Background
Jack McLaren was the eldest son of Review John McLaren, Presbyterian minister, and his wife Mary. McLaren"s father was on his way to the South Seas as a missionary and his son was born at the end of the voyage.
Jack McLaren was the eldest son of Review John McLaren, Presbyterian minister, and his wife Mary. McLaren"s father was on his way to the South Seas as a missionary and his son was born at the end of the voyage.
McLaren was educated at Scotch College, Melbourne, but ran away from school at the age of 16. He finished his first novel there in 1919 and then moved to Sydney with the intention of earning a living as a writer
He worked as a cabin boy and seaman before landing in North Queensland in 1902, and for the next ten years worked a variety of jobs and traveled to Fiji, Java, New Guinea, Malaya and the Solomon Islands. In 1911 he settled at Simpson"s Bay on the west coast of Cape York and began to write short pieces for The Bulletin. The couple moved to London in 1925 where McLaren continued his writing life.
He broadcast and wrote scripts for the British Broadcasting Corporation and during World World War II was in charge of the section of the Ministry of Information responsible for publicity about the Empire.
Jack McLaren died of myocardial infarction on 16 May 1954, while on holiday at Brighton.