CANBERRA, Australia — Australian author and social commentator Richard Neville, best known as founder of the 1960s counterculture magazine Oz, has died, his wife said. He was 74.

His wife Julie Clarke Neville said she and their daughters Lucy and Angelica were with Neville when he died Sunday night at the Australian east coast town of Byron Bay.

“Our wonderful Richard has gone on to his next adventure,” Clarke Neville posted on Facebook late Sunday.

She did not say what he died of, but Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported he had Alzheimer’s disease.

Born in Sydney on Dec. 15, 1941, the young Neville railed against the long era of conservative rule in Australia that lasted from 1949 until 1972.

He was editor of the University of New South NSW student magazine when he collaborated with Richard Walsh, editor of Sydney University student newspaper, and artist Martin Sharp to publish anti-establishment magazine Oz.

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The magazine, first published on April Fool’s Day in 1963, mocked hypocrisy in Australian society and took on taboo subjects including abortion, homosexuality, sexism, racism and censorship.

Neville was among editors charged with breaching obscenity laws and became locked in a two-year court battle before being cleared on appeal.

The public profile of Oz grew when the editors moved to the more permissive society of London.

In 1971, Neville and two of his co-editors Felix Denis and James Anderson were charged in Britain with corrupting the morals of children through an obscene publication.

They were jailed but later won the case on appeal. The last Oz was published in 1973.

“It was a stroke of luck, the obscenity (trial) because it made the magazine quite famous,” Oz cartoonist Peter Kingston told ABC on Monday.

Kingston said Neville became a life-long friend who was motivated by a strong social conscience and a confrontational nature.

“He made me squirm a lot. That was Richard’s forte,” Kingston said. “I’ll miss him making me squirm.”

Neville met journalist Julie Clarke in 1974 and the pair wrote “The Life and Crimes of Charles Sobhraj,” a biography published in 1979 of the French serial killer who preyed on Western tourists in Southeast Asia in the 1970s.


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