Mary Fortune

Mary Helena Fortune (c. 1833 – 1911) was an Australian writer, under the pseudonyms Waif Wander and W.W. She was one of the earliest female detective writers in the world,[1] and probably the first to write from the viewpoint of the detective. Never financially secure, she wrote prolifically over several genres including Poetry, Detective, Gothic Horror, Journalism and Travel writing.

Mary Fortune
Born1833
Belfast
Died1911
Pen nameWaif Wander
W.W.
NationalityAustralian
Genrecrime fiction
SpouseJoseph Fortune
Percy Rollo Brett

Personal life

She was born Mary Helena Wilson around 1833 in Belfast, Ireland. Her mother, Eleanor, née Atkinson, died when she was very young, so she travelled with her father, civil engineer George Wilson to Montreal, Canada. In Melbourne, Canada, she married Joseph Fortune on 25 March 1851 and they had one son. When her father left Canada for the Australian goldfields, she followed him after receiving an offer to write about the goldrush for the Ladies Companion. She left her husband behind and travelled to Australia with her son, arriving in Melbourne, Victoria, on 3 October 1855.

In November 1856, she gave birth to a second son, registered under the name of her husband, although there is no record of him ever entering Australia. She soon found it more financially rewarding to work for local newspapers, and several were pleased to publish her poetry, although The Mount Alexander Mail withdrew a job offer after realising she was female[2] In January 1858 her elder son died. On 25 October 1858, Mary married a Police constable, Percy Rollo Brett (possibly bigamously) at Dunolly, Victoria.[1] It has been surmised she may have obtained knowledge of police procedure and cases from him.[3]

A prolific storyteller, she wrote in all over 500 detective stories over 40 years, most featuring Detective Mark Sinclair.

During her lifetime, she was popular enough to have a racehorse[4] and greyhound[5] named after her.

She became an alcoholic and was arrested several times for public drunkenness.[6] The Australian Journal gave her an annuity when, her eyesight failing, she was unable to write.[7] In 1910 she was in the "Benevolent Asylum" and she died in 1911. Her place of burial was unknown until 2016, when her grave was discovered at Springvale Cemetery. Her death passed without public notice, in part because she wrote under pseudonyms.[8][9]

Her horror fiction story "The White Maniac: A Doctor's Tale" (included in James Doig's anthology Australian Ghost Stories (2010)) verges on being a tale of vampirism, but its theme is in fact anthropophagy.

The Detective's Album

She is best known for The Detective's Album, the longest-running early detective serial anywhere in the world.[10] Narrated by detective Mark Sinclair, The Detective's Album was serialized for forty years in the Australian Journal from 1868 to 1908. In 1871, seven of the stories were published as a book, as The Detective's Album: Tales of the Australian Police.[2]

In the early 1880s she collected her notes from the Goldfield days, and wrote a serial that was part memoir, part travelogue under the title Twenty-Six Years Ago; or, the Diggings from '55 [11] It was later republished as a book, The Fortunes of Mary Fortune in 1989.

Bibliography

Novels

  • Bertha's Legacy (1866)
  • Clyzia the Dwarf : A Romance (1866)
  • The Secrets of Balbrooke : A Tale (1866)
  • The Bushranger's Autobiography (1872)
  • Dan Lyons' Doom (1884)
  • Dora Carleton : A Tale of Australia (1886)

Short story collections

  • The Detective's Album : Tales of the Australian Police (1871)
  • The Fortunes of Mary Fortune (1996) edited by Lucy Sussex
  • Three Murder Mysteries (2009)

Poetry collection

  • Cooee and Other Poems (1995)

Examples of her work

gollark: Are you *also* going to have to roll krist back 23 hours too?
gollark: ÅAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
gollark: Did you *do something*‽
gollark: There is actually OS.js, and Node OS.
gollark: Both in the sense of "actually competent enough" and "aligned enough to human values".

References

  1. Sussex, Lucy. "Fortune, Mary Helena". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Melbourne University Press. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  2. Lemon, Barbara. "Fortune, Mary Helena (c. 1833 – 1910)". Australian Women's Archives Project. The National Foundation for Australian Women (NFAW) and University of Melbourne. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  3. Charleston, Libby-Jane (21 April 2017). "Australian Firsts: Mary Fortune, The World's First Female Detective Author". Huffington Post. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  4. "Kingston Turf Club". The Argus. Melbourne. 20 March 1891. p. 10. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  5. "Queanbeyan Coursing Club". Queanbeyan Age. 14 September 1887. p. 2. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  6. "Literary". Mercury. 19 February 1874. p. 2. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  7. "Mary Fortune". Victorian Fiction Researchguides. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  8. Sussex, Lucy. "A Woman of Mystery: Mary Fortune". The Lucy Sussex Home Page. Lucy Sussex. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  9. Steger, Jason (7 July 2016). "Solved! The case of Mary Fortune, the pioneering crime writer who vanished". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  10. Doig, James (June 2011). "Australian Ghost Stories". The National Library Magazine: 22–24. ISSN 1836-6147.
  11. Brown, Megan (2010). "Mary Fortune's Life in the Colonial Periodical Press". In Collett, A. (ed.). The Unsociable Sociability of Women's Lifewriting. Springer. pp. 128–147. ISBN 9780230294868 via Google Books.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.