The Drowner

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The Drowner
ISBN
0732908582
Preceded byOur Sunshine 
Followed byGrace 

The Drowner (1996) is a novel by Australian author Robert Drewe. It was shortlisted for Miles Franklin Award, and won the Vance Palmer Prize for Fiction and New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards — Book of the Year in 1997.

Plot summary

In the late 19th century an Englishman irrigator or "drowner", Will Dance, utilises ancient water-knowledge and modern technology to save a drought-ridden town in Western Australia.

Reviews

  • Publishers' Weekly noted: "The desert mining town,..., comes fully to life, invigorated by crisp and moving portrayals of Drewe's minor characters and the monotonous beauty of the hostile (blessedly arid) countryside."[1]
  • Garth Crawford in Woroni Sstated: "In his mastery of image, and spare but beautiful descriptions of this quest, Drewe reveals his strongest claim to pre-eminence. The Drowner is by an author who enjoys words, weighs and places each without mistaking linguistic asceticism for aestheticism."[2]

Awards and nominations

  • 1997 winner New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards — Christina Stead Prize for Fiction
  • 1997 winner New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards — Book of the Year
  • 1997 shortlisted
    Commonwealth Writer's Prize
    — South East Asia and South Pacific Region - Best First Novel
  • 1997 winner Vance Palmer Prize for Fiction
  • 1998 winner Festival Awards for Literature (SA) — Award for Fiction — National Fiction Award
  • 1998 winner Festival Awards for Literature (SA) — Premier's Award for the Best Overall Published Work

Notes

A film adaptation of the novel is currently in pre-production. Directed by Jeff Darling from a screenplay by Justin Monjo, Producers Michael Boughen and Matthew Street, Production Company: Ambience Entertainment The Drowner: A story of love, passion, madness, death, and human frailty]</ref>

References