Oscar and Lucinda is a sweeping, irrepressibly inventive novel set in nineteenth-century Australia. Oscar, a nervous Anglican minister who gambles on the instructions of the Divine, joins forces with Lucinda, a teenaged heiress who buys a glassworks to help liberate her sex. The resulting narrative tangle of love, commerce, religion, and colonialism culminates in a half-mad expedition to transport a glass church across the Outback. In True History of the Kelly Gang, the legendary Australian outlaw Ned Kelly speaks for himself, scribbling his narrative in semiliterate but magically descriptive prose as he flees from the police. To his pursuers, Kelly is nothing but a monstrous criminal, but to his own people he is a hero defying the authority of the English. In a dazzling act of ventriloquism, Peter Carey brings the famous bushranger wildly and passionately to life.
PAUL GILES is the Challis Professor of English at the University of Sydney and author of numerous books, including The Global Remapping of American Literature and Transnationalism in Practice.
"The stuff of shimmering, transparent fantasy, held together by the struts of nineteenth-century history." --TIME
"A kind of rollercoaster ride . . .The reader emerges . . . gasping, blinking, reshaped in a hundred ways, conscious that the world is never going to look the same again." --THE WASHINGTON POST BOOK WORLD
Praise for TRUE HISTORY OF THE KELLY GANG:
"A spectacular feat of imagination." --THE BOSTON GLOBE
"Vastly entertaining . . . As if Huck Finn and Shakespeare had joined forces to prettify the legend of Jesse James." --THE NEW YORK TIMES
"A bravura performance . . . Rewards the persistent reader with a powerful emotional experience." --THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
"The ingenuity, empathy, and poetic ear that the novelist brings to his feat of imposture cannot be rated too high." --John Updike, THE NEW YORKER