Steer P14/12/2021Journal of New Zealand Studies, 2021, 33 pp. 171 - 1721170-4616https://hdl.handle.net/10179/16963This review was originally published in Journal of New Zealand Studies, 2021, NS33, pp171 - 172.https://doi.org/10.26686/jnzs.iNS33.7392I’ll begin with a confession: before taking on this review, I’d never even heard of Alexander Bickerton, let alone his only novel, Morganeering. In my defence, he doesn’t rate a mention in the Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature (he lies in the gap between “bibliography” and “Biggs, Bruce”), or even in Lawrence Jones’ encyclopaedic survey of the novel in the Oxford History of New Zealand Literature in English. As Lyman Tower Sargent explains in his thorough introduction, Bickerton was well known during his lifetime, albeit for other reasons than his fiction. As the inaugural professor of physics at Canterbury College, where he taught from 1874 to 1902, he numbered Ernest Rutherford and Ettie Rout among his pupils.171 - 172Review of Alexander Bickerton, Morganeering, or, The Triumph of the Trust: A Satirical Burlesque on the Worship of Wealth, edited by Lyman Tower SargentBook Review451553Massey_Dark2103 Historical Studies