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''The Big Fellow'' (1959) is the last novel by Australian author
Vance Palmer Edward Vivian "Vance" Palmer (28 August 1885 – 15 July 1959) was an Australian novelist, dramatist, essayist and critic. Early life Vance Palmer was born in Bundaberg, Queensland, on 28 August 1885 and attended the Ipswich Grammar School. With ...
. It won the 1959
Miles Franklin Award The Miles Franklin Literary Award is an annual literary prize awarded to "a novel which is of the highest literary merit and presents Australian life in any of its phases". The award was set up according to the will of Miles Franklin (1879–195 ...
. This is the third in the author's Golconda trilogy of novels, following ''Golconda'' (1948) and ''Seedtime'' (1957).


Story outline

The novel continues the story of the Big Fellow, Macy Donovan, a politician in Queensland. Now 50 he is about to take over the role of Premier as the incumbent, Wardle, departs for a cosy job in London.


Critical reception

Lisa Hill, on the ANZLitLovers Litblog was rather disappointed with the novel: "I think it might have come as a bit of a disappointment to readers lured to the title by the award. It is just not in the same class as its predecessors. ..I wouldn’t recommend spending any time hunting out a copy, but as a period piece it has some nostalgia-factor charm. Palmer’s realism is achieved with snippets that bring the 1950s to life. Brisbane still has its trams, there are porters on the railway stations, and people read books and play cards at night instead of watching the box. I felt a vague nostalgia reading about a time when a state politician could move freely around at whim without bodyguards and a media pack at heel." In his extensive study of Vance Palmer's work Harry Hesletine stated: "It is characteristic of Palmer that he opened the last volume of the trilogy at the zenith of Donovan's career only for the sake of exploring the disappointments, frustrations, and failures which underlie his seemingly gleaming achievement...In taking Donovan back to Golconda for this insight into his future. Palmer closes ''The Big Fellow'' with a forceful reminder of its integral relation to ''Seedtime'' and ''Golconda'': the trilogy ends where it had begun. And however wide a range of material his fascination with Australian society encouraged, however broad a span of space and time his panoramic structure demanded, he undoubtedly made of the three novels a single and unified work of art."''Vance Palmer'' by Harry Hesletine, UQP, 1970, pp135-139


References


Middlemiss.org
1959 Australian novels Miles Franklin Award-winning works Angus & Robertson books {{1950s-novel-stub