dear_prudence: (Default)
dear_prudence ([personal profile] dear_prudence) wrote2008-03-19 03:12 pm

book: Romulus, my Father, by Raimond Gaita



'romulus, my father', by raimond gaita


i had my suspicions about this book. i had heard that it was a wonderful novel, but i wasn't in a huge hurry to read another book written by a wistful, nostalgic old man about how great and noble his father had been. i couldn't imagine what i could find to relate to in a book of this kind.
i think i should stop judging books by what their blurbs lead me to believe they will be about.
this was a completely honest, involving, and beautiful text. it confronted themes of mental illness, suicide, and the migrant experience in australia, with unsentimental honesty. he writes like a philosopher, in a measured, thoughtful, and clear manner, and that saves the novel from being a romanticised history of 'growing up tough in the bush'.
i'd strongly recommend it to anyone who enjoys a good auto/biography.

[identity profile] neko-seraph.livejournal.com 2008-03-19 09:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Heh, funny you should say he writes like a philosopher - he is. I met (and you probably did too) his daughter at Melb uni philosophy classes. Mr Gaita's an ethical philosopher, wrote A Common Humanity: Thinking About Love and Truth and Justice, The Philosopher's Dog and Good and Evil: An Absolute Conception.

I remember Eva being very embarrassed when one of her dad's treatises was set as a main text for our subject (though I can't remember which subject it was...).

[identity profile] nixwilliams.livejournal.com 2008-03-20 02:57 am (UTC)(link)
i'd like to read it one day. have you seen the film?