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Patrick White  (1912 - 1990)

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The Living and the Dead (Twentieth-Century Classics)

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Patrick White : LettersPatrick White : Letters by David Marr (Editor), Patrick White

Australian novelist Patrick White, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1973, was a compulsive letter-writer throughout his life, and he generally asked that people destroy his letters. They didn't. Only portions of White's voluminous correspondence have been previously published, but this books fills the gap. Included are hundreds of letters in which White gossips about other writers, discusses serious literary matters and holds forth in his witty manner about all sorts of subjects.

When Patrick White won the Nobel Price for Literature in 1973, he was known only to readers of serious fiction. Since that time he has become world-famous. By the time he died in 1990, White had attempted to destroy -- or have destroyed -- most of the letters he had written to friends, fans and acquaintances. This makes David Marr's collections of White's letters almost a miracle. Marr has collected over 600 pages of witty, insightful and revealing correspondence from the gay novelist which give us an unforgettable, intimate portrait of White and his world. Read in conjunction with Marr's 1992 biography of the author, Patrick White Letters is an unparalleled look into the life of a literary genius.

Patrick White (1912-1990), author of The Living and the Dead, 1973 Nobel Laureate in Literature, officially Australian but also partly upper-crust Englishman by education, rejected alike English stuffiness and Australian philistinism. These letters, edited by his biographer David Marr, chronicle White's gradual reluctant engagement with the world: his interest in Jewish culture after an early ignorant anti-Semitism; his idyllic wartime period in West Africa; his passionate and rancorous anti-royalism, sparked by the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis when the British Queen's representative sacked the Prime Minister; his deep held belief in the validity of homosexual unions, based on his own life-long relationship. These letters give an inner glimpse of a mostly private life.

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Patrick Victor Martindale White Biography

By Petri Liukkonen

Excerpt:

Australian novelist, short story writer and playwright who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1973. White combines in his works myth, symbols and allegory. His characters are of ten separated from the society by age, sexuality, race or geography. White's international breakthrough novel was VOSS, which was published in 1957. RIDERS IN THE CHARIOT, which contains a powerful indictment of Australian suburban life, established him as one of the most important modern writers. In his own country White had to wait a long time before his depiction of the Australian middle class was accepted.

"I would like to believe in the myth that we grow wiser with age. In a sense my disbelief is wisdom. Those of a middle generation, if charitable or sentimental, subscribe to the wisdom myth, while the callous see us as dispensable objects, like broken furniture or dead flowers. For the young we scarcely exist unless we are unavoidable members of the same family, farting, slobbering, perpertually mislaying teeth and bifocals." (from Three Uneasy Pieces, 1987)

Patrick White was born in London of Australian parents. His youth was spent partly in Australia, where his father owned a sheep farm, and partly in England. At the age of 13 he was sent to Cheltenham College, an experience which he hated and referred as a 'four-year prison sentence'. He returned the to Australia and worked for two years as a jackaroo on a remote sheep station and started then to study French and German literature at Cambridge, and receiving his B.A. in 1935. White settled in London and wrote several unpublished novels...

 

Patrick White

From The Complete Review

Excerpt:

Patrick White is one of the major English-language writers of the second half of the twentieth century, and still the grand old master of Australian literature. His strong narrative voice and his wrenching tales make him an always fascinating read. White's books evolved from the very traditional to, ultimately, the very experimental. Even in his early work he is resolutely modern, trying to do more with fiction than most novelists care or dare to.

His novels are deceptive, with their weight and their stories which are frequently placed earlier in this century -- or in the last. White wrestles with the profound questions of our age, never opting for the easy answers (there are no "happy endings" or even truly positive resolutions in his work). He gives the reader food for thought -- often, it seems, too much for comfort...

   

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