Jimmy Brockett

Jimmy Brockett : Portrait of a Notable Australian (1951) is the debut novel by Australian writer Dal Stivens.[1]

Jimmy Brockett
First edition
AuthorDal Stivens
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
GenreFiction
PublisherBritannicus Liber, London
Publication date
1951
Media typePrint
Pages312 pp
Preceded by 
Followed byThe Wide Arch 

Story outline

Jimmy Brockett is a backstreets entrepreneur who builds a fortune from racing, boxing and newspapers. Brockett joins the Labour Party in Sydney and the novel follows his political career as he rises to become a successful businessman and a Member of Parliament.

Critical reception

Geoffrey Hutton in The Argus noted some highlights of the book: "Mr Stivens writes in what may already be called the Sydney tradition, which is distinct from anything you might expect from Adelaide, Perth, or Brisbane. In its toughness it has links with the bushranger novel but its back country is the slums of Woolloomooloo or Surry Hills; and its bandits don't stick up mail coaches but run wrestling matches and get into Parliament. Jimmy Brockett does both, for Jimmy is an urban Ned Kelly, who holds up the city suckers and lifts their bullion without needing firearms. Jimmy is big and brash, like Sydney, and he narrates his story largely in the third person like Caesar."[2]

Reviewing the novel for Westerly in 1984, Van Ikin compared the book to Power Without Glory by Frank Hardy, published the year before: "As the difference between the two novels' titles implies, Hardy is writing primarily to advance a thesis whereas Stivens' focus falls upon the human individual (though with sufficient structural apparatus to place that individual within a wider perspective)."[3]

Note

  • Dedication: To Win, who has had to live with both of us
  • The novel was originally published in London, as Stivens was living there at the time, but was held up by Customs on its arrival in Australia.[4] No reason was given but the novel was subsequently released for sale.[5]
gollark: I don't know how you would actually enforce any of this, but it might help.
gollark: And have all words go through neural network driven rewriting to remove all emotional content.
gollark: And yet you didn't want me as owner.
gollark: Perhaps politicians could be required to have all voice be run through speech synthesis which removes all emotion.
gollark: I don't know.

See also

References

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