 19th century childbirth or premature death.

(And if this book is used as a resource in schools, I hope that teachers also give due consideration to the challenges faced by lower-class urban women, not to mention the dreadful suffering of Aboriginal women dispossessed by these pioneers.

To read the rest of my review which is about Pt 2 of the book about heroic women in war, please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2012/06/14/the-complete-book-of-heroic-australian-women...
… (more)
 
Flagged
anzlitlovers | Aug 15, 2016 |
nonfiction...biography

4 ★

6 October 1859 – 18 April 1951
As an anthropologist living among the Australian aborigines, Daisy Mae Bates compiled and published a unique collection of material about them.
She was born as Margaret Dwyer in County Tipperary, Ireland in 1859. At age 23, she emigrated to Australia on the R.M.S. Almora and began life anew.
She reworked the threads of childhood poverty and created a Daisy May O'Dwyer, born into a life of opulence.

She married poet and horseman Breaker Morant (1884).
Never divorced, she moved to New South Wales and met and married John (Jack) Bates..(1885)

"Daisy Bates' pulled herself up to become governess, wife, mother, journalist, intrepid traveler and one of Australia's most controversial ethnographers. Her lack of convention went deeper than her private life; at a time when white Australia mostly turned its back on indigenous Australians, Daisy set out to study desert Aborigines and document their culture." (publishers note)

Apparently the web of lies woven made Daisy a somewhat difficult biographical study.

I did appreciate reading historian Susanna de Vries portrait of Daisy Bates.
… (more)
 
Flagged
pennsylady | 1 other review | Feb 11, 2016 |
3.5 - 4 stars

Although I initially didn't really care for Daisy Bates, I must admit she was a colourful character and one gutsy woman. A lot of this biography is supposition - I've never seen so many if, maybe, perhaps and possibly in the space of one book, but then Daisy covered her tracks well and created her own legend; digging up the true story would be very difficult and I think the author made a valiant effort.

Daisy Bates was the daughter of poor Irish Catholic parents, her father was an alcoholic and her mother died early of tubercolosis. As a teenager, she re-invents herself as a semi-aristocratic heiress and governess, travels to Australia, marries three times in less than two years (without bothering to divorce anyone) and returns to England, presumably to extort money from the family of her last husband. Bates returns to Australia at the age of 40 and becomes the champion for Aboriginal welfare (at a time when nobody wanted to hear about that) and spends more or less the rest of her life trekking across the Australian outback living in a tent, recording Aboriginal legends, customs and language, all the while maintaining stict Victorian dress if not morals. She was not the most likable woman, but she certainly was tough and determined and it was a most interesting read.… (more)
 
Flagged
SabinaE | 1 other review | Jan 23, 2016 |

Lists

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
31
Also by
1
Members
374
Popularity
#64,496
Rating
3.9
Reviews
5
ISBNs
90

Charts & Graphs