The Chantic Bird
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''The Chantic Bird'' (1968) is the debut novel by Australian writer David Ireland.Austlit - ''The Chantic Bird'' by David Ireland
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Plot summary

The novel follows the story of a young, psychotic teenage boy living on the fringes of society in Sydney. His only interactions with the world are through a suburban family, the children who live there and Bee the woman who cares for them.


Critical reception

Virginia Osborne, reviewing the novel in ''The Canberra Times'', found the novel "impressive" and noted: "The country is vividly described by Mr Ireland. The only jarring note is the baby talk indulged in by the children which is too cloying. But this apart, it has the same aura of inescapable tragedy as the film 'Bonnie and Clyde' and should appeal to the same public." Michael Wilding found the novel less than impressive: "There is never any firm establishment of his idiom. The language is a shaky mixture of slang and routine literary, overlaid with the odd portentous gesture at establishing some metaphysical cum-our-violent-civilization's angst. There is no meaningful exploration of character or social type nor is there any insight offered into the delinquent mind. The psychology is rudimentary and literary, and the novel's only function is a titillating or emetic one."


See also

* 1968 in Australian literature


Notes

Text Publishing Text Publishing is an independent Australian publisher of fiction and non-fiction, based in Melbourne, Victoria. Company background Text Media was founded in Melbourne in 1990 by Diana Gribble and Eric Beecher, along with designer Chong Weng ...
re-issued the novel in March 2015 as part of their "Text Classics" series. The book was issued with an introduction by critic Geordie Williamson titled "Australian Psycho"."Australian Psycho" by Geordie Williamson
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References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Chantic Bird, The 1968 Australian novels Novels by David Ireland 1968 debut novels