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Elizabeth Harrower (1928–2020)

Author of The Watch Tower

6+ Works 488 Members 27 Reviews

About the Author

Elizabeth Harrower was born in 1928 in Sydney, Australia. She has worked as a reviewer for The Sydney Morning Herald, for the ABC, and in publishing. She is the author of In Certain Circles which won the 2015 Voss Literary Prize. Her other work includes Down in the City, The Long Prospect, The show more Catherine Wheel and The Watch Tower. She won the Steele Rudd Award for a Short Story Collection at the Queens Literary Awards 2016 with her title, A Few Days in the Country: And Other Stories. On July 7, 2020, she died at the age 92. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Includes the name: Elizabeth Harrower

Works by Elizabeth Harrower

The Watch Tower (1966) 215 copies
In Certain Circles (2014) 103 copies
The Long Prospect (1958) 67 copies
The Catherine Wheel (1979) 42 copies
Down in the City (2013) 29 copies

Associated Works

The Best Australian Stories 2016 (2016) — Contributor — 17 copies
Classic Australian Short Stories (1974) — Contributor — 13 copies

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Reviews

 
Flagged
oldblack | 17 other reviews | Feb 2, 2022 |
Interesting bunch of characters very nicely presented but it all got a bit samey and dull after a while.
 
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mjhunt | Jan 22, 2021 |
I'm not usually interested in woman-falls-for-inappropriate-man stuff, but Harrower does it much better than most, and our narrator's reflectiveness made it bearable. Plus Harrower is such a great writer that she could choose much worse material and make it work.
 
Flagged
stillatim | Oct 23, 2020 |
Listen to me: if you like Ferrante's Naples novels, go read this. Harrower's story is eerily similar. Harrower famously fell silent after writing a few novels. And nobody knows who 'Elena Ferrante' is, which makes me think... well, cue the conspiracy theories.

WT is about two sisters who struggle with the limited options available to them in war-time and post-war Australia. There is horrific domestic violence. There is generalized misogyny. One of the sisters gives in, one of them does not (lose the blood relationship, and doesn't this sound familiar, Elena?) All of this takes place is lovely, Jamesian prose, which lets Harrower lay out some great psychology:

"Looking into the intense darkness of Felix's gaze was not like looking into the eyes of an insane person, though the internal resistance was similar; yet it in no way resembled the experience of looking into the eyes of another nominally rational human being. His eyes were rather peep-holes through which a force could be glimpsed, primitive, chilling, subterranean beyond definition."

Though the sisters are great characters, this Felix gent is one of the great males of twentieth century literature: despite being utterly horrific, Harrower constantly makes her reader feel for him. It's clear he's at the mercy of this force within him, and the forces outside him as well. Of course, you don't feel for him that much. Mostly you just want him dead.
… (more)
 
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stillatim | 17 other reviews | Oct 23, 2020 |

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Statistics

Works
6
Also by
2
Members
488
Popularity
#50,613
Rating
3.8
Reviews
27
ISBNs
55
Languages
6

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