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Fiction

Desire, gambling and glass

Oscar & Lucinda by Peter Carey

by Elizabeth Riddell
March 1988, no. 98

Oscar & Lucinda by Peter Carey

University of Queensland Press, $28.95 hb, 511 pp

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From short stories Peter Carey has proceeded to long novels. This is his third. It is dense with incident and meticulously delineated characters who drop in and out of the narrative, always with a purpose. In some ways it is as surreal as Bliss, in others as naturalistic as Illywacker. But it is like neither of these novels. It cannot be said to be ‘better’ than either, if this mode of comparison can be used legitimately in a literary sense.

What can be said is that it is a marvellous piece of story-telling, which doesn’t stop there. Its theme explores and exploits and to some extent explains a time – around the 19th century half way mark – which bears an extraordinary resemblance to our own.

 


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Oscar & Lucinda by Peter Carey

University of Queensland Press, $28.95 hb, 511 pp

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


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