Spirit House, EPUB eBook

Spirit House EPUB

EPUB

  • Information

Description

Thirteen-year-old David is confused. Staying in Bondi with his grandparents, his mum seems to have abandoned him to run off with her lover. David's grandfather, Jimmy, spends his days at the local RSL grumbling with his three best friends, all of them Jewish-Australian survivors of the Thai-Burma Railway. But underneath their playful bickering and witty one-liners, Jimmy and his friends are afflicted by the ghosts of long-dead comrades. The only person Jimmy can confide in is a thirteen-year-old from a different world, a boy trying to make sense of his future and the daunting business of growing up.
'A little masterpiece of comedy and torment.' The Australian, 'Books of the Year'
'A literary cocktail of rare originality . . . The writing has real freshness . . . the story glides effortlessly from an intriguing start to a heart-warming resolution . . . Dapin impresses with the understated authority of his storytelling.' The Telegraph (UK)
'Every now and then you can run across a writer who does a little magic. They take something that almost everyone thinks they know something about, re-examine it from a completely unexpected direction and present the reader with a whole new take on their expectations . . . Mark Dapin has pulled off a deeply human, but particularly Australian, bit of magic.' Courier-Mail
'Dapin is funny, poignant, vibrantly witty and his novel is a treat from its elegiac opening to its bitter, unexpected close.' Canberra Times
'Strikingly original, [this is] a novel of war and its terrible legacies that eschews sentimentality, that is full of uniquely funny and wonderfully human characters, and is also profoundly moving and honourable. The voices are vivid, complex, authentic and richly democratic. This is a remarkably strong book.' Christos Tsiolkas
'Destined for classic status in every sense of the word. It is powerful, poignant, moving, tragic and intensely distressing. It is a feast of a story which will almost simultaneously move you to tears and bring a smile to your face . . . Buy, beg, borrow or steal this novel. You won't regret it.' ABC Radio Brisbane
'Dapin's achievement is to bring the past to life through memorable moments and characters in whom one can believe. The use of comedy to juxtapose the brutality of war is well measured, leading to a resolution with the past and a kind of grace for those in the present.' Sydney Morning Herald
'A compassionate, subtle and darkly humorous novel about a complex subject - it deals with male psychology and the architecture of historical wounds terrifically well.' Judges for the Royal Society of Literature's Ondaatje Prize
'Dapin richly and disquietingly combines the voices and viewpoints of Jimmy, a survivor of Japanese captivity on the Burma railway, and his grandson David, who has been abandoned by his parents in Sydney, in 1990. One of the most original of fictional depictions of Jewish-Australian life, this is also a fresh account of brutality and resistance in time of war. Dapin's command of the vernacular invigorates every page of a bold and satisfying novel.' Judges for theAge Book of the Year award

Information

  • Format:EPUB
  • Pages:368 pages
  • Publisher:Penguin Books Ltd
  • Publication Date:
  • ISBN:9780857978882

Other Formats

£4.99

Information

  • Format:EPUB
  • Pages:368 pages
  • Publisher:Penguin Books Ltd
  • Publication Date:
  • ISBN:9780857978882