About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 40. Chapters: Australian book editors, Australian magazine editors, Australian newspaper editors, Carl Feilberg, David Syme, Derryn Hinch, Martin Fabinyi, Robert Samuel Ross, Robina Courtin, Alfred Stephens, Padraic McGuinness, Creighton Burns, Jeremy Fisher, Edwin Greenslade Murphy, Charles Brunsdon Fletcher, Russell B. Farr, Warren Thomson, Karen Pearlman, Theophilus Parsons Pugh, Gresley Lukin, David Penberthy, George Howe, Andrew Garran, Robert James Thomson, Donald Horne, George Stevenson, Craig Mathieson, Beatrice Deloitte Davis, William Thomas Reay, Michelle Grattan, James Edmond, Frederick William Haddon, John Henry Barrow, Bertram Stevens, Peter Hartcher, Claude Eric Fergusson McKay, Deborah Hutton, Jason Steger, Frederick Wimble, David Brooks, J. F. Archibald, Les Carlyon, Frank Marien, John Edgar Byrne, Nene King, Thomas Cockburn-Campbell, John James Knight, Jennifer Higgie, Henry Ernest Boote, Benjamin Szumskyj, Sophie Cunningham, Adrian Deamer, David Miller, Donna Hay, Lloyd Turner, Malcolm Uren, Julie Ditrich, Max Dunn, Frederick William Ward, Nick Cater, Alan Oakley, Nan McDonald, Wendy Boase, William McGarvie, Sarah Wilson, James Williamson, Rex Jory, Margaret Curran, Ben Naparstek, Paul Ramadge, Gabriel Dowrick, Dennis Shanahan, Frank McGuinness, Christopher Dore. Excerpt: Carl Adolph Feilberg (21 August 1844 - 25 October 1887) was a Danish-born Australian journalist, newspaper editor, general political commentator and human rights activist. Carl Feilberg was arguably the most prominent political commentator and newspaper editor in Queensland in his time. His death in October 1887 was received with an amount of strongly worded obituaries and expressions of grief, which was to remain extraordinary as well as unprecedented for any Queensland journalist of his era. Yet it so happened that his most lasting legacy was...