Voss by Patrick White - ISBN: 9780143105688
Paperback
Love and exploration clash in the brutal Australian desert.
  • Paperback

    464 pages

  • Release Date

    27 January 2009

Summary

Join J. M. Coetzee and Thomas Keneally in rediscovering Nobel Laureate Patrick White

In 1973, Australian writer Patrick White was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature “for an epic and psychological narrative art which has introduced a new continent into literature.”

Set in nineteenth-century Australia, Voss is White’s best-known book, a sweeping novel about a secret passion between the explorer Voss and the young orphan Laura. As Voss is tested by hardship, mutiny, a…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780143105688
ISBN-10:014310568X
Author:Patrick White, Thomas Keneally
Publisher:Penguin Putnam Inc
Imprint:Penguin Classics
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:464
Release Date:27 January 2009
Weight:374g
Dimensions:196mm x 130mm x 27mm
Series:Penguin Classics
About The Author

Patrick White

Patrick White (1912-1990) was born in England in 1912, when his parents were in Europe for two years; at six months he was taken back to Australia, where his father owned a sheep station. When he was thirteen, he went to school in England, to Cheltenham, “where it was understood, the climate would be temperate and a colonial acceptable.” Neither proved true, and after four rather miserable years there he went to King’s College, Cambridge, where he specialized in languages. After leaving the university he settled in London, determined to become a writer. His first novel, Happy Valley, was published in 1939 and his second, The Living and the Dead, in 1941. During the war he was an RAF Intelligence Officer in the Middle East and Greece. After the war he returned to Australia. His novels include The Aunt’s Story (1946), The Tree of Man (1956), Voss (1957), Riders in the Chariot (1961), The Solid Mandala (1966), The Eye of the Storm (1973), A Fringe of Leaves (1976), and The Twyborn Affair (1979). He also published two collections of short stories, The Burnt Ones (1964) and The Cockatoos (1974), which incorporates several short novels, a collection of novellas, Three Uneasy Pieces (1987), and his autobiography, Flaws in the Glass (1981). He also edited Memoirs of Many in One (1986). In 1973 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. Upon his death, The Times wrote, “Patrick White did more than any other writer to put Australian literature on the international map…. His tormented oeuvre is that of a great and essentially modern writer.”

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