Coal Creek (novel)

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Coal Creek
First edition
AuthorAlex Miller
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAllen & Unwin, Australia
Publication date
2013
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages291 pp
ISBN978-1-74331-698-6
Preceded byAutumn Laing 
Followed byThe Passage of Love 

Coal Creek is a 2013 novel by the Australian author Alex Miller.[1]

Synopsis[edit]

In the 1950s in Queensland's Stone Country the orphaned Robert Blewitt (nicknamed "Bobby Blue") works as a deputy for the local constable, Daniel Collins. Bobby boards with the Collins's and falls for their young daughter. But he comes into conflict with the constable when his oldest friend Ben Tobin gets into trouble.

Reception[edit]

Writing in The Monthly Geordie Williamson noted: "To follow Alex Miller once again into the stone country of Central Queensland, a landscape sacred in the author’s memory and an essential site for his fiction, is to watch a self return to its wellsprings, and not only in terms of place...Miller's voice is never more pure or lovely than when he channels it through an instrument as artless as Bobby. Some will complain that Coal Creek is only as complex as the words in which it is expressed, but I disagree. The intelligence of the author haunts the novel, like an atmosphere: a “colouring of the air”, writes Proust, like 'the bloom on a grape'."[2]

In the Australian Book Review Brian Matthews wrote: "Coal Creek is a beautifully managed novel. The almost unbearably harrowing climactic sequence – laden with the inevitability Bobby has long feared for himself, Ben Tobin, and the Collins family – is followed by a tender 'dying fall' in which, however, there is no mitigation of grim reality or wrenching loss. 'We all hang on the cross, Bobby Blue,' his mother had told him, and, in one way or another, they all do."[3]

Awards[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Coal Creek by Alex Miller". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
  2. ^ ""Alex Miller's 'Coal Creek'"". The Monthly, September 2002. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
  3. ^ ""Hanging on the Cross, Alex Miller's Journey of the Imagination"". Australian Book Review, October 2013. 26 September 2013. Archived from the original on 12 January 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
  4. ^ ""2014 Prime Mimister's Literary Awards Shortlists"". Prime Minister of Australia. Archived from the original on 22 October 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
  5. ^ "2014 Victorian Premier's Literary Awards winners announced; 'Liquid Nitrogen' wins Victorian Prize for Literature". Books+Publishing. 29 January 2014. Archived from the original on 24 September 2021. Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  6. ^ ""Interview: Alex Miller"". Sydney Morning Herald, 5 October 2013. 4 October 2013. Retrieved 1 May 2024.