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By the author of 'Remembering Babylon', 'The Great World' is a
remarkable novel of self-knowledge and of fall from innocence, of
survival and witness.
Winner of the IMPAC Award and Booker Prize nominee
In this rich and compelling novel, written in language of astonishing poise and resonance, one of Australia's greatest living writers gives and immensely powerful vision of human differences and eternal divisions. In the mid-1840s a thirteen-year-old British cabin boy, Gemmy Fairley, is cast ashore in the far north of Australia and taken in by aborigines. Sixteen years later he moves back into the world of Europeans, among hopeful yet terrified settlers who are staking out their small patch of home in an alien place. To them, Gemmy stands as a different kind of challenge: he is a force that at once fascinates and repels. His own identity in this new world is as unsettling to him as the knowledge he brings to others of the savage, the aboriginal.
"Breathtaking...To read this remarkable book is to remember Babylon well, whether you think you've been there or not." --The New York Times Book Review
In the first century a.d., Ovid, author of the groundbreaking epic poem Metamorphoses, came under severe criticism for The Art of Love, which playfully instructed women in the art of seduction and men in the skills essential for mastering the art of romantic conquest. In this remarkable translation, James Michie breathes new life into the notorious Roman’s mock-didactic elegy. In lyrical, irreverent English, he reveals love’s timeless dilemmas and Ovid’s enduring brilliance as both poet and cultural critic.
In the fourth Quarterly Essay of 2003, David Malouf looks at
Australia's bond with Britain and wonders whether it wasn't the
Mother Country which did most of the giving. This is an essay which
presents British civilisation, the civilisation of Shakespeare and
the Enlightenment and the Westminster system, as the irreducible
ground on which any Australian achievement is based. Britain has
always been the tolerant parent, and an older Australia could be
both intensely patriotic and see itself as what it was, a
transplantation of Britain. This relationship did not exclude
America but it made for a sometimes complicated threesome of
nations. This is a brilliant, deeply meditated essay by one of our
finest writers about the traditions that shaped Australia and which
connect it to one of the mightier traditions in world history.
'...Made in England is ...a case of one of Australia's most eminent
novelists allowing himself to imagine, and by imagining to analyse,
the hopes and glories, once and future, that were part of this new
Britannia.' - Peter Craven, Introduction 'Any argument for the
republic based on the need to make a final break with Britain will
fail.' - David Malouf, Made In England
In a sunlit piazza on an April morning, women throw buckets of water over the cobbles and men deliver trays of pastry to trattorie. In a barren room above, a fanatic watches, engaged in the details of his life's most important project: the assassination of one of Italy's most beloved men of letters.
In this penetrating novella, David Malouf, the highly acclaimed Australian author and finalist for the Booker Prize, plumbs the darker uses of our passions. Weaving a dense tapestry of sensual observation and personal events of mythic importance, he re-creates the frighteningly fascinating mind of a madman poised at his moment of truth. Dazzling in its beauty, intensely enigmatic, Child's Play conjures the mystical rising and falling of fear and pathos, where human idiosyncrasy and the incantatory rhythms of life give way to mania.
In this shimmering work of imagination, one of Australia's most honored writers conjures a single still moment on the edge of the 20th century in which two unlikely people share a friendship. When Ashley Crowther returns to Australia to manage his father's property, he discovers a timeless landscape of kingfishers and ibises; he also meets Jim Saddler, the young woodsman who becomes Ashley's guide to his inheritance. Together they discard the differences of personality and class to enter a partnership of wonder. But when war breaks out in Europe, Jim and Ashley are drawn into obscene enterprise of the trenches, where death falls from the sky and burrows out of the earth. In telling the story of these men, Fly Away Peter combines overwhelmingly sensual imagery with an unblinking consciousness of the worst that history can inflict to produce a novel of phosphorescent beauty.
A new work of fiction by the author of Remembering Babylon. It is 1827, and, in a remote hut high on the plains of New South Wales, two strangers spend the night in talk. One, an illiterate Irishman, and ex-convict and bushranger, is to be hanged at dawn. The other is the police officer who has been sent to supervise the hanging. As the night wears on, the two men share memories and uncover unlikely connections between their lives. 240 pp. Author tour. 20,000 print.
From the Hardcover edition.
The destinies of artist Frank Harland and young Phil Vernon
intertwine in a haunting, evocative portrait of the life and work
of the artist, childhood, family bonds, and the dark dimensions of
vision, creativity, and passion that become the roots of all art.
Reprint. 10,000 first printing. Tour.
A searing and magnificent picture of Australia at the moment of its
foundation, with early settlers staking out their small patch of
land and terrified by the harsh and alien continent. Focussing on
the hostility between the early British inhabitants and the native
Aborigines, Remembering Bablyon tells the tragic and compelling
story of a boy who finds himself caught between the two worlds.
Shot through with humour, and poetic intensity, Malouf's epic novel
of epic scope is simple, compassionate and universal.
In his first novel in more than a decade, award-winning author
David Malouf reimagines the pivotal narrative of Homer's
"Iliad"--one of the most famous passages in all of literature.
This is the story of the relationship between two grieving men at
war: fierce Achilles, who has lost his beloved Patroclus in the
siege of Troy; and woeful Priam, whose son Hector killed Patroclus
and was in turn savaged by Achilles. A moving tale of suffering,
sorrow, and redemption, "Ransom "is incandescent in its delicate
and powerful lyricism and its unstated imperative that we imagine
our lives in the glow of fellow feeling.
Every city, town and village has its memorial to war. Nowhere are these more eloquent than in Australia, generations of whose young men have enlisted to fight other people's battles - from Gallipoli and theSomme to Malaya and Vietnam. In THE GREAT WORLD, his finest novel yet,David Malouf gives a voice to that experience. But THE GREAT WORLD is more than a novel of war. Ranging over seventy years of Australian life, from Sydney's teeming King's Cross to the tranquil backwaters ofthe Hawkesbury River, it is a remarkable novel of self-knowledge and lost innocence, of survival and witness.
For three very different people brought together by their love for birds, life on the Queensland coast in 1914 is the timeless and idyllic world of sandpipers, ibises and kingfishers. In another hemisphere civilization rushes headlong into a brutal conflict. Life there is lived from moment to moment. Inevitably, the two young men - sanctuary owner and employee - are drawn to the war, and into the mud and horror of the trenches of Armentieres. Alone on the beach, their friend Imogen, the middle-aged wildlife photographer, must acknowledgefor all three of them that the past cannot be held.
A picture of Australia at the time of its foundation, focused on the hostility between early British settlers and native Aboriginals. It is essentially the story of a boy caught between both worlds. David Malouf, himself an Australian, is the prize-winning author of "The Great World".
During World War II two Australian soldiers, Digger Kean and Vic
Curran, meet in a Japanese war camp. Kean is a stubborn and
attentive man who leads a quiet life in a small town near Sydney.
Curran is an honest man who, after a childhood of extreme poverty,
develops a successful entrepreneurial career. The peculiar
friendship that develops between the two men during the war will
continue after their release and will affect them for the rest of
their lives. "Durante la segunda guerra mundial, dos soldados
australianos, Digger Kean y Vic Curran, se conocen en un campo
japones para prisioneros de guerra. Kean es un hombre taciturno y
atento, que lleva una existencia tranquila en una pequena aldea
cercana a Sidney. Curran es un hombre expansivo que despues de una
infancia de extrema pobreza desarrolla una brillante carrera
empresarial. La peculiar amistad que se forja entre ambos durante
la guerra continuara una vez liberados y terminara marcando sus
vidas. "
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