Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living

Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living is a 2005 novel by Australian author Carrie Tiffany. It won the 2005 Western Australian Premier's Book Award for Fiction, and was shortlisted for the 2006 Miles Franklin Award and the 2007 Orange Prize for Fiction.

Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living
First edition
AuthorCarrie Tiffany
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
GenreLiterary
PublisherPan Macmillan, Australia
Publication date
2005
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages256 pp
ISBN0330421913
Followed byMateship with Birds 

Description

The novel follows Jean Finnegan, a sensible and appealing young seamstress who, when the story opens in 1934, has earned a billet in the women's car at the rear of the Better Farming Train that tours Victoria, bringing agricultural science to the man-on-the-land. The rest of the train consists of 14 cars, each dedicated to some aspect of farm labour - a pig car, a cattle car, a sheep car, a wheat car, even a chicken-sexing car run by world-famous Japanese chicken-sexer Mr Ohno, whose admiration manages to unsettle Jean despite his almost non-existent English.[1]

Awards

Notes

The novel carried the following dedication:

"For T. P. S., T. E. S. & G. R. T. and with heartfelt thanks to K. J. S."

Reviews

  • The Age: "..a highly accomplished, adroit and funny-serious novel, which, unlike a Mallee farm, works almost perfectly."[1]
  • Blogcritics: "..all of Australia’s 20th-century history is here – the struggle to find a workable relationship with an ancient continent, to come to terms with its place in Asia, two world wars, the Depression, stories that are indeed not just Australian, but universal."[2]
gollark: I quite like Alpine Linux myself.
gollark: All hail Linux!
gollark: Yep, CPU is probably never going to reach anywhere near 100% usage most of the time.
gollark: If you're going for a low performance server you should possibly use containers for less overhead.
gollark: Praise systemd.

References

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