Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

White Topee

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Country
  
Australia

Genre
  
Literary fiction

Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
1954

Publisher
  
Angus & Robertson

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1954

Pages
  
250 pp

Author
  
Eve Langley

Preceded by
  
The Pea-Pickers

White Topee (1954) is a novel by Australian writer Eve Langley.

Contents

Plot summary

The novel is set in Gippsland, Victoria, which is depicted as an idyllic place with peoples from many nations working on the land in harmony. The novel is a sequel of sorts to the author's earlier book The Pea-Pickers, and features the same characters two years later.

Critical reception

Peter Harding, writing in The Sydney Morning Herald, found the novel "is, more than anything else, a poem. Plain prose and formal verse intersperse many of its 250 pages, but much of it is a poem disguised as prose. The poem is about Australia and Italians, and about a poet's ecstatic, anguished memories of youth in Gippsland and probably somewhere in northern Australia. And in reading it one is in the presence of something great amid a rambling eccentricity."

Peggy Wright was impressed with the novel in The News (Adelaide): "It is impossible to be lukewarm about Eve Langley. Either you lap up her strikingly original prose, or you wonder what the heck she's writing about. Personally, I can take all Eve Langley likes to write, and come back for more...The book is packed with lively characters music-loving Italians, and casual Australians, university graduates and laborers. Every page is rich with a sincere, almost passionate love of Australia."

References

White Topee Wikipedia