The Call (Flanagan novel): Difference between revisions

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==Critical reception==
==Critical reception==
Writing in ''The Age'' Jack Hibberd commented: "While ''The Call'' deploys fictional devices, such as extensively scarred old red gums symbolically embodying the mutilated blacks, and a helmeted Nek Kelly surreally "emerging from the soft white skin of a young woman's shoulder," it does not quite have the deep knit of a novel. Nor does it quite knit as biography and history...This formal irresolution does not, howver, detract from the pleasures in this book: the vivid evocations of our colonial and Aboriginal past, of city and country, of sporting wizardry, and of the strangely soulful narrator's search for heroes in an empty culture."<ref>{{cite web|title="Rules of the game" |publisher= The Age, 21 November 1998, Extra p9|url=https://www.proquest.com/historical-newspapers/november-21-1998-page-123-314/docview/2521625496/se-2|access-date= 25 April 2024}}</ref>
Writing in ''The Age'' Jack Hibberd commented: "While ''The Call'' deploys fictional devices, such as extensively scarred old red gums symbolically embodying the mutilated blacks, and a helmeted Nek Kelly surreally "emerging from the soft white skin of a young woman's shoulder," it does not quite have the deep knit of a novel. Nor does it quite knit as biography and history...This formal irresolution does not, {{sic|?|howver}}, detract from the pleasures in this book: the vivid evocations of our colonial and Aboriginal past, of city and country, of sporting wizardry, and of the strangely soulful narrator's search for heroes in an empty culture."<ref>{{cite web|title="Rules of the game" |publisher= The Age, 21 November 1998, Extra p9|url=https://www.proquest.com/historical-newspapers/november-21-1998-page-123-314/docview/2521625496/se-2|access-date= 25 April 2024}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Latest revision as of 19:18, 29 April 2024

The Call
AuthorMartin Flanagan
Cover artistNada Backovic
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistorical novel
PublisherAllen & Unwin, One Day Hill
Publication date
1998
Media typePaperback
Pages181 pp
ISBN0-9757708-0-2
OCLC154632077

The Call is a historical novel by Australian writer Martin Flanagan. It was first published by Allen & Unwin in 1998.[1]

It was adapted into a stage play for Malthouse Theatre in 2004.[2]

Plot summary[edit]

The novel follows the life of Tom Wills, considered a founder of Australian rules football. Here he is the coach of the Australian Aboriginal cricket team in England in 1868 which was the first cricket tour of England by any Australian team.

Critical reception[edit]

Writing in The Age Jack Hibberd commented: "While The Call deploys fictional devices, such as extensively scarred old red gums symbolically embodying the mutilated blacks, and a helmeted Nek Kelly surreally "emerging from the soft white skin of a young woman's shoulder," it does not quite have the deep knit of a novel. Nor does it quite knit as biography and history...This formal irresolution does not, howver [sic?], detract from the pleasures in this book: the vivid evocations of our colonial and Aboriginal past, of city and country, of sporting wizardry, and of the strangely soulful narrator's search for heroes in an empty culture."[3]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Austlit — The Call by Martin Flanagan". Austlit. Retrieved 25 April 2024.
  2. ^ ""The Call"". The Age, 19 October 2004. Retrieved 25 April 2024.
  3. ^ ""Rules of the game"". The Age, 21 November 1998, Extra p9. Retrieved 25 April 2024.

External links[edit]