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A Woman's Friendship, one of the author's
many newspaper novels, was serialised in the Age in 1889. It is
now, for the first time, available in book form. Elizabeth Morrison's edition
for the Colonial Texts Series is a careful rendering of the newspaper text,
with an extended introduction and notes and, as an appendix, 'The Reform
Club', a short story version written by Cambridge thirty-one years later.
In this gentle satire of clase and sexuality,
Ada Cambridge opens a window on Melbourne society of the 1880s and illuminates
some important issues of the day - reform of dress and diet, the 'marriage
question', socialism, and women's suffrage.
The Grand Melbourne Exhibition of 1888 is a most
agreeable place for Margaret Clive, a journalist's wife, and Patty Kinnaird,
married to a squatter, to pursue their 'purely intellectual friendship'
with handsome, widowed and wealthy Seaton Macdonald. The triangular relationship
changes, however, when the women are house guests at Yarrock, MacDonalds
magnificent country property - and unadmitted attractions begin to surface. |
Up the Murray was her first published novel
- it was serialised in the Australasian, a Melbourne weekly, in
1875. A Woman's Friendship was her sixteenth. In all there were
twenty-eight novels, together with short stories, essays, and volumes of
poetry and of autobiography. Cambridge died in Melbourne in 1926, aged
eighty-one.
Elizabeth Morrison is a research librarian with interests in Australian literary and newspaper history. She formerly lectured at Monash University.
Last Updated : 1 March 2007