Mabel Forrest Explained

Mabel Forrest
Birth Name:Helena Mabel Checkley Mills
Birth Date:6 March 1872
Birth Place:Yandilla, Queensland
Death Place:Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Nationality:Australian
Occupation:novelist, short story writer, poet, and journalist

Helena Mabel Checkley Forrest (6 March 1872 – 18 March 1935) was an Australian writer and journalist.[1]

Life

Forrest was born near Yandilla, Queensland (now part of Toowoomba Region), the daughter of James Checkley Mills and his wife Margaret Nelson, née Haxell. She began writing at an early age but did not publish her first book, The Rose of Forgiveness and other Stories, until 1904.

She became well known as a writer of verse following the publication of her first volume of poems, Alpha Centauri, which appeared in Melbourne in 1909. Her first novel A Bachelor's Wife, was included in the Bookstall series in 1914. The Green Harper (prose and verse) followed in 1915, and Streets and Gardens, a small collection of verse, in 1922.

In 1924 The Wild Moth, a novel, was published in London, and was followed by four other novels, Gaming Gods (1926), Hibiscus Heart (1927), Reaping Roses (1928), and White Witches (1929). Poems by M. Forrest, a collection of her verse contributions to Australian, English and American magazines, was published at Sydney in 1927.[2]

In addition to her work in book form, for the last 30 years of her life Forrest poured out a constant stream of verse and short stories for newspapers and magazines. Her verse is represented in several anthologies.

Death and family

Forrest died of pneumonia on 18 March 1935 in Brisbane, after a long illness and only two days after her last poem, 'Waning Moon', appeared in the Australasian. She was twice married and was survived by a daughter. Gaming Gods was dedicated to the memory of her second husband, John Forrest.[3]

Selected works

Novels

Collections

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mabel Forrest (1872–1935) by Kay Ferres . Australian Dictionary of Biography. 2 April 2024.
  2. News: OBITUARY. . . Melbourne . 19 March 1935 . 1 August 2012 . 8 . National Library of Australia . 11 December 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191211223109/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/12220855 . live .
  3. News: OBITUARY. . . Hobart, Tasmania . 19 March 1935 . 1 August 2012 . 10 . National Library of Australia . 14 December 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191214161958/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/29186563 . live .