Fotografía de autor

Gerald Murnane

Autor de The Plains

26+ Obras 1,614 Miembros 89 Reseñas 7 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Gerald Murname was born in Melbourne, Australia in 1939. In 1956, he matriculated from De La Salle College Malvern. He briefly trained for the Roman Catholic priesthood in 1957, but decided to become a teacher in primary schools from 1960 to 1968 and at the Victoria Racing Club's Apprentice mostrar más Jockeys' School. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Melbourne in 1969, then worked in the Victorian Education Department until 1973. He is the author of numerous books including Tamarisk Row, A Lifetime on Clouds, The Plains, Landscape with Landscape, Inland, Velvet Waters, Emerald Blue, Invisible Yet Enduring Lilacs, Barley Patch, A History of Books, and A Million Windows. He won the Victorian Literary Award 2016 in the Nonfiction category for Something for the Pain: A Memoir of the Turf. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos

Incluye los nombres: murnanegerard, Gerald Murnane

Obras de Gerald Murnane

The Plains (1982) 359 copias
Inland (1988) 203 copias
Border districts (2017) 194 copias
Collected Short Fiction (2018) 143 copias
Barley Patch (2009) 118 copias
Tamarisk Row (1974) 84 copias
A Million Windows (2014) 81 copias
Landscape with Landscape (1985) 66 copias
A lifetime on clouds (1976) 57 copias
A History of Books (2012) 54 copias
A Season on Earth (2019) 46 copias
Last Letter to a Reader (2021) 41 copias
Velvet waters (1990) 28 copias

Obras relacionadas

The Best Australian Essays 2008 (2008) — Contribuidor — 28 copias
The Best Australian Stories 2002 (2002) — Contribuidor — 15 copias
The best Australian stories 2001 (2001) — Contribuidor — 14 copias
Dreamworks: Strange New Stories (1983) — Contribuidor — 12 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Miembros

Reseñas

So, I struggle with Murnane. Perhaps it's generational frustration - the same reason I find Calvino tiring, even twee. But when he's on point, golly gee, is he on point. Australia, thy sins laid bare.
 
Denunciada
therebelprince | 21 reseñas más. | Apr 21, 2024 |
I'm somewhat agnostic about Murnane, Australia's Calvino, but his shorter fiction is perhaps his ideal outlet. Ideas crawling over each other, as Durrell once said, like crabs in a basket. Very worthwhile little peeks under the rug at what lies beyond our conception of literature...
 
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therebelprince | 7 reseñas más. | Apr 21, 2024 |
For fans of postmodern novels with a meta-evocation of the act of writing, this must be the cream of the crop. Murnane hides behind a few personae (following Pessoa?) to do what he loves: writing at a table, looking out of the window and contemplating the grassland, successively in Hungary, South Dakota and Australia. It seems as if this book starts over every 30 pages, each time with the sentence “I'm writing…”. It gives an elliptical effect, which is fascinating, but also annoys (at least to me). Fortunately, there are the humorous elements, such as the Institute of Prairie Studies, or the writer who calls himself a 'scientist of grasslands'. As mentioned, postmodernists would love this. While I was quite taken with The Plains, I'm starting to think Murnane might be a one-trick pony. And from the rare interviews with him, I gather that he thinks so too.… (más)
 
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bookomaniac | 7 reseñas más. | Mar 1, 2024 |
I was finishing off an 800 (flawed but fascinating) biography of Napoleon: A life by Andrew Roberts when a friend recomended I read Murnane's 137 page Border Districts. So I opened it with relief at the prospect of brevity. Perhaps it was the constricted type-face of the And Other Stories 2019 edition that I read but it just didn’t appeal to me - even though it touched on several areas (landscapes of the mind and their enchantments) that interest me. I’m wondering if I can explain why I didn’t take to it? My type-face test was to read passages out-loud and suddenly, like a fresh breeze, the writing seemed to improve. But by taking a shorter form of a Proustian monologue (without Proust’s elegance) and using Slessor’s glass imagery to elucidate, in the words of Richard Jeffries, soul-thought, I think I wanted to find something richer or deeper. I found the repetitive phrasing by the scrupulous monologist irritatingly tedious. From the outset, I felt the twitch of a lip-curling reaction to what I thought might turn out to be yet another lapsed-Catholic purgation. But by page 15, as the monologist begins to explain his use of the term guard my eyes and how he employs the edge of vision as a border between memory and reality my interest was piqued enough to continue. And I did appreciate the resonances of the image of the church window smashers and his attempt to look through the photographs. If it is possible to distinguish between Murnane and his contrived monologist, the book made me feel like he was wearing his underwear over his clothes as he slipped back and forth between one after another paragraph and afterthought; from one after another window glass to return veranda and one after another tentative qualification to tentative realisation. Sorry to say that by the end the layers of repetitive phrasing (not just one after another) got in the way and, maybe because of it, this scrupulous man seemed to me to have little or nothing to say that interested me.
…I am therefore free to think of her as waiting for insight on the far side of one after another wall of amber-coloured stone behind one after another return veranda of one after another house that I see from the sides of my eyes in one after another border district. p. 126.


As an afterthought, just like him, secondary school left me with just a fragment of Latin (Catullus) that I have repeated to myself ever since:
Odi et amo. Quare id faciam fortasse requiris.
Nescio, sed fieri sentio et excrucior.
(I hate and I love. Why do I do this, you may ask.
I don't know, but it happens, and it bothers me.)
… (más)
 
Denunciada
simonpockley | 12 reseñas más. | Feb 25, 2024 |

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Obras
26
También por
5
Miembros
1,614
Popularidad
#15,967
Valoración
½ 3.7
Reseñas
89
ISBNs
118
Idiomas
10
Favorito
7

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