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Australian Fiction

The text or subtext of much Australian fiction is both the vastness of the continent and its settlement by British convicts. Australian novels convey the idea that place somehow defines who and what you are. (Canadian fiction shares this sense of place to some degree.) Many Australian novelists write about journeys, road trips, people running away from their pasts or their presents (or their presence in their own life), challenged by the terrain, the weather, the impossibility of leaving (and the equal impossibility of staying), their own history, and the inner demons that plague them.

Martin Boyd’s The Cardboard Crown; A Difficult Young Man; When Blackbirds Sing; and Outbreak of Love comprise a wonderful (and little-known) series written in the 1950s about an Australian family who move to England when things go wrong in Australia, and move back to Australia when things go wrong in England. The first two books are especially good.


  • Comment here! What's your favorite book set in Australia--or written by an Aussie?



Tirra Lirra by the RiverOther notable Australian novels include Jessica Anderson’s Tirra Lirra by the River and The Only Daughter; James Bradley’s Wrack; Peter Carey’s True History of the Kelly Gang and Oscar and Lucinda; Miles Franklin’s My Brilliant Career (first published in 1901 and still a delight to read); Nikki Gemmell’s Alice Springs; Janette Turner Hospital’s Oyster; Thomas Keneally’s Woman of the Inner Sea; David Malouf’s Remembering Babylon; and Tim Winton’s Cloudstreet; That Eye, The Sky; and Dirt Music.


The Sound of one Hand ClappingTasmania

Novels set in Tasmania form their own subgenre within the broader category of “Australia.” Some of my favorites are Richard Flanagan’s The Sound of One Hand Clapping; Death of a River Guide; and Gould’s Book of Fish; and Matthew Kneale’s English Passengers.

Two of the best novels set in Australia are by Nevil Shute: A Town Like Alice and The Breaking Wave (Requiem for a Wren is its title in the United Kingdom). Shute, who was born in England, moved to Australia when he was nearly fifty and dearly loved his adopted country.





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Umbagollah Christina Stead 0 Mar 11 2008, 11:27 PM EDT by Umbagollah
Thread started: Mar 11 2008, 11:27 PM EDT  Watch
Christina Stead, who was born in Australia and set her first book in Sydney, is one of the finest authors this country has produced -- her voice is huge, inimitable, expansive, overflowing. The Man Who Loved Children is her best-known book, and possibly the best thing she wrote overall, but other works like The Little Hotel, Cotter's England and The Salzburg Tales have strengths of their own, and The People With The Dogs is one of her rare happy moments.

Robert Dessaix is worth reading as well, elegant and erudite. In poetry: Les Murray, Gwen Harwood, and ... someone else whose name has escaped me. I have an anthology by them too. All of a sudden I realise that I can't think who they are. Kenneth Slessor, sometimes. Peter Porter. Miriel Lenore, particularly her cycle of poems about the outback community she sometimes stays with. (I think Malouf is a wonderful prose writer, but I'm not convinced by his poetry.)
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roslyni The White Earth by Andrew McGahan 0 Dec 29 2007, 12:35 AM EST by roslyni
roslyni
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This is the compelling story of a young boy William living on his uncle's property in Queensland. William is tested by his uncle to determine if he could be worthy of inheriting the land and The House. The uncle believes so strongly in his own links to this property that he will do anything to retain it and pass it down to someone in his family. While William starts to understand the world of grown ups and tries so desperately to please his uncle, he becomes uneasy about the complexity of owning land in Australia. Is it really what he wants? McGahan's descriptions of the environment and country are vivid and lively. He writes about people's relationship to land with conviction and this is an important novel for Australia's cultural and social health.
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llibrariann Oldies but goodies 1 Dec 17 2007, 2:50 PM EST by llibrariann
llibrariann
Thread started: Mar 7 2007, 1:41 PM EST  Watch
Green Dolphin Street by Elizabeth Goudge and Sara Dane by Catherine Gaskin have basically the same plot, young English woman goes to Australia as pioneer, but each author expands the plot deliciously. Nevil Shute's On The Beach is another downunder favorite. Scared the socks off me as a youngun.
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Anonymous John Marsden 0 Feb 20 2007, 12:14 PM EST by Anonymous
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By far, the best and most compelling Aussie books for teens is the Tomorrow When The War began Series by John Marsden. I think there are 8 in the series and are followed by a series devoted to Ellie, one of the girls in the TWTWB books. His other YA novels are thought provoking and well written.Georgia savage's The House Tibet, while recommended for adults, is another terrific book for older teens.
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Anonymous Elliot Perlman: Seven Types of Ambiguity 0 Feb 13 2007, 12:18 AM EST by Anonymous
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The brief abduction of a young boy from the perspective of seven characters. Gorgeous writing. One of my favorites from last year.
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