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Prelude to Christopher

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Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print

Preceded by
  
Slow Dawning

Originally published
  
1934

Page count
  
317

Publisher
  
P. R. Stephensen

3.9/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
1934

Pages
  
317

Followed by
  
Return to Coolami

Author
  
Eleanor Dark

Genre
  
Novel

Country
  
Australia

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Similar
  
Return to Coolami, Lantana Lane, Storm of time, The Timeless Land, The little company

Prelude to Christopher is a 1934 novel by Eleanor Dark (1901–1985). It was awarded the ALS Gold Medal in 1934.

Contents

Plot summary

The storyline is nonlinear and of interest to those interested in the establishment of modernism in the arts in Australia. The story centers on a Eugenicist experiment gone awry on a remote island. The repercussions of the incident play out in a young woman's decision whether to have a child. A recurring symbol in the book is a painting of the island with the doomed eugenicist's experiment.

Reviews

A reviewer in The Sydney Morning Herald noted that "It stands apart from the ordinary run of Australian fiction because of the author's mastery over her material, and her capacity for making every phrase tell...Not many Australian writers have exhibited such technical efficiency in a first novel."

After the book's re-issue by Halstead Press in 2011, Anne Maxwell, of the University of Melbourne, found that "Arguably, part of the emotive power of Prelude to Christopher stems from the fact that it contains autobiographical elements; indeed, some critics maintain that it was based on a dark family secret." Maxwell notes that Dark's mother committed suicide and that her father was a sexual predator and tyrant. She continued: "Underlining the extent of Dark’s investment in the finer emotions, especially the human capacity for compassion and empathy and the ability to hit back at the ideal of rational efficiency, is the novel’s non-realist style."

References

Prelude to Christopher Wikipedia