Black Rock White City

Black Rock White City (2015) is the debut novel of Australian writer A. S. Patrić.[1] It won the Miles Franklin Award in 2016.[2]

Black Rock White City
AuthorA. S. Patrić
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
GenreLiterary fiction
PublisherTransit Lounge
Publication date
1 April 2015
Media typePrint (paperback)
Pages248 pp
ISBN9781921924835
Preceded by 

Plot

In the late 1990s Jovan, a writer and academic in Serbia, and his wife Suzana are refugees living in Melbourne, having fled the Yugoslav Wars. Jovan works as a cleaner at a hospital, and is tasked with cleaning up some graffiti which is followed by more vandalism that becomes ever more weird and threatening.

Reception

Commenting on behalf of the Miles Franklin Award judging panel, State Library of NSW Mitchell Librarian, Richard Neville, said Black Rock White City delivers a powerful and raw account of the migrant experience in Australia, exploring the damages of war, and the possibility of redemptive love, in the context of debilitating emotional and physical dislocation.[2]

Joanne Peulen of Booklover Book Reviews said "Black Rock White City defies typical genre categorisation, and that perhaps this is the mark of a truly great novel… with the intensity and suspense of a psychological thriller, the lyricism and universality of great literature, and the grittiness and brutality of a crime novel".[3]

Lisa Hill of ANZLitLovers said "Black Rock White City is a stunning novel that places A.S. Patrić among the finest of our new crop of writers. His prose is uncompromising but his imagery is exquisite. He doesn’t fall back on lashings of foul language to express ferocity and violence; and his use of poetry to reveal the Jovan unseen by the people he meets, is sublime."[4]

Awards and nominations

gollark: I would switch our fusion reactors to potatOS control, but only OC can manage them. Sad!
gollark: Fallen? You mean TechCorp 5?
gollark: It may also be in use on LurCraft.
gollark: Also TechCorp in various iterations but that is down.
gollark: Also "obsidian computing" but it was bad and may be gone.

References

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