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Broken Words

1988 novel by Australian author Helen Hodgman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Broken Words is a 1988 novel by the Australian author Helen Hodgman, originally published in Australia by Penguin.[1] It is also known by the alternative title Ducks, under which it was published in the USA.[2]

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It was the winner of the 1989 New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, Christina Stead Prize for Fiction.[3]

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Synopsis

Hazel, from the small Queensland town of Goondiwindi, lives on the dole in London in the late 1980s. This novel, in a fractured narrative, tells her story and the story she interacts with.

Critical reception

Reviewing the novel for The Sydney Morning Herald Catherine Kenneally found it to be "bleak, funny and savage". She continued "Not only are words broken in this novel, but hearts, minds and bodies as well."[4]

Publication history

After the novel's initial publication in Australia by Penguin Books[1] it was reprinted as follows:

Notes

  • Dedication: With thanks to Barbara Bridges, Jane Cameron, Irma Havlicek, Roger Hodgman, Suzanne Perkins and Nathan and special thanks to Colin Haycroft for the punctuation and to Meredith Hodgman for the ducks.

Awards

See also

References

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