Synopses & Reviews
Review
"The Voyage is a beautiful book, sumptuously executed for all the apparent slenderness of its narrative line... We won't see a finer piece of fiction in the longest while."--Peter Craven, The Age
Review
"The Voyage is also about love--or rather how dislocation, memory, work, loneliness, and love whirl around in our daily experience. The surface of the novel might seem as smooth as the deck of the Romance, but that it because of its brilliant execution. Underneath, the complexities of Downunder roll."--Metro (NZ)
Review
"The Voyage is oblique, idiosyncratic and original. To read it is to breathe the rarefied air of an artistic consciousness, nostalgic for literary modernism."--Stella Clarke, The Australian
Review
"A radical account of displacement, both mental and physical. Murray Bail goes from strength to strength."--Anita Brookner, author of Hotel du Lac
Review
"Bail produces a novel only every decade, which perhaps explains why he is not as well known as he should be. This novel about an Australian piano-maker in Vienna is sexy and hugely enjoyable."--Sunday Telegraph
Review
"Bail's long paragraphs slither between Delage's adventures in Vienna and the weeks spent aboard the Romance, the cargo ship making its slow way to the antipodes... This novel is not the sum of its preoccupations but an essentially abstract work of art: an invention in the sense that Bach and his contemporaries used the term for some of their compositions."--Andrew Riemer, Sydney Morning Herald
Review
"With humor and intelligence, Murray Bail explores [the] Euro-centric view in The Voyage... sexy, and hugely enjoyable."--Nicholas Shakespeare, author of The Dancer Upstairs
Review
"His exquisite prose draws us through temporal and geographic movements, leading the eye on and on, trancelike, with no white space to distract or form a natural pause.... Bail's novel has the polish and ring of literature that will have lasting appeal. An immensely satisfying book, one that rewards slow and careful reading, it confirms his status as a writer of the highest caliber."--James McNamara, The New York Times Book Review
Review
"In a quixotic narrative that zigs and zags and turns back upon itself, an esoteric exploration of passion and love, memory and ambition is revealed in pointillist fashion."--Kirkus Reviews
Review
"Surprising and new... [Bail] meticulously fashions a past tense that's made up of various scenes of the story put together, a sort of simultaneous past, vividly present on the page and whirring and turning with the mechanism of its own ingenious making."--Kirsty Gunn, author of Rain and The Boy and the Sea
Review
"The novel reads like a series of pratfalls and recoveries... the comedy, and the pathos, is squirrelled away in gestures and situations, and in emblematic moments."--
Ivor Indyk, The Sydney Review of BooksFrom the Hardcover edition.
Review
"This intelligent and shockingly funny novel shifts and shimmers as restlessly as the various seas being crossed... Though concise in scale, it is vastly thought-provoking, with some inspired nods to the