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         Malouf David:     more books (100)
  1. Brodie's Notes On: Johnno / An Imaginary Life by David Malouf, 1987
  2. Typewriter Music by David Malouf, 2007-01
  3. Selected Poems 1959 1989 by David Malouf, 1994
  4. Poems 1959-89 (UQP paperbacks) by David Malouf, 1992
  5. Child's Play: The Bread of Time to Come by David Malouf, 1982-04
  6. Selected Poems (A & R modern poets) by David Malouf, 1981-02-01
  7. Die Nachtwache am Curlow Creek. by David Malouf, 2001-01-01
  8. Untold Tales by David Malouf, 2000-01
  9. 12 EDMONDSTONE STREET by DAVID MALOUF, 1985
  10. 12 Edmonstone Street by David Malouf, 1986
  11. On Experience (Little Books on Big Themes) by David Malouf, 2008-12-01
  12. Jenseits von Babylon. by David Malouf, 1999-01-01
  13. Je me souviens de Babylone by David Malouf, 2000-01-01
  14. Südlicher Himmel. by David Malouf, 1999-04-01

41. Malouf, David George Joseph
HUTCHINSON ENCYCLOPEDIA. malouf, david George Joseph. Australian poet, novelist,and shortstory writer. He is of Lebanese and English extraction.
http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0032611.html
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HUTCHINSON ENCYCLOPEDIA Malouf, David George Joseph Australian poet, novelist, and short-story writer. He is of Lebanese and English extraction. His poetry collections include Neighbours in a Thicket (1974), which won several awards, Wild Lemons (1980), and First Things Last (1980). Malouf's first novel Johnno (1975) deals with his boyhood in Brisbane. It was followed by An Imaginary Life (1978) and other novels, including Fly Away Peter The Great World Remembering Babylon (1993), and Dream Stuff He has also written opera librettos for Voss 1986, from the novel of Patrick White, and La Mer de Glace
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42. David Malouf Overview
Note This new section of the Postcolonial Web, which has just begun with thekind assistance of Jörg Heinke of the University of Kiel, thus far has
http://www.scholars.nus.edu.sg/post/australia/malouf/maloufov.html

43. David Malouf: An Introduction
david malouf An Introduction. Jörg Heinke, University of Kiel, Germany. davidmalouf can also be described as a postcolonial author.
http://www.scholars.nus.edu.sg/post/australia/malouf/intro.html
David Malouf: An Introduction
, University of Kiel, Germany
A lthough born and raised in Australia, David Malouf is greatly interested in Europe. Especially the problem of Australia's position and attitude towards Europe is often found in his novels. For Malouf Australia definitely belongs to the European civilisation and tradition. In defiance of the problems European immigrants had and have in Australia he refers to a translated Europe onto Australian conditions rather than a transplanted Europe. Malouf focuses on Europe are often connected with the subject of war. In Fly away Peter The Great World Johnno and Remembering Babylon war is seen as a moment of defining Australia's identity by asking questions about the background of Australians who went to war for other countries. This way of emancipation form the old continent always goes parallel with the notion of being at the edge of things. David Malouf often tells his stories not only from the Australian edge and with a look for the centre but also about people who live at the fringes of society, and aim at a secure position inside. The motif of the edge is personified by criminals ( The Child's Play Conversations at Curlow Creek ), soldiers (

44. Two Interviews With David Malouf
Two Interviews with david malouf Australian and New Zealand Studies in Canada5 (1991). An Interview with david malouf “People Get Second Chances”.
http://www.arts.uwo.ca/~andrewf/anzsc/anzsc5/malouf5.htm
Two Interviews with David Malouf Australian and New Zealand Studies in Canada 5 (1991) ANZSC
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Malouf Interview Deane Scheckter -George Johnston Review Contributors ZOETROPES NZ Literature Home Contact An Interview with David Malouf: “People Get Second Chances” Barbara Williams
Editor’s Note: Both this interview and the interview with Shelagh Rogers which follows were recorded while David Malouf was in Toronto for the Harbourfront festival of readings in October, 1990. David Malouf began by reading his poem “A Poet Among Others:” A poet, after all, is just a human being like any other and he is bound to end up in the most ordinary way, in the way most typical for his age and his times meeting the fate that lies in wait for everyone else. Nadezdha Mandelstam The self is like smoke drifting up at dawn, a ?st can’t hold it, a knotted handkerchief. It fades into grey winter skies. It goes where the birds go when water cracks in pools and is no window.

