The White Earth: Winner of the Miles Franklin Literary Award 2005

Author(s): Andrew McGahan

Fiction

One spring day in late 1992, when William was halfway between his eighth birthday and his ninth, he looked out from the back verandah of his home and saw, huge in the sky, the mushroom cloud of a nuclear explosion. He stared at it, wondering. The thunderhead was dirty black, streaked with billows of grey. It rolled and boiled as it climbed into the clear blue day, casting a vast shadow upon the hills beyond. But there was no sound, no rumble of an explosion. William was aware of the smell of burning ...but it was a good smell, a familiar smell. The smell of grass, of wheat, of the farm itself. His father dead by fire and his mother plagued by demons of her own, William is cast upon the charity of his unknown uncle - an embittered old man encamped in the ruins of a once great station homestead, Kuran House. It's a baffling and sinister new world for the boy, a place of decay and secret histories. His uncle is obsessed by a long life of decline and by a dark quest for revival, his mother is desperate for a wealth and security she has never known, and all their hopes it seems come to rest upon William's young shoulders. But as the past and present of Kuran Station unravel and merge together, the price of that inheritance may prove to be the downfall of them all. The White Earth is a haunting, disturbing and cautionary tale. 'The novel is beautifully structured, filled with parallels and reverberations which come back to haunt and illuminate the reader as the story unfolds.' - Katharine England, Adelaide Advertiser 'A great Australian story embracing national themes that should engage us all.' - Lucy Clark, The Sunday Telegraph.


Product Information

Winner of Miles Franklin Literary Award 2005 and Age Book of the Year 2004 and Courier-Mail Book of the Year Award 2004 and Commonwealth Writers' Prize Best Book - SE Asia and South Pacific 2005. Shortlisted for Queensland Premier's Literary Awards: Best Fiction Book 2004. IMPAC Dublin Literary Award 2005.

Andrew McGahan was born in Dalby, Queensland, and now lives in Victoria. His first novel, Praise (1992), won The Australian/Vogel Literary Award. His second novel was the prequel, 1988 (1995), and his third novel, Last Drinks (2000), was shortlisted for multiple awards, including The Age Book of the Year and The Courier Mail Book of the Year, and won a Ned Kelly award for crime writing. In 2004, The White Earth was published and won the Miles Franklin Literary Award, the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for the South East Asia and South Pacific region, The Age Book of the Year (Fiction) and The Courier Mail Book of the Year Award. It was also shortlisted for the Queensland Premier's Literary Awards. McGahan's fifth novel, Underground, was published in 2006 and was shortlisted in the Queensland Premier's Prize for fiction and for the Aurealis Award. Wonders of a Godless World (2009) won and Aurealis Award.

General Fields

  • : 9781742373713
  • : Allen & Unwin
  • : Allen & Unwin
  • : 31 October 2010
  • : 234mm X 153mm
  • : Australia
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Andrew McGahan
  • : Hardback
  • : 20th birthday ed.
  • : A823.3
  • : 392