On Patrick White | Black Inc.
×
On Patrick White

On Patrick White: Writers on Writers

‘Patrick White, the un-Australian writer who did more than any other writer in the twentieth century to create an imaginative language that we can call Australian, who unshackled us from the demand that we write as the English do, who recognised, through his own alienation and also through his profound love for his partner, that we were a migrant and mongrel nation forging our own culture and our own language.’

Christos Tsiolkas spent a year of ‘discovery and rediscovery’ reading Patrick White. In this passionate and original book, he shows how the Nobel Prize winner’s work still speaks to us.

In the Writers on Writers series, leading writers reflect on another Australian writer who has inspired and fascinated them. Provocative and crisp, these books start a fresh conversation between past and present, shed new light on the craft of writing, and introduce some intriguing and talented authors and their work.

Published by Black Inc. in association with the University of Melbourne and State Library Victoria.

About the author

Christos Tsiolkas

Christos Tsiolkas is the author of six novels: Loaded, The Jesus Man, Dead Europe, The Slap, Barracuda and Damascus. He has published the short story collection, Merciless Gods, and co-authored Jump Cuts: An Autobiography with Sasha Soldatow. He has published a monograph on Fred Schepisi’s The Devil's Playground, for the Australian …

More about Christos Tsiolkas



Specifications

Release date: 14 May 2018

RRP: $22.99

Hardback ISBN: 9781863959797

Format: Hardback

Size: 181 x 111mm

Extent: 112pp

Praise for On Patrick White

On Patrick White is ultimately a love letter to its subject. It is a welcome celebration of a writer who laid bare his own contradictions in order to expose ours, and who continues to evade categorisation.’ —Sydney Morning Herald

‘One might wish it longer – the truncated nature of the enterprise means too much literary ground is traversed too breathlessly – but no one would wish it less urgently impassioned.’ —Weekend Australian

‘This splendid latest instalment in Black Inc.’s Writers on Writers series is an innovative critical reappraisal of White ... a moving tribute to White’s devastating skill with language, and an enlightening insight into the nature of literary influence.’ —Australian Book Review