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・ Jeannie Berlin
・ Jeannie Blaylock
・ Jeannie C. Riley
・ Jeannie Carson
・ Jeannie Chan
・ Jeannie Cho Lee
・ Jeannie Darneille
・ Jeannie Deakyne
・ Jeannie Drake, Baroness Drake
・ Jeannie Ebner
・ Jeannie Elias
・ Jeannie Epper
・ Jeannie Ferris
・ Jeannie Fisher
・ Jeannie Gaffigan
Jeannie Gunn
・ Jeannie Haddaway
・ Jeannie Hilton
・ Jeannie Hopkirk
・ Jeannie Hsieh
・ Jeannie Jeannie Jeannie
・ Jeannie Lea
・ Jeannie Leavitt
・ Jeannie Lee
・ Jeannie Lewis
・ Jeannie Linero
・ Jeannie Longo
・ Jeannie Mai
・ Jeannie Marie-Jewell
・ Jeannie McDaniel


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Jeannie Gunn : ウィキペディア英語版
Jeannie Gunn

Jeannie Gunn OBE (pen name, Mrs Aeneas Gunn) (5 June 18709 June 1961) was an Australian novelist, teacher and Returned and Services League of Australia (RSL) volunteer.
== Life ==
Jeannie Taylor was born in Carlton, Melbourne, the last of five children of Thomas Johnstone Taylor, a Baptist minister who went into business and later worked on the Melbourne ''Argus''. Matriculating through Melbourne University after being educated at home, Taylor ran a school with her sisters between 1889 and 1896, after which she worked as a visiting teacher. In 1901 she married the explorer, pastoralist and journalist Aeneas James Gunn in the Presbyterian Church. Together they travelled to Darwin (then called Palmerston) and then onto an outlying station at Mataranka. Jeannie Gunn's husband died early in 1903 and she returned to live in Melbourne.
There, at the encouragement of friends, she began writing the books for which she would become famous. ''The Little Black Princess: a True Tale of life in the Never-Never Land'', published in 1905 and revised in 1909, chronicled the childhood of an Indigenous Australian protagonist named Bett-Bett. Gunn's second book, ''We of the Never Never'' (1908), was styled as a novel but was actually a recounting of her time in the Northern Territory with only the names of people changed to obscure their identities. ''We of the Never Never'' sold more than 300,000 copies over thirty years, was translated into German in the 1920s, and by 1931 its author was voted the third most popular Australian novelist after Marcus Clarke and Rolf Boldrewood in a poll by ''The Herald'' (Melbourne).〔 By 1990 over a million copies of the book had been sold.
During the First World War Gunn became active in welfare work for Australian servicemen overseas. At the end of the conflict she began campaigning for the welfare of returned servicemen, liaising with government departments and becoming a patron of the Monbulk RSL, attending every event they organised over two decades. Although she never completed another novel, she did publish further stories about the characters from her previous works.〔 In 1939 she was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for her writing and advocacy work.
Jeannie Gunn died at Hawthorn, in 1961. The memoirs of her work with the RSL, ''My Boys: A book of remembrance'', was published in 2000.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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