Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Man Shy

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Language
  
English

Pages
  
153

Author
  
Frank Dalby Davison

Genre
  
Novel

Followed by
  
The Wells of Beersheba

3.9/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
1931

Originally published
  
1931

Page count
  
153

Country
  
Australia

Publisher
  
Angus & Robertson, Australia

Media type
  
Print (Hardback and Paperback)

Novels
  
A Modern Instance, Dodsworth, Giles Goat‑Boy, Mountolive, The Ambassadors

Man-Shy (1931) is a novel by Australian author Frank Dalby Davison. It won the ALS Gold Medal for Best Novel in 1931.

Contents

Plot summary

Set on a Queensland cattle station, the novel tells the story of the interactions between man and beast with the cattle receiving prominence.

Publication

The author was originally unable to find a publisher for the novel and was forced to publish it himself. It was later picked up by Angus & Robertson who issued a new edition.

Reviews

Aidan de Brune, writing in The West Australian in a retrospective of the author's work stated that "Like the painter of pictures in oils, the writer, who is a painter of pictures in words, must trust his eye, and use his eye, before he begins to use his pen. Frank Davison understands this. He has looked closely at Australia before beginning to write about it. He has looked through his own eyes and not through the spectacles kindly provided for our use by English, and other visitors, to this country. That is why the work of Frank Dalby Davison is a portent for the future of the Australian novel."

A reviewer in The Queensland Times noted that "With a happy gift of expression, Mr. Davison has painted the ordinary round of work on a cattle station with startling new tints, and always from the angle of the beast on the hoof."

Awards and nominations

  • 1931 winner ALS Gold Medal
  • References

    Man-Shy Wikipedia