45. The Prose Of David Malouf: A Bibliography
The Prose of david malouf A Bibliography Australian and New Zealand Studies inCanada 7 (1992). david malouf’s Fiction.” Meanjin 41 (1982) 52634.
http://www.arts.uwo.ca/~andrewf/anzsc/anzsc7/giffuni7.htm
The Prose of David Malouf: A Bibliography Australian and New Zealand Studies in Canada 7 (1992) ANZSC
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Mitchell
-Australian Edwardians
Bird
-Artists and Mothers
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Interview
with Les Murray
Nettelbeck
-Malouf and History Malouf Bibliography Brenner -Autobiography West -Local History Anne French -Poems Brown -Belich and Shadbolt McLaren -Wedde's Symme's Hole Jones Leaving the Highway review Contributors ZOETROPES NZ Literature Home Contact Cathe Giffuni Author’s Note: The key which follows is provided to enable the user to locate discussions of individual texts in the general essays on Malouf’s works. For Malouf’s poetry and additional criticism by Malouf, see the bibli­ography in Philip Neilsen, Imagined Lives: A Study of David Malouf (St. Lucia: U of Queensland P, 1990). KEY J Johnno IL An Imaginary Life CP Child’s Play FAP Fly Away Peter HHA Harland’s Half Acre A Antipodes ES 12 Edmondstone Street GW The Great World PROSE WORKS BY MALOUF Books Johnno: A Novel. An Imaginary Life.

46. A David Malouf Page
Translate this page
http://ikarus.pclab-phil.uni-kiel.de/daten/anglist/Heinke/malouf.htm

47. OzLit@Vicnet Favourite Reading List
Stead, Christina 6; An Imaginary Life – malouf, david 5; MissPeabody's Inheritance – Jolley, Elizabeth 5; The Twyborn Affair
http://home.vicnet.net.au/~ozlit/fav_read.html
Favourite Reads
T he Aust.Lit Discussion Group recently (August, 1996) had an interesting discussion about what books the members considered to be their favourites. One of the members, Dave Rubeli from Canada, collated the information to compile the following list of books and made the following observations: “In total, participants suggested approximately 120 different works. Thanks to all. This should keep me going for the next decade or so. The [bracketed number] refers to the number of times each individual work was recommended. Two things surprised me after looking at the list. The first one was that that no one recommended any of Thomas Keneally books. With the release of Schindler's List (the movie) a couple of years ago, he is one of the more visible Australian writers here in Canada (and maybe North America) … Secondly, not many people suggested plays.” Note: This list is not necessarily a true reflection of the most favoured Australian work as some participants tended not to repeat books already mentioned. Also see: OzLit Book Survey 1998
  • The Fortunes of Richard Mahony – Richardson, Henry Handel
  • 48. OzLit@ Vicnet – Australian Poets
    Anthony; Mackellar, Dorothea *; malouf, david; Martin, david; McAuley,James; Morgan, Mal; Mudie, Ian; Murray, Les. A. Nicholson, Peter
    http://home.vicnet.net.au/~ozlit/thepoets.html
    The Poets
    A ustralia has a long tradition of verse and poetry. The writers on this list include new and established poets, as well as those of yesteryear. Those marked * are the OzLit Poets which have sample poetry attached.
    Australian Banner Bank Information
    Please visit Vicnet or Sign/View OzLit's Guest Book To search the internet we recommend Australia's GoEureka Web Wombat or Yahoo Australia To search OzLit use the or the Links database Mareya Peter Schmidt
    E-mail
    or snailmail for Queries, Submissions or Banner Advertising at OzLit)
    Updated 19 February 2000 and you are visitor #

    49. David Malouf- Vancouver International Writers Festival
    david malouf has written poetry, fiction, an autobiography and three opera librettos. School.Venues, Map. Parking. Tickets, david malouf. Australia 21, 26, 37, 40.
    http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/2002festival/author.php?author=36

