Photo de l'auteur

Kel Richards

Auteur de The Aussie Bible

59+ oeuvres 1,039 utilisateurs 11 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Séries

Œuvres de Kel Richards

The Aussie Bible (2006) 115 exemplaires
The Lamington Man (2009) 72 exemplaires
Defending the Gospel (2006) 69 exemplaires
The three kangaroos gruff (2009) 52 exemplaires
Murder in the Mummy's Tomb (2001) 49 exemplaires
Goldilocks and the three koalas (2009) 45 exemplaires
Father Koala's Nursery Rhymes (1992) 42 exemplaires
Jesus on Trial (2001) 33 exemplaires
Gumtree Gully (2005) 27 exemplaires
The Case of the Damascus Dagger (1994) 21 exemplaires
Father Koala's Fairy Tales (1997) 19 exemplaires
Dark Storm (2004) 17 exemplaires
Journey Towards God (2003) 16 exemplaires
Aussie Christmas Carol (2007) 15 exemplaires
Aussie Yarns (2005) 15 exemplaires
The third bloodstain (1995) 15 exemplaires
More Aussie Bible (2007) 14 exemplaires
Little Red Riding Hoodie (2014) 13 exemplaires
The Story of Australian English (2015) 13 exemplaires
The Second Death (1994) 13 exemplaires
Death in Egypt (1996) 12 exemplaires
Moonlight Shadows (1994) 12 exemplaires
ABC Classic FM's word of the day (2004) 11 exemplaires
Kel Richards' wordwatch (2002) 11 exemplaires
Father Koala's fables (1993) 10 exemplaires
Flash Jim (2021) 8 exemplaires
The Sinister Student. (2016) 7 exemplaires
Christmas Wordwatch (2007) 6 exemplaires
Jacko and the beanstalk (2013) 6 exemplaires
An Outbreak of Darkness (1996) 6 exemplaires
Two Roads (2008) 4 exemplaires
The Floating Corpse (2015) 4 exemplaires
Snowy White and the Seven Wombats (2015) 4 exemplaires
Big Book of Aussie Dinosaurs (2014) 4 exemplaires
The ballad of the two sons (1993) 2 exemplaires
Domestic bliss and other verse (1988) 2 exemplaires
Clues for Armchair Detectives (1991) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Australian Stories for the Soul (2001) — Contributeur — 41 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Membres

Critiques

FLASH JIM is the story of James Hardy Vaux, writer of Australia's first dictionary and first true-crime memoir. It's kind of appealing to know the first dictionary came about as a result of the inability of colonial police and magistrates to understand the slang used by the criminal classes. I will admit to being somewhat startled still to discover the words and phrases that are particularly unique to Australian English (normally as a result of the utterly blank look on the face of the hearer from another land).

But the story of James Hardy Vaux is the main point of FLASH JIM, with a reprint of the original dictionary included at the end, entitled A New and Comprehensive Vocabulary of the Flash Language. This is the component of the book that I found particularly fascinating, with many of the words and phrases new to me, and many still in common use today.

The bulk of the biography by Richards uses for source material Vaux's own published memoir, entitled 'Memoirs of the First Thirty-Two Years of the Life of James Hardy Vaux, A Swindler and Pickpocket; Now Transported, For the Second Time, and For Life, To New South Wales. Written by Himself'. Needless to say Vaux seems like an unrepentant man, somebody very inclined towards being quite chuffed with themselves. Despite being born into a relatively well off family, with the offer of a good education and a long-term professional career, he took to crime at the age of fourteen starting out embezzling an employer, raising that to confidence scams, pick-pocketing and a range of other crimes designed to supplement that wage he was usually earning working as a clerk. Despite what was ultimately three transportation's to the penal colony in the end, nothing much seemed to dissuade Vaux from his preference for crime, and he developed a hefty ego and a sense of charm that he seemed to think would detract from the ongoing criminal behaviour.

Having said that, its hard to know exactly what to believe given the primary source is the subject's own words, and ego definitely appears to have been something he had in spades. And perhaps that's where my greatest doubt about FLASH JIM came from. Whilst very readable, there's something here that didn't flow quite right, for want of a better description, perhaps best described as a lack of connectivity between the story of the dictionary itself and the story of Vaux's own life. There's also some interesting gaps in the lifestory (questions never able to be answered it seems); two wives, fate unknown; and his own vanishing after being released from a third stint in a Sydney jail. No record of him ever found again, no idea where he died or how or when. Odd ending for a flashy, egotistical, centre of attention type such as James Hardy Vaux. Perhaps that's part of the reason for the dictionary and his own story being largely unknown. To rectify that, FLASH JIM, is well worth a read.

