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Voss Paperback | Pages: 448 pages
Rating: 3.77 | 2425 Users | 221 Reviews

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Title:Voss
Author:Patrick White
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 448 pages
Published:July 21st 1994 by Vintage Classics (first published August 10th 1957)
Categories:Fiction. Cultural. Australia. Historical. Historical Fiction. Classics

Narrative To Books Voss

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY ROBERT MACFARLANE

Set in nineteenth-century Australia, Voss is the story of the secret passion between an explorer and a naïve young woman. Although they have met only on a few occasions, Voss and Laura are joined by overwhelming, obsessive feelings for each other. Voss sets out to cross the continent, and as hardships, mutiny and betrayal whittle away his power to endure and to lead, his attachment to Laura gradually increases. Laura, waiting in Sydney, moves through the months of separation as if they were a dream and Voss the only reality.

List Books Toward Voss

Original Title: Voss
ISBN: 0099324717 (ISBN13: 9780099324713)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Johann Ulrich Voss, Laura Trevelyan
Setting: Australia
Literary Awards: WH Smith Literary Award (1959), Miles Franklin Literary Award (1957)

Rating Appertaining To Books Voss
Ratings: 3.77 From 2425 Users | 221 Reviews

Commentary Appertaining To Books Voss
To summarise: this is a beautifully written, evocative novel, with lots of philosophical and theological exploration. And maybe, if it wasn't for my huge aversion to the existential-angst-in-the-wilderness genre, I might have actually enjoyed it. But then there is the fact that I kinda found it, well, - I want to say 'wrong', but you can't really accuse great literature of being wrong, so we'll go with 'presents a view of the world that I don't share', or alternatively, "OMG enuff about the

While pondering on whether to read another Patrick White, I check my rating of "Voss", which I remember dimly as an excruciatingly slow ride through 19th century Australia with a man I couldn't stand at all until the very end of the story. Even though I felt that it was a struggle to get to the end of that (reading) journey, it left an impression on me that lingered: that Patrick White's fiction is worth grappling with, that the effort the reader has to put in is mirrored in the effort of the

Wow, this was a surprising discovery! At first it seemed to be a classic adventure story about a sturdy German, named Voss, who was the first ever to make the passage through Australia, from east to west, around 1840. This story is mixed with the platonic lovestory between this Voss-character and the headstrong lady Laura. But the book offers much more than this: it is a derisive portrait of society in Sydney (in the manner of Jane Austen), an accumulation of wisdom on life, death and love (in

This was a strange book. I have seldom experienced so many ups and downs within a book.In 1845 Johann Ulrich Voss, a German, sets out to explore the Australian outback as the first white man ever. Before that he meets the orphaned Laura Trevelyan, niece of a wealthy merchant and sponsor of Voss' expedition. Although Voss and Laura only meet twice face to face, a strange form of love story evolved between the two during the expedition.I don't want to tell more of the plot to not spoil the

Very interesting story. It is about crossing the then unexplored center of the vast Australian continent. Look at the globe. Australia is a big piece of land in the lower part of the Southern hemisphere. According to Wiki, a big part of that piece of land are desserts and one of the first land explorer who attempted to cross it from coast-to-coast, was a Prussian explorer, Ludwig Leichhardt (1814-1848), who disappered in the Australian outback while doing his 3rd land exploration. In this 1957

This book is based upon the life of the nineteenth-century Prussian explorer and naturalist Ludwig Leichhardt who disappeared whilst on an expedition into the Australian outback.A magnificent and unforgettable book to be read by all fans of Australian fiction.

KOBOBOOKSReviewed by The Independent