Three Dollars (novel)

Three Dollars is a 1998 novel by Australian writer Elliot Perlman.[1] It is his first published novel. A movie of the same name based on the novel was released in 2005.

Three Dollars
Cover of 1998 Picador edition
AuthorElliot Perlman
Cover artistBland Design
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovel
PublisherPicador
Publication date
1998
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages381pp
ISBN0-330-42167-0
OCLC156765358

Plot summary

The novel is set in Melbourne. The first-person narrator, Eddie Harnovey, is a chemical engineer, married to Tanya, an aspiring but ultimately uncontracted political science academic. Eddie is from middle class origins, his father being a clerk for a local council. His childhood friend Amanda, however, was a class above them. As a chemical engineer, her father wore starched cotton shirts while Eddie's father wore drip-dry poly-cotton shirts. Amanda's family banned Eddie from meeting her. Nevertheless, Eddie meets Amanda every nine and half years. The next time is as undergraduates, where Eddie notices her in a queue for more fashionable food than he is in the queue for. The next time is as fellow shoppers in a department store, as Eddie looks for formal wear for his marriage to Tanya. The next time he meets her is in much straitened circumstances. Downsized, jobless, and with only three dollars in his bank account, Eddie skips an appointment with Amanda - now an employment consultant - and ends up beaten unconscious protecting a friend of a now indigent man Eddie befriended while still solvent. Eddie's report on Amanda's father's smelter expansion was the reason Eddie was downsized. Amanda identifies Eddie from the appointment card he had in his shirt pocket.

Movie adaptation

In 2005, the novel was adapted to a movie of the same name.

gollark: Perhaps it is actually time-based, with chances being great on some days and awful on others.
gollark: or something like that.
gollark: ***TURN OR DIE***
gollark: What if we *tell* them they will be but don't?
gollark: (like ARing, but with more emphasis)

References

  1. Minshull, Rob (11 November 2011). "Three Dollars by Elliot Perlman". 612 ABC Brisbane. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 20 October 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.