    50. Alphamusic - David Malouf
    Translate this page TB/Belletristik/Romane/Erzählungen Buch malouf, david - Die Nachtwache am CurlowCreek. Cover vergrößern, malouf, david Die Nachtwache am Curlow Creek.
    http://www.alphavideos.de/585/3423128585.html
    Sehr geehrter Kunde,
    unsere Produktdatenbank wird derzeit aktualisiert. Daher können wir Ihnen im Augenblick nicht das von Ihnen gesuchte Original-Produkt anzeigen, sondern stellen Ihnen interessante Auktionen zu Ihrem Suchbegriff vor. Melden Sie sich jetzt bei Ebay an und bieten Sie für diese interessanten Produkte mit. Ihr Alphamusic-Team Produkt Preis Gebote Endzeit david malouf, südlicher himmel-HC EUR 1.00 Alle 1 Artikel bei eBay aufrufen Ausschlussklausel

    51. Zeal.com - United States - New - Lifestyle - Books - By Country - Australia - Au
    A great resource for United States New - Lifestyle - Books - By Country- Australia - Authors - malouf, david. malouf, david Preview Category,
    http://www.zeal.com/category/preview.jhtml?cid=534142

    52. Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag: Die Große Welt
    Translate this page Bestellen malouf, david Die Große Welt Roman ISBN 3-423-11905-2 Euro 12,73 D13,10 A sFr 22,00 Weitere Titel von david malouf. Bei dtv sind erschienen
    http://www.dtv.de/_google/titel/titel11905.htm
    Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag
    Malouf, David
    Die Große Welt
    Roman
    ISBN 3-423-
    Euro 12,73 [D] 13,10 [A]
    sFr 22,00
    Autorenportrait

    David Malouf
    , 1934 in Brisbane/Australien geboren, Nachfahre libanesischer und britisch-jüdischer Einwanderer, hat Romane, Erzählungen, Gedichte und Oper ...
    Die Große Welt
    Weitere Titel von David Malouf Bei dtv sind erschienen: Malouf, David Die Große Welt Malouf, David Jenseits von Babylon ... www.dtv.de - Ihr Kulturportal

    53. PRICEFARMER.COM: Farm-Fresh Price Comparisons Of Books
    david malouf. 17 Titles Sorted by Title Alphabetically. 1. The Art of Love (Paperback)by Ovid; david malouf; James Michie October 2002
    http://www.pricefarmer.com/cgi-bin/farm?author=Malouf, David

    54. What The Critics Say About David Malouf
    . What the critics say about david malouf. “An sentences. davidmalouf has written a profound and poignant book.”. Harvey Blume.
    http://www.ou.edu/worldlit/authors/malouf/criticismdm.html
    Home WLT Neustadt Puterbaugh ... Malouf links
    What the critics say about David Malouf
    “An exceptionally diverse writer, Malouf is concerned with certain fundamental, consistent, and unifying themes: the relationships between past and present, continuity and change, animal and human, and the role of language as a mediator of experience. Drawn by the force of his own early experience, and regional in his preoccupations in that much of his poetry and fiction recreates his childhood in Brisbane, Malouf is nevertheless thoroughly European in
    his interests and attitudes.” The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature . Eds. William H. Wilde, Joy Hooton, and Barry Andrews. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1985.
    About Remembering Babylon
    “Despite his love of the sensible universe, Malouf explores how we wither into meaning, if not truth. This stripping action takes an uncanny turn in Remembering Babylon (1993). A historical incident again provides the cue: a blond English boy, raised by Aborigines for sixteen years, rejoins colonial society . . . He had appeared at the edge of a white settlement, a spindly scarecrow thing, shouting: “Do not shoot. I am a B-b-british object.” Subject and object in the novel, self and other, all those lines that language draws, cross and recross in a haunting fictional meditation, colored by the harsh sublime.” Ihab Hassan

