Albert Dorrington

{{short description|British writer}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2015}}

{{Use British English|date=February 2015}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Albert Dorrington

| image =

| alt =

| caption =

| birth_name = Albert Dorrington

| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1874|09|27}}

| birth_place = Fulham, London, England

| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1953|04|09|1874|09|27}}

| death_place = Ruislip, London, England

| nationality = English

| other_names =

| known_for = Children of the Cloven Hoof

| occupation = novelist and journalist

| alma_mater =

| website =

}}

File:Argosy 191508.jpg in 1915.]]

Albert Dorrington (27 September 1874 – 9 April 1953) was an English writer, active in Australia, who was born in Fulham, London, England.

Life

Dorrington arrived in Australia around 1890 as a sixteen-year-old[http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/dorrington-albert-6003 Australian Dictionary of Biography - Albert Dorrington] and after brief stays in Melbourne and Adelaide, he traveled for many years through the back-country of New South Wales and Queensland as a newspaper and advertising canvasser.[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article33338433 "Pioneers of the Pen" by John K. Ewers, The West Australian, 5 July 1930, p5] He began contributing to The Bulletin in 1895 and by 1899 had settled to live in Sydney. He took employment as a replater of silverware and lived with Leonora Anderson, who bore him several daughters.

He left Australia in 1907 complaining bitterly of the closed literary establishment there and returned to England, where he remained for the rest of his life. He died in Ruislip on 9 April 1953.

Writing career

Dorrington was a frequent contributor to The Bulletin during the 1890s, under the pseudonyms "AD" and "Alba Dorian", and during his time in Australia published a book of short stories, Castro's Last Sacrament and Other Stories, and one novel, The Lady Calphurnia Royal (in collaboration with A. G. Stephens), serialized in The Bookfellow magazine, then in 1909 in book form.W. H. Wilde et al, The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature, Melbourne 2nd ed. 1994 {{ISBN|0 19 553381 X}} On his return to England he published another 13 novels and one collection of short stories. Much of his popular work contained Australian settings, with some noted as having "fantastic content",[http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/dorrington_albert "Dorrington, Albert" SF Encyclopedia] and his novels The Radium Terrors and The Half God are described as science fiction.[http://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/A1511 Austlit - Albert Dorrington]

During his time in Australia he was a close friend of Victor Daley and Louis Becke and initially also of Stephens. However, he and Stephens had a falling out over the publication arrangements of their novel. After his return to England Dorrington was published in such magazines as Pall Mall Magazine, as well as in The Daily Telegraph and elsewhere.

Dorrington was variously described as "extravagant and tawdry"[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article58149883 "Australian Novel - What is Wanted" by A.G. Stephens, The Register, 14 May 1910, p4] and "a writer of vigorous clear-cut stories".[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article56520555 "Australian Prose - A Brief Survey", The Register, 10 September 1927, p5]

Bibliography

= Novels =

  • And the Day Came: A Novel (1908)
  • The Lady Calphurnia Royal with Alfred George Stephens (1909)
  • Our Lady of the Leopards (1911)
  • Children of the Cloven Hoof (1911)
  • A South Sea Buccaneer (1911)
  • The Radium Terrors (1911)
  • A Door in the Desert (1927)
  • The Moon-Dial (1928)
  • The Fatal Call (1929)
  • Madonna Island (1932)
  • The Velvet Claw (1932)
  • The Half God (1933)
  • A Mirror in Chinatown (1933)

= Short story collection =

  • Castro's Last Sacrament and Other Stories (1900)
  • Stories to the Master (1926)

References

{{reflist}}