Awards
2002 Miles Franklin Literary Award
Synopses & Reviews
Luther Fox, a loner, haunted by his past, makes his living as an illegal fisherman a shamateur. Before everyone in his family was killed in a freak rollover, he grew melons and played guitar in the family band. Robbed of all that, he has turned his back on music. There's too much emotion in it, too much memory and pain.
One morning Fox is observed poaching by Georgie Jutland. Chance, or a kind of willed recklessness, has brought Georgie into the life and home of Jim Buckridge, the most prosperous fisherman in the area and a man who loathes poachers, Fox above all. But she's never fully settled into Jim's grand house on the water or into the inbred community with its history of violent secrets. After Georgie encounters Fox, her tentative hold on conventional life is severed. Neither of them would call it love, but they can't stay away from each other no matter how dangerous it is and out on White Point it is very dangerous.
Set in the dramatic landscape of Western Australia, Dirt Music is a love story about people stifled by grief and regret; a novel about the odds of breaking with the past and about the lure of music. Dirt music, Fox tells Georgie, is "anything you can play on a verandah or porch, without electricity." Even in the wild, Luther cannot escape it. There is, he discovers, no silence in nature.
Ambitious, perfectly calibrated, Dirt Music resonates with suspense and supercharged emotion and it confirms Tim Winton's status as the preeminent Australian novelist of his generation.
Review
"Dirt Music plunges the reader straight into small-town life in Western Australia, where we find ourselves at once adrift and percussed by the tidal movements of love. Winton's prose has a shocking veracity, and a velocity that is intoxicating to behold." Gretel Erlich, author of The Solace of Open Spaces
Review
"Dirt Music strikes with the force of a full-blown natural catastrophe an intricately layered and impeccably executed novel that begins with a woman torn for the love of two men but escalates effortlessly into an examination of the central questions of human existence. The genius of Tim Winton is that for all of this he never loses his pacing, and the story lodges deeply within the reader. Dirt Music is that rare and wondrous thing a novel that is impossible to put down and yet one read slowly for the diamond brilliance of each sentence. My hands were shaking when it finally came to an end." Jeffrey Lent, author of In the Fall
Review
"[An] exhilarating multilayered amalgam of withering satire and beguiling character creation a more than worthy successor to [Winton's] critically acclaimed Cloudstreet and The Riders....Winton presents this uniquely textured fable of growth and change as a boisterous comedy....A terrific novel. Winton's best yet." Kirkus Reviews
Synopsis
Set in the wild landscape of Western Australia, this novel by the author of "The Riders" is about the odds of breaking with the past, a love story about people stifled by grief and regret, and a journey across landscapes within and without.