Path and Goal
{{Short description|Book by Ada Cambridge}}
{{Use Australian English|date=January 2025}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2025}}
{{Infobox book|
| name = Path and Goal
| title_orig =
| translator =
| image = Path and Goal.png
| caption = Title page for Path and Goal (1900)
| author = Ada Cambridge
| cover_artist =
| country = Australia
| language = English
| series =
| genre = Fiction
| publisher = D. Appleton and Company, New York
| release_date = 1900
| media_type = Print
| pages = 338pp
| isbn =
| preceded_by = Materfamilias
| followed_by = The Devastators
}}
Path and Goal (1900) is a novel by Australian writer Ada Cambridge.{{cite web|title= Path and Goal by Ada Cambridge|publisher= National Library of Australia|url= https://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/1574533 |access-date= 1 January 2025}}
Story outline
Adrian Black is a doctor who has settled in the fictional English provincial city of Wakeminster. The novel follows the doctor's various liaisons, especially with Ruth Strang, a woman he loves and then loses. Many years later, as widows and widowers, they are re-united.
Critical reception
A reviewer in The Australian Town and Country Journal was not impressed with the work: "It is devoutly to be hoped that people in real life do not blunder as stupidly in the most important crises of life as the hero of Ada Cambridge's Path and Goal... A somewhat melodramatic ending by no means atones for the lack of genuine human interest, and the artificial posing of the leading players in the piece."[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article71463902 "New Fiction", The Australian Town and Country Journal, 23 February 1901, p158]
A reviewer in The Advertiser (Adelaide) noted the author's abilities but was non-plussed by the ending: "It is Miss Ada Cambridge's fault that she is not one of the first female writers of the day. She has dash, spirit, vivacity, keen powers of observation, and very fair powers of delineation. But she almost fails of success because of her very qualities...Path and Goal is clever, and on the whole well sustained, but it is hurried, especially towards the end, where the reader is left in doubt as to what precisely happened to the hero and heroine."[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article36976242 "Current Literature", The Advertiser, 6 November 1900, p5]
See also
- Full text of the novel at Princeton University[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101064788142;view=1up;seq=1 Path and Goal by Ada Cambridge]
- 1900 in Australian literature
References
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Category:1900 Australian novels
Category:Novels set in England
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