    55. Interviews With David Malouf
    Subscribe Contact Us World Literature Today logo image of david malouf. davidmalouf. Interviews with david malouf. www.abc.net.au/lateline/stories/s17596.htm.
    http://www.ou.edu/worldlit/authors/malouf/linksdm.html
    Home WLT Neustadt Puterbaugh ... Malouf links
    Interviews with David Malouf
    www.abc.net.au/lateline/stories/s17596.htm www.arts.uwo.ca/~andrewf/anzsc/anzsc5/malouf5.htm www.lamp.ac.uk/ahr/archive/Issue-Sept-1996/intermal.html We hope these "virtual author pages" can serve as a resource for scholars everywhere. If you know of additional online information we should include, please write to vav@ou.edu

    56. The Motif Of Strangeness In David Malouf's Works: Remembering Babylon
    The Motif of Strangeness in david malouf's Works Remembering Babylon. Jörg Heinke,University of Kiel, Germany. Postcolonial Web Singapore OV david malouf.
    http://www.victorianweb.org/post/australia/malouf/jh4.html
    The Motif of Strangeness in David Malouf's Works: Remembering Babylon
    , University of Kiel, Germany
    In Remembering Babylon we meet a savage, Gemmy, who comes to a white settlement in mid-19th century Queensland. He does it voluntarily because in his 'first' life he was a boy from England having been cast overboard by a ship crew just off the Australian shore, sixteen years before his arrival at the settlement. During that time he lived with Aborigines, learned their language(s) and customs. Despite his total assimilation, all the time there were still unresolved glimpses of memories from the past in his head which tended to appear from time to time. After he was 'found' by eleven-year-old Lachlan Beattie and his cousins Janet and Meg McIvor he is taken in by the children's parents to stay with them. Among most of the settlers his presence seems to disturb their way of living and nourishes fear of possible attacks by blacks on the settlement. These threats are not mentioned openly because nobody wants to accuse Gemmy of being a spy. On the contrary, the secret suspicions manage to split the group of settlers after a while. Gemmy is attacked twice and after his removal from the settlement to the beekeeper Mrs. Hutchence he finally leaves the whites altogether. During his stay Gemmy does not only evoke suspicion but also manages to change some people's attitudes towards the environment and towards life. His 'child-like' perception of the world opens the eyes of Jock McIvor, the minister Mr. Frazer and Lachlan Beattie so that they have a closer look at nature and are able to better appreciate what it has to offer. Janet McIvor has a special incident which occurs alone to her when being covered all over with bees. She suddenly hears and feels the animals 'single mind'. She feels a sort of belonging to them, belonging to nature, in which she moves without contact to the artificial rules of society. This incident brings her closer to her self and prepares her for her later life as a beekeeper.

    57. The Stranger In Three Novels By David Malouf: Introduction
    The Stranger in Three Novels by david malouf Introduction. Jörg Heinke,University of Kiel, Germany. Postcolonial Web Singapore OV david malouf.
    http://www.victorianweb.org/post/australia/malouf/jh1.html
    The Stranger in Three Novels by David Malouf: Introduction
    , University of Kiel, Germany
    The experience of strangeness is an every-day experience. The notion of something that is strange can occur when we are confronted with people from other countries, when we ourselves travel to other places and even at home when we meet people who are unknown to us. When looking at etymology of the term stranger we see that it can have different connotations. The stranger can be a guest, a visitor, a completely unknown person, a new-comer and so on. In English the word stranger can also be used as a synonym for foreigner other or enemy The term strangeness , however, does not only refer to people but also to situations, places, time or to behaviour of other people, even to unknown traits in ourselves. In that respect it is multi-dimensional and if we considered the aspect of place we could mean the physical place of an unknown country but also the mental map of thinking. These are, in fact, ways of labelling, ordering, naming and placing the world in our mind. The first European settlers in Australia around the beginning of the nineteenth century were exactly confronted with that problem of putting a name to things. The land they conquered had only few similarities with what they were used to from home. The foreign country did not match their concept of an inhabitable place. Australia demanded new ways of perception, attitudes and ways of living. With their cultural background the settlers were not only isolated from their usual way of thinking but also geographically from the rest of the known world. The settlements advanced only slowly around the coast but had still vast spaces of land between them where nobody lived, which also added to the feeling of isolation and alienation.

