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Twenty Three : Stories

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Country
  
Australia

Publication date
  
1962

Pages
  
212

Author
  
John Morrison

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print (hardback)

Originally published
  
1962

Page count
  
212

Publisher
  
Australasian Book Society

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Twenty-Three : Stories (1962) is the third collection of short stories by Australian author John Morrison. It won the ALS Gold Medal in 1963.

Contents

The collection consists of 23 stories, with several appearing here for the first time. The stories are taken from Morrison's writing from the 1950s and early 1960s, with the earliest having been published for the first time in 1950, and the latest, originally in this collection, in 1962.

Contents

  • "The Ticket"
  • "To Margaret"
  • "A Man's World"
  • "This Freedom"
  • "The Hold Up"
  • "At This Very Moment"
  • "The Last Three Years"
  • "The Children"
  • "Bo Abbott"
  • "Goyai"
  • "The Lonely One"
  • "Black Night in Collingwood"
  • "It Opens Your Eyes"
  • "The Man on the Bidgee"
  • "The Drunk"
  • "To Kill a Snake"
  • "Dog-Box"
  • "The Judge and the Shipowner"
  • "Morning Glory"
  • "All I Ask"
  • "Way of Life"
  • "Sydney or the Bush"
  • "Ward Four"
  • Critical reception

    Judah Waten, in his survey of Australian fiction of 1962, in Realist Writer stated: "Twenty Three stories by John Morrison has added to his already considerable fame as a short story writer. It was widely reviewed in the press and even right-wing critics have conceded that these stories are authentic pictures of Australian life. This collection includes such outstanding stories as "Bo Abbott," a study of a militant waterside worker and "Morning Glory," a picture of the bourgeois mentality which places property above life."

    References

    Twenty-Three : Stories Wikipedia