Louis Kaye (author)

Louis Kaye was the pseudonym of Noel Wilson Norman (14 July 1901 - 19 April 1981), an Australian novelist and short story writer. He also published short stories under the names Grant Doyle Cooper and James Linnel.

He was born in Claremont, Tasmania to a well-connected Lindisfarne family but was more interested in an adventurous outback life than one of business and politics. From 1917 he was to make frequent forays into the Western Australian bush to experience first-hand life in the bush and deserts of outback Australia. His experience of aboriginal life was augmented by reading the works of anthropologist Baldwin Spencer.[1]

He was already a successful contributor of short stories to overseas magazines in 1931 when he wrote his first novel, Tybal Men, set in a WA sheep station. He is regarded as giving a realistic depiction of bush life and aboriginal culture, though criticised for emulating the "violent excesses of the American cowboy novel".[2]

His brother Don (Donald Manners Thirkell) Norman (24 April 1909 - 10 March 2001) was a writer (e.g. Errol Flynn : the Tasmanian story W.N. Hurst and E.L. Metcalf, Hobart c1981 ISBN 0-9594146-0-6) and historian.

Short stories

A partial list of Kaye's short stories includes:[3]

Novels

also as Tybal Men - A Struggle For Survival in the Outback Angus and Robertson, Sydney 1988 ISBN 0-207-14813-9

Sources

See also

References

  1. Roe, Michael. "Noel Norman". The Companion to Tasmanian History. University of Tasmania. Retrieved 30 June 2010.
  2. Sydney Morning Herald 24 November 1933
  3. FictionMags website
  4. Camperdown Chronicle 20 May 1937
  5. Brisbane Courier (criticism) 14 November 1931
  6. Brisbane Courier 26 March 1932
  7. Courier Mail (review) 24 March 1934
  8. The Argus (review) Friday September 1934
  9. The Mercury (review) 12 June 1936
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