The Literary Lunch
RRP: AUD $22.95 + p&p.

Copies:

The Literary Lunch

Selected Stories

By Geoffrey Dean.
Edited by Giles Hugo.
ISBN: 0-9756797-0-8
AUD $22.95 + p&p.

Proudly hosted by Post Pressed

About

Born in Hobart, Tasmania, in 1928, Geoffrey Dean saw his first short story published in the mid-1950's. Scores of his stories have appeared in five collections of his work (Stranger's Country and Other Stories; Cold Dead Monday and other Australian Stories; Summerbird and Other Stories; Over the Fence; and The Hadlee Stories), magazines, anthologies and collections in Australia, the UK, USA, Norway and China. His major credits include the State of Victoria Short Story Award and the Northern Territory Literary Awards Arafura Short Story Award. The title story form his collection Summerbird and Other Stories (William Collins 1989) was translated for an anthology of Australian writers published in China in 1992. His Story 'The Town that Died' was selected by Thea Astley, as complier, for inclusion in Coast to Coast: Australian Stories 1969-1970, and in 1986 was made into a ABC TV teledrama broadcast in Australian and sold overseas. Various critics have compared aspects of his work with masters such as Anton Chekov, Katherine Mansfield, Somerset Maugham, A.E. Coppard and William Faulkner.

Proudly published by Roaring Forties Press

Back to top

Reviews

A haunting and poetic quality ... [Geoffrey Dean] writes very, very well.

Thea Astley

The secret of dean's power is very simple, he knows how to write ... These tales are poetic. The author dips into the heart of things and tells in unpretentious language what he sees there.

The Age, Melbourne

He's a marvelous storyteller and deservedly a multi-award winner. The sense of mystery, the undercurrents of horror and the high emotional pitch of these stories compel attention. Dean's passionate response to the wilderness, expressed with clarity and freshness and a naturalist's eye for detail is a delight.

Mary Rose Liverani
The Weekend Australian

[Dean's stories] are more like mini novels ... an occasional swipe at the ineffable in the Patrick White tradition.

Tony Ryan
Federal Gazette, Hobart

Back to top