    58. Resources - David Malouf Laments The Loss Of Poetry - 20 February 2001
    david malouf laments the loss of poetry. Andrea Dawson talks to internationallyacclaimed Australian author david malouf about the reasons why.
    http://www.brisinst.org.au/resources/dawson_andrea_malouf.html

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    David Malouf laments the loss of poetry
    Author: Andrea Dawson
    Date: 20 February 2001 David Malouf at the
    Brisbane Institute
    Are we all missing a little poetry in our lives? Andrea Dawson talks to internationally acclaimed Australian author David Malouf about the reasons why.
    With a new book Dream Stuff released in 2000 and a string of international best-sellers to his credit, celebrated Australian writer David Malouf would like to breathe life back into one of his great loves - poetry. Approaching the subject with the same passion he might one of his characters in a novel, Malouf is looking to find the essence of the spoken word, to resurrect the dying art. Gone, says Malouf are the glory days when primary school children recited by heart poetry that etched its way into their minds, instilling a sense of the lyric. Instead today, Malouf is saddened by the recent backlash against poetry, in particular the outcry that it is no longer relevant. Malouf: I am led to ask why? It all very well to say these people are being stupid but I think when people make any kind of protest we need to listen and ask ourselves what has happened when intelligent young people, who might be interested in poetry, reject it so completely. Why do you believe this type of statement is being made?

    59. Books And Writing - 5/1/2001: David Malouf - Dream Stuff... Summer Series
    This week a public conversation with the gifted Australian author david malouf whosewriting has been delighting readers and attracting prizes for almost four
    http://www.abc.net.au/rn/arts/bwriting/stories/s225573.htm

    Australia Talks

    Books

    Book Talk

    Book Reading
    ...
    The Space

    with Ramona Koval
    Friday 5/1/2001
    David Malouf - 'Dream Stuff'... Summer Series
    Summary:

    This week a public conversation with the gifted Australian author David Malouf , whose writing has been delighting readers and attracting prizes for almost four decades. David speaks to Ramona Koval about his new collection of short stories, Dream Stuff , in front of an enthusiastic crowd at the St Kilda Town Hall. (Random House) Details or Transcript: Ramona Koval : Hello, welcome to Books and Writing, Ramona Koval : with you, and tonight a conversation with David Malouf on his new collection of short stories, Dream Stuff , recorded late in March, 2000, at the St. Kilda Town Hall in Melbourne. David Malouf has been delighting his readers for decades since his first collection of poetry was published almost forty years ago, and then followed stories, novels, novellas, librettos and his autobiographical writing. His work has won very many awards, including a 1993 Booker Prize nomination for Remembering Babylon , the book which went on to win the inaugural IMPAC Literature Prize in May 1996, and earlier last month David was awarded the biennial Neustadt Prize for Literature for his body of work–joining a group which includes Nobel Prize winners Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Czeslaw Milosz and Octavio Paz.

    60. The Space Books Feature: MICHAEL ONDAATJE AND DAVID MALOUF TALK 'LOST CLASSICS'
    to no real world, it was as if they were about another planet almost, because nothingin them physically was coterminous with anything I knew. david malouf.
    http://www.abc.net.au/arts/books/stories/s444824.htm
    go to the programs Artery Australia Talks Books AWAYE! Black Arts Review Book Reading Book Talk Books and Writing The Comfort Zone Critical Mass DIG Radio FlyNet Lingua Franca The Listening Room Live On Stage The Makers Message Stick Music Deli The Music Show New Music Australia Night Club The Planet Poetica Radio Eye Sound Quality Sunday Afternoon - ABC TV Sunday Morning More Classic FM Programs More Radio National Programs More Triple J Programs
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    Contact About PEN Lecture: Delivered by A L Kennedy, Edinburgh Book Festival 2001
    24 January 2002 "What I loved about the books that I was being read was they seemed to belong to no real world, it was as if they were about another planet almost, because nothing in them physically was coterminous with anything I knew."
    David Malouf "The only form of literature was in terms of conversation at the dinner table of people who lied and lied and lied and told stories and one-upped each other, but there was really no literature except memoirs by viceroys..."
    Michael Ondaatje "What those books offer is a world and an experience which is infinitely more complex and richer, more full of possibilities, more full of contradictions than the world around you..."

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