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Literary Studies

Alex Miller: The ruin of time by Robert Dixon

by Brenda Walker
December 2014, no. 367

Alex Miller: The ruin of time by Robert Dixon

Sydney University Press, $30 pb, 246 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

We do nothing alone,’ writes Alex Miller, in his brief memoir ‘The Mask of Fiction’, where he gives an account of the generative processes of his writing. Art, according to Miller, comes from the capacity of the writer to ‘see ourselves as the other’. Early in his career, Miller’s friend Max Blatt woke him, in his farmhouse at Araluen, in order to dismiss the weighty and unsuccessful manuscript that Miller had given him to read. Blatt’s urgent and unsociable rejection of the manuscript may have saved Miller’s work, establishing a new emotional basis for his writing. ‘Why don’t you write about something you love?’ Blatt asked. That night, Blatt told Miller a true story of personal survival and Miller began to write afresh. In the morning, Blatt accepted Miller’s version of the story he had told with the words: ‘You could have been there.’

 


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Alex Miller: The ruin of time by Robert Dixon

Sydney University Press, $30 pb, 246 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

Comments

Lois Cameron
Thursday, 09 July 2015 20:22
I thought this was a wonderful book, but remain flummoxed by the fact that no-one has been hanged in Queensland since 1913. Surely a serious book that has a hanging in it would set it in a time and place where such a thing was credible?

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