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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › RedheapRedheap - Wikipedia

    Redheap, also published as Every Mother's Son, is a 1930 novel by Norman Lindsay. [ citation needed ] It is a story of life in a country town in Victoria , Australia in the 1890s. Lindsay portrays real characters struggling with the social restrictions of the day.

  2. Redheap is a 1930 novel by Norman Lindsay. It is a story of life in a country town in Victoria, Australia in the 1890s. Lindsay portrays real characters struggling with the social restrictions of the day.

  3. Quick Reference. A novel by Norman Lindsay, was published in the USA in 1930 with the title Every Mother's Son; banned in Australia until 1958, it was published in 1959. Part of ... From: Redheap in The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature ». Subjects: Literature.

  4. Redheap, a novel by Norman Lindsay, was published in the USA in 1930 with the title Every Mother's Son; ... Access to the complete content on Oxford Reference requires a subscription or purchase. Public users are able to search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter without a subscription.

  5. In this paper I outline the various accounts, identify their fallacies and comment critically on the tendency for discussions by historians, journalists and biographers to repeat the claims of previous writers, no matter how erroneous or improbable, with no attempt at veriication. The paper is divided into three parts.

  6. Redheap is a novel I've been meaning to read for quite some time. A product of Creswick's most famous son (although the point is arguable, given the town also claims an Australian Prime Minister, Victorian Premier and the founders of the Australian Shearer's Union, as well as the rest of the prolific Lindsay family.

  7. Abstract. 'Australian authors who published in London were occasionally caught in the Customs’ censorship net when their books were sent to Australia. One such was Norman Lindsay, whose novel Redheap was published by the prestigious London firm of Faber.