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Reviews for Patrick White: Letters

 Patrick White magazine reviews

The average rating for Patrick White: Letters based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2019-08-25 00:00:00
1996was given a rating of 5 stars Jeffrey Kimbel
I live for this. What a great volume. White is unequivocally the greatest writer Australia ever produced, and this volume came about as a result of David Marr's landmark biography of White, written with the man's consent and published shortly after his death. Something like 20,000 letters from or to White were found by Marr during this process, and here he reprints a generous selection from across the author's life. From pondering his early novels during WWII (in which, in Europe, he met his lifelong partner Manoly) to his final years sharing his many thoughts on the state of Australian literature, this is a gem of a collection. I can understand why many reviewers have given this less than 5 stars. This is a supplementary volume for White fans. It will be of interest to those who have read a few of the works, but the story of White's life - and especially of the critical fortunes of his career - only really makes sense in light of his body of work: 12 novels, 3 short story collections, an autobiography, several well-received plays, and one screenplay. As someone so famously private during his lifetime, we are lucky that White had a change of heart in his final years, and allowed Marr such unfettered access. (If not, his equally reclusive partner would no doubt have imposed strict conditions on these letters after White's death.) The letters are more focused on White's personal life and thoughts about society than on his work but, again, read in tandem with Marr's biography and the canon itself, this makes sense. An endlessly fascinating, self-deprecating, brilliant, thorny, endlessly intellectual mind at work.
Review # 2 was written on 2016-02-15 00:00:00
1996was given a rating of 3 stars Alejandro magno Cardona tovar
An interesting read, especially for Patrick White fans. You gain a very good idea of his character, the number of friends he kept up a correspondence over a long period of time, his love of his partner, Manoly, (a relationship that lasted over 45 years - until White's death), how novels took him on average two years to write, his moral stances, his philanthropy, his love of original paintings by present day artists, his love of opera and plays, his grumpiness and what he reckonised as his vice - his lack of forgiveness. He didn't discuss his novels much but had plenty to say about books he read, countries he visited, his illnesses, the fact the he was the cook in the household. He was fortunate to be able to live off his inheritance and royalties from his books. After he won the Nobel Prize in 1973 with the $82,000 prize money, he established a Trust to award a sum of money each year for old Australian novelists who were not well off.


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