Albert Dorrington

Albert Dorrington
Born Albert Dorrington
27 September 1874
Fulham, London, England
Died 9 April 1953 (aged 78)
Ruislip, London, England
Nationality British
Occupation novelist and journalist
Known for Children of the Cloven Hoof

Albert Dorrington (27 September 1874 — 9 April 1953)[1] was a British writer who was born in Fulham, London, England.

Life

Dorrington arrived in Australia around 1890 as a sixteen-year-old[1] 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.[2] 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.[1]

Writing career

Dorrington was the author of 13 novels (one in collaboration with A. G. Stephens) and two collections of short stories. Much of his popular work contained Australian settings, with some noted as having "fantastic content",[3] and his novels The Radium Terrors and The Half God are described as science fiction.[4]

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.[1]

Dorrington was variously described as "extravagant and tawdry"[5] and "a writer of vigorous clear-cut stories".[6]

Bibliopgrahy

Novels

Short story collection

References