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/flash-jim-kel-richards
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
austcrimefiction | 1 autre critique | Jun 29, 2021 |
Though English has been considered the language of our country since it was invaded/colonised by the British in 1788, did you know that legally Australia has no official language? Neither did I! While our language today continues to adhere to the conventions of British English with regards to spelling and grammar, from very early on, Australian English began to develop its own unique quirks.
Slang, also known as flash and cant, was a term originally used to refer to the language used mostly by criminals in 16th and 17th century England and so it’s no surprise that it thrived in Australia, and took on a life of its own as British, Irish, and Scottish convicts mixed in the British penal colony.
In 1812 an opportunistic convict, James Hardy Vaux, heard the grumblings of the colony’s police and magistrates who were at a loss to understand much of the slang used among criminals, and always eager to press any advantage, presented his supervisor with ‘A New and Comprehensive Vocabulary of the Flash Language’ – Australia’s very first dictionary. Included as an Appendix in Flash Jim, browsing through the dictionary proves fascinating, revealing words and phrases both strange and familiar.
The bulk of Kel Richards Flash Jim however is a biography of James Vaux, drawing on several sources, mainly the man’s own published memoirs, ‘Memoirs of The First Thirty-Two Years of the Life Of James Hardy Vaux, A Swindler and Pickpocket; Now Transported, For The Second Time, And For Life, To New South Wales. Written By Himself.’
Flash Jim reveals a man who was an extraordinary character. Though born into a family able to provide him a good education and entry into a comfortable profession, James took his first step into a life of crime by embezzling from his employer at aged fourteen. Over the next few years, never satisfied with wages earned as a clerk, James indulged in a number of illegal activities from confidence scams to pick pocketing, with reasonable success, that is until inevitably, his luck ran out. Not that even being sentenced to transportation to New Holland on three separate occasions, seemed to deter his criminal impulses. Vaux, who used a number of aliases over his lifetime, seemed to have possessed an uncanny charm which often saw him turn even the most dire of circumstances to his advantage. I was absolutely fascinated by him, and his antics, marvelling at his ego and nerve, though as Richards regularly reminds us, Vaux’s own words can hardly be trusted.
It’s unclear just how much of Richards own creativity informs the retelling he has crafted, though I imagine he has taken some liberties. I thought it read well, though personally I would have preferred for the author to have found a way to integrate the story of the dictionary more fully into the narrative of Vaux’s biography.
James Hardy Vaux is the sort of incorrigible, dissolute character that Australians delight in claiming as part of our convict past so I’m surprised that I hadn’t heard of him before now, particularly given his twin achievements as the writer of Australia’s first dictionary, and the first true-crime memoir. I expect Flash Jim will be enjoyed by readers interested in Australian colonial history, the etymology of Australian English, or just a bang up yarn.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
shelleyraec | 1 autre critique | May 27, 2021 |
I picked this one from the church lending library because I knew the author once. Kel and I worked on Brisbane radio at the same time, although on different stations. We were also among the small group of broadcasters who were openly Christian. Kel has written a series of crime fictions, this one published in 1994. He tells a good story that unravels in the most important way for this genre, namely, it keeps you reading to see what happens next. At the end there is a crisis and a reveal that you may not see coming. Apart from that, the writing is light and easy, the characters rather thin, and the romance cringe-worthy. Kel has also tried to weave in the Christian message of salvation. A worthy attempt, but it feels out of place, and the dialogue changes in style so that it becomes a sermon, or a religious tract. I'd say Kel was aware of the difficulty in making this work, as he has one of his characters comment on its sermon-like nature.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
PhilipJHunt | Apr 18, 2017 |
Fun but even an idiot like me will be able to solve it from the first. Like the second book in this series there is just too much theological debate. I found myself skipping pages to avoid it and I just don't think that it adds anything to the story or characters in fact is makes C.S. Lewis appear a bit of a superior bore. This could be a fun series but I would have to think carefully before reading any more of this series.
 
Signalé
simon_carr | Aug 4, 2016 |

Listes

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Statistiques

Œuvres
59
Aussi par
1
Membres
1,039
Popularité
#24,780
Évaluation
3.2
Critiques
11
ISBN
101
Langues
1

Tableaux et graphiques