Zora Cross
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Zora Bernice May Cross (18 May 1890 - 22 January 1964) was an Australian poet, novelist and journalist.
She was born in Brisbane, and was educated at Ipswich Girls' Grammar School and then Sydney Teachers' College. She taught for three years and then worked as a journalist, for the Boomerang and then as a freelance writer.[1]
She was known not only for her poems, including sonnet sequences, but for a private life scandalous by the standards of her time. She wrote about sex, childbirth and war, in terms also considered too explicit by contemporaries.
As Bernice May, she wrote a regular column in the 1930s for the Australian Women's Mirror. It comprised interviews with women writers.[1]
[edit] Works
- A Song of Mother Love (1916)
- Songs of Love and Life (1917)
- The Lilt of Life (1918)
- The City of Riddle-Me-Ree (1918)
- Elegy on an Australian Schoolboy (1921)
- Memory (1940)
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
- Adelaide, Debra (1988) Australian women writers: a bibliographic guide, London, Pandora
Persondata | |
---|---|
NAME | Cross, Zora |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | May, Bernice |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Poet, novelist and journalist |
DATE OF BIRTH | 1890 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | |
DATE OF DEATH | 1964 |
PLACE OF DEATH |