|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewIn the first days of spring in his eighty-second year, Gerald Murnane – perhaps the greatest living writer of English prose – began a project that would round off his strange career as a novelist. He would read all of his books in turn and prepare a report on each. His original intention was to lodge the reports in two of his legendary filing cabinets: in the Chronological Archive, which documents his life as a whole, and the Literary Archive, which is devoted to everything he has written. As the reports grew, however, they themselves took on the form of a book, a book as beguiling and hallucinatory, in its way, as the works on which they were meant to report. These miniature memoirs or stories lead the reader through the capacious territory Murnane refers to as his mind: they dwell on the circumstances that gave rise to his writing, on images and associations, on Murnane’s own theories of fiction, and then memories of a deeply personal kind. The final essay is, of course, on Last Letter to a Reader itself: it considers the elation and exhilaration that accompany the act of writing, and offers a moving finale to what must surely be Murnane’s last work, as death approaches. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Gerald MurnanePublisher: And Other Stories Imprint: And Other Stories ISBN: 9781913505424ISBN 10: 1913505421 Pages: 144 Publication Date: 03 May 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsMurnane, a genius, is a worthy heir to Beckett. --Teju Cole [For Murnane, ] access to the other world--a world distinct from and in many ways better than our own--is gained neither by good works nor by grace but by giving the self up to fiction. --J. M. Coetzee, New York Review of Books Murnane's sentences are little dialectics of boredom and beauty, flatness and depth. They combine a matter-of-factness, often approaching coldness, with an intricate lyricism. --Ben Lerner, New Yorker An image in Murnane's prose has the quality of an image in colored glass: One both sees the image and sees through the image simultaneously. --Benjamin H. Ogden, New York Times Murnane has proven, over four decades and some dozen books, to be one of [Australia's] most original and distinctive writers. --Paris Review Murnane's fantasies are many-layered, and the narration weaves between these and his mundane life in thrillingly long, lyrical sentences. --Christian Lorentzen, London Review of Books Murnane's is a vision that blesses and beatifies every detail. --Jamie Fisher, Washington Post [The] Nobel Prize contender writes like a clockmaker: every sentence is a finely tooled cog, every book an exquisite machine. --Australian Book Review 'Has any writer ever paraded his aesthetic privacies so shamelessly? It doesn't matter. These are the ravings of a genius. Ignore them if you dare, literature-besotted unraveller.' Peter Craven, Australian Book Review ---- 'The best book about Murnane's books that anyone is ever likely to write.' Shannon Burns, The Monthly ---- 'When looking over the endless paddocks of his fictions, one is also looking out at the mysterious landscape of the soul.' Dustin Illingworth, New York Times Book Review ---- 'Murnane, a genius, is a worthy heir to Beckett.' Teju Cole ---- 'The emotional conviction...is so intense, the sombre lyricism so moving, the intelligence behind the chiselled sentences so undeniable, that we suspend all disbelief.' J. M. Coetzee ---- 'An enigmatic author, possibly the best you've never heard of . . . His work insists on the reality of the inner world - perhaps even its primacy.' Melissa Harrison, Financial Times ---- 'Immediately arresting . . . Murnane's writing exhibits what literature should: an insight into a way of seeing that is quite unlike our own.' John Self, Irish Times ---- 'As with Proust, the specificities of the images he pursues and catalogues provide their own pleasure [but] the effect of his writing is less about the images themselves, and more about the way thought works in the human mind.' Chris Power, The Guardian ---- 'Murnane's fantasies are many-layered, and the narration weaves between these and his mundane life in thrillingly long, lyrical sentences. Christian Lorentzen, London Review of Books Author InformationGerald Murnane is the award-winning author of such acclaimed works of fiction as Border Districts, Inland, Barley Patch, and The Plains, as well as the memoir Something for the Pain. Murnane lives in the remote village of Goroke in the northwest of Victoria, near the border with South Australia. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |