The Glass Canoe

Novel by David Ireland
0-333-21051-4OCLC2895871
Dewey Decimal
823LC ClassPZ4.I65 Gl PR9619.3.I674Preceded byBurn Followed byA Woman of the Future 

The Glass Canoe (1976) is a novel by Australian author David Ireland. It won the Miles Franklin Award in 1976.[1]

Plot outline

The novel is about a man who spends his life at the pub, seeing the world through his beer glass – a glass canoe. The novel is told through the voice of Meat Man, a regular drinker at the Southern Cross hotel, who works as a groundsman at the local golf course.

Critical reception

The book was published in a new edition in 2012 by Text Publishing; Nicolas Rothwell wrote in the introduction:

The book has traction. It pulls you in. It's the hard core. It's art, not entertainment; action, not plot. It's the lurking, dark beast of fear and beauty at the heart of Australian life. It is all we know, and all we seek to put behind us, and all that the literary world has struggled to evade and overcome. It has a geography, physical and social: it's what lies beyond the beach; Australia beyond the line of coastal suburbs and their aspirations. The set-up is simple. Ireland works this way: he disdains surface marks of coherence, he has no time for the long forms of narrative. It's fragments, for him, snatched scenes, glimpses that show all.[2]

References

  1. ^ Austlit - The Glass Canoe by David Ireland
  2. ^ "David Ireland's Glass Canoe" by Nicolas Rothwell, The Australian, 7 April 2012]

See also

  • 1976 in Australian literature
  • The Glass Canoe, Middlemiss.org
  • v
  • t
  • e
Works by David Ireland
Novels
  • v
  • t
  • e
Miles Franklin Award
1957–1959
  • Voss by Patrick White (1957)
  • To the Islands by Randolph Stow (1958)
  • The Big Fellow by Vance Palmer (1959)
1960–1969
1970–1979
1980–1989
1990–1999
2000–2009
2010–2019
2020–present
Stub icon

This article about a 1970s novel is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

See guidelines for writing about novels. Further suggestions might be found on the article's talk page.

  • v
  • t
  • e