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DIRT MUSIC [Paperback]

Tim Winton
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Picador/Pan (2001)
  • ASIN: B001UC0D18
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

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Inside This Book (Learn More)
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First Sentence
ONE NIGHT in November, another that had somehow become morning while she sat there, Georgie Jutland looked up to see her pale and furious face reflected in the window. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
25 of 26 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Another Strong Scarred Work 15 Aug 2003
Format:Paperback
Tim Winton's books are not light and easy. His characters are the walking wounded, scarred marred and often barely surviving. He besets them with harsh tragedies, violent accidents, abandonment. Sometimes their situations are so dire that you might want to put the book aside and go into the fresh air just to know that life isn't as bleak and cruel as he paints it. When you return to the narrative, wary and battle weary the chinks of light begin to appear.

Dirt Music reduced me to tears - Fox the sole survivor of a brutal family accident, an outcast of a harsh unforgiving Australian community finds love and redemption of a sort through Georgie, a woman who is as adrift as he. The novel is surprisingly suspenseful, so I won't write any more of the actual events, but God is it good! Tim Winton stands with Janette Turner Hospital as a major talent who has sprung from the arid ground of Australia.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars He sings. He's sung. 24 Sep 2006
By jfp2006
Format:Paperback
This is a stunning novel in many unexpected ways, and for a newspaper such as the Mail on Sunday to say that it is "a book about the possibility and power of love" hardly even skims the surface of its beauty and its complexity.

With precious little knowledge of Australian literature, I confess to having approached it warily, and mainly on the recommendation of a trustworthy friend, although also on the strength of its having been shortlisted for the Booker Prize [in 2002]. Also - and this seems to happen more and more often these days - the blurb on the back of the paperback edition is slightly misleading: it introduces us to the two main characters, Georgie Jutland, "stranded with a fisherman she doesn't love", and Luther Fox. "Outcast". And "so begins an unlikely alliance".

But this is not particularly accurate, given that, for much of the novel, after an initial idyllic but thwarted episode, Georgie and Luther find themselves many hundreds of miles apart. And Tim Winton's novel slowly but inexorably turns into a fascinating thriller, as disturbing elements from the past slowly emerge, concerning the tragic history of Fox's family, and the role played in that tragedy by Jim Buckridge, Georgie's doltish, swaggering and somewhat sadistic partner.

From the fishing community of White Point in Western Australia, the reader travels northwards with Fox into an increasingly hostile and wild landscape against which he has to pit his wits constantly in order to survive. It is a journey into an Australian heart of darkness, and Fox, despite the music in his soul, is sometime hard pressed to continue making sense of what he sees as "a life writ in mud".
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A Cinematic Experience 23 Nov 2003
Format:Paperback
I am not an avid reader, nor prone to writing reviews, but this book is something special.

What makes it for me is the time and effort taken to embed the characters and the plot into the western Australian environment. In essence it is a very simple story, but the magic is in the telling; a stark story told with an eloquent richness.

I found it a real pleasure to find characters explicitly shaped by, and articulated through, the intensity of the landscape around them. It reminds me of Steinbeck in part, and conjures up expansive visual images.

I stayed up till the early hours to finish this book, and - if I have a criticism - it would be that ending comes together a little too conveniently. A minor grumble though, the journey the book takes you on is quite exceptional.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Australian demotic 16 Sep 2009
By Eileen Shaw TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Georgie Jutland is becalmed, like a boat without a sail, in a small, coastal fishing town in the southern Australian temperate zone. She's living with Jim Buckridge, a wild-man in his youth, who is now widowed, wealthy and worn down by resentment and guilt. Georgie has all she needs materially, but the reason she's latched onto Jim is to escape her own, less than happy family, where she seems forced by her sisters' conventionality to act the eternal renegade. Then she meets by accident a poacher - Luther Fox - a man who scrapes a living from illegal filching of the fishing grounds and diving for abalone. Buckridge and Fox have a long-standing feud and Georgie teases at the ugly back-story of their relationship, without making much headway.

Then circumstances force Fox to flee the town and the rest of the book concerns his headlong journey into the coastal hinterland of northern Australia, and Georgie's eventual search for him.

A recurring theme is the dirt music of the title, a mixture of blues, rock and folk-protest, dark and thrumming, like a pulse beat in the blood. This was the music Fox and his clan used to play, before the horrific accident that wiped most of them, children included, out of the world that hated them.

Winton writes here in what might be described as Australian demotic, secret thoughts half-strangled in clenched throats - a shock after the searing literary prose of his Booker-nominated novel The Riders. His range as a writer is powerful and impressive. For Winton in yet another guise, read Cloudstreet, an epic novel spanning half a century of Australian family life.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Yet another Tim Winton book - read this after reading Cloud Street - go on - you won't be disappointed.
Published 5 months ago by Cereda Kemp
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb Writing - Possible Spoilers
I left it a few days before writing this review, to see if the haunting effect of Dirt Music had lessened any. It hasn't. Read more
Published 11 months ago by J. Mccready
5.0 out of 5 stars one of the few books I've read twice
I first read this when we were travelling in Western Australia. We were heading north from Perth, up the coast road thru Geraldton, Carnarvon, Port Hedland and onwards up to Broome... Read more
Published 15 months ago by rosie c
3.0 out of 5 stars Directionless
Having greatly enjoyed Breath I wanted to try anther Winton novel. I finished Dirt Music last night and what started out a joy had tuned into a chore. Read more
Published on 10 Mar 2011 by Lendrick
1.0 out of 5 stars Dull Dirge Music
Winton seems to be desperately trying to not write with any kind of involvement. Characters lie flat on the page, scenery is black and white and emotions are kept well hidden. Read more
Published on 5 Mar 2011 by Dillon the Villain
5.0 out of 5 stars Tim Winton^s Eggs
Tim Winton is a writer with remarkable gifts (as I knew already from Breath). Dirt Music is formidable piece of writing, which depicts the Australian landscape with a vividness I,... Read more
Published on 24 Nov 2010 by Duncan Bush
5.0 out of 5 stars dirt music
This book is very much a tribute to Australia the environment and the unusual characters that populate the space. Read more
Published on 29 Aug 2010 by C. Woodward
5.0 out of 5 stars poetic and gutsy
Another brilliant piece by Tim Winton. Reading some of the reviews people have shared, it strikes me that one man's meat is another man's poison. Read more
Published on 20 July 2010 by littleredrobin
4.0 out of 5 stars Dirt Music by Tim Winton
Gives an insight into living wild in Western Australia. Characters are obsessed and persistent, but very well observed and recorded. Read more
Published on 11 Dec 2009
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic
This is the third book I have read by Tim Winton, the first two being 'Cloudstreet' and 'That Eye, the Sky', both wonderful books. Read more
Published on 18 Aug 2009 by Paula Mc
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