Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Patrick Holland (author)

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Nationality
  
Australian

Name
  
Patrick Holland

Role
  
Novelist


Patrick Holland (author) wwwaftwcomau2013wpcontentuploads201301pa

Born
  
7 August 1977 (age 46) Rockhampton, Australia (
1977-08-07
)

Occupation
  
Novelist, short story writer, essayist

Language
  
English, Chinese, Vietnamese

Books
  
Long Road of the Junkmailer

Patrick Holland is an Australian novelist and short story writer who grew up in outback Australia doing horse work for local station owners.

His novel, The Mary Smokes Boys (Transit Lounge, 2010), tells the story of a band of young disenfranchised horse thieves and the young sister of one of them. It was longlisted for the Miles Franklin Award and shortlisted for the Age Book of the year. The novel employs a prose technique based on Arvo Pärt's tintinnabuli technique of musical composition and Biblical dirges.

His short story collection, The Source of the Sound (Salt, 2010), won Salt Publishing's 2010 Scott Prize.

The Darkest Little Room (Transit Lounge, 2012), is a literary thriller set in Ho Chi Minh City. The novel concerns human trafficking.

Navigatio (Transit Lounge, 2014) is a novelistic meditation on the Navigatio Sancti Brendani Abbatis (or The Journey of St Brendan (circa AD 900)), which assumes the form of a semi-ordered collection of Medieval manuscripts.

One (Transit Lounge, 2016) is a novel that imagines the final days of the Kenniff gang, Australia's last bushranges, on their escapdes in Western Queensland.

Holland's writing is informed by Greek Orthodoxy, to which faith he is a convert, and his experiences working in Asia and outback Australia. He is a founding member of the Asia Pacific Writers and Translators Association and judge of the 2016 Commonwealth Short Story Prize. He has described his writing style as minimalist, and also 'ambient' with reference to Japanese literature, in particular the works of Yasunari Kawabata, John Saul, and Yuki Kurita.

References

Patrick Holland (author) Wikipedia