Ebook {Epub PDF} The Aunts Story by Patrick White
· The Aunt's Story by Patrick White - Penguin Books Australia. Published: 19 March ISBN: Imprint: Penguin. Format: Paperback. Pages: the aunt's story rejects any holistic understanding, if one comes at it searching for one the book will fall apart. theodora is searching, and falls apart, but it is in the falling apart that she reaches a sort of understanding. everything is fragments, there are innumerable fragments of truth that do not synthesise into a whole. often time they contradict each other, but they are still true. in many ways that is how you /5. · As both a reading experience and an artistic statement, The Aunt’s Story is both impressive and sticky. Slow, intense, often hallucinogenic in its perceptual intricacy, and yet as distant from immediate reality as its half-mad heroine, The Aunt’s Story is, as a feat of technical writing, quite amazing. Time and time again, White conjures sentences that paint in perfervid tones an imagination .
Book Club: The Aunt's Story by Patrick White - Radio National Books and Arts Daily program panel discussion. Abstract A panel discussion of The Aunt's Story by Patrick White on ABC Radio National's Books and Arts Daily program presented by Michael Cathcart. The panel includes Peter Skrzynecki, Helen Morse, and Adam Cook. 78 Views 0. Title: Aunt's Story Author(s): Patrick White ISBN: / (UK edition) Publisher: TBS The Book Service Ltd Availability: Amazon Amazon UK. The Aunt's Story. by. Patrick White. · Rating details · ratings · 71 reviews. With the death of her mother, middle-aged Theodora Goodman contemplates the desert of her life. Freed from the trammels of convention she leaves Australia for a European tour and becomes involved with the residents of a small French hotel.
The Aunt's Story is the third published novel by the Australian novelist and Nobel Prize-winner, Patrick White. It tells the story of Theodora Goodman, a lonely middle-aged woman who travels to France after the death of her mother, and then to America, where she experiences what is either a gradual mental breakdown or an epiphanic revelation. As both a reading experience and an artistic statement, The Aunt’s Story is both impressive and sticky. Slow, intense, often hallucinogenic in its perceptual intricacy, and yet as distant from immediate reality as its half-mad heroine, The Aunt’s Story is, as a feat of technical writing, quite amazing. Time and time again, White conjures sentences that paint in perfervid tones an imagination that perceives experience in an off-kilter, hyper-vivid style, shading into vague dissociation. This time I’m revisiting The Aunt’s Story by Patrick White, one of the first Australian novels I came across (when I hadn’t yet migrated to this country). Published in , a quarter of a century before he won the Nobel Prize for Literature, it’s a novel that retains a capacity to startle me.
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