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The Passage of Love
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
The Passage of Love
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Alex Miller
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Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:600 | Dimensions(mm): Height 198,Width 128 |
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Category/Genre | Modern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945) |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781760529888
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Classifications | Dewey:A823.4 |
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Audience | |
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Allen & Unwin
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Imprint |
Allen & Unwin
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Publication Date |
3 September 2019 |
Publication Country |
Australia
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Description
'Capacious, wise, and startlingly honest about human frailty and the permutations of love over time. Frankly autobiographical, it is also a work of fully achieved fiction, ripe with experience, double-voiced, peopled with unpredictable men and women, and set in Miller's landscapes that characteristically throb with life.' --Morag Fraser, Australian Book Review Sitting in a New York park, an old man holds a book and tries to accept that his contribution to the future is over. Instead, he remembers a youthful yearning for open horizons, for Australia, a yearning he now knows inspired his life as a writer. Instinctively he picks up his pen and starts at the beginning ... At twenty-one years, Robert Crofts leaves his broken dreams in Far North Queensland, finally stopping in Melbourne almost destitute. It's there he begins to understand how books and writing might be the saving of him. When Robert is introduced to Lena Soren, beautiful, rich and educated, his life takes a very different path. But in the intimacy of their connection lies an unknowability that both torments and tantalises as Robert and Lena long for something that neither can provide for the other. Alex Miller is magnificent in this most personal of all novels filled with rare wisdom and incisive observation. 'Half a dozen of Miller's novels are likely to be judged among the finest of the past quarter century. They were written in the course of a career that has showcased Miller's subtlety, narrative craft, moral acuity and delight in writing about what he loves.' The Weekend Australian 'A thoughtful autobiographical work by an award-winning Australian novelist ... traces themes of art and commitment through Crofts' relationships with three women. Miller pulls back from the narrative several times in interludes that return to the first person of the much older man and highlight how memory has many layers. A rich addition to the growing shelf of autofiction from a seasoned storyteller.' Kirkus (starred review)
Author Biography
All of Alex Miller's novels have been critically acclaimed and have won or been shortlisted in all of the major Australian literary awards. He is twice winner of Australia's premier literary prize, the Miles Franklin Literary Award, and is an overall winner of the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for The Ancestor Game. In 2015, The Simplest Words, Alex Miller's first collection of stories, memoir, commentary and poetry, was published to great acclaim. Alex Miller is published internationally and his works have been widely translated. www.alexmiller.com.au
Reviews'Alex Miller has made an outstanding contribution to Australian literature and to our cultural and intellectual life.' Melbourne Prize for Literature Judges' Statement, 2012 'Coal Creek is a triumph.' Tim Winton 'Miller's voice is never more pure or more lovely than when he channels it through an instrument as artless as Bobby.' Geordie Williamson, The Monthly (on Coal Creek) 'Alex Miller is a wonderful writer.' John Banville, author of The Sea 'Alex Miller has an extraordinary ability to uncover the connections among people - individuals, races, nations.' Elizabeth Kostova, author of The Historian 'A wonderful novel of stunning intricacy and great beauty.' Michael Ondaatje (on The Ancestor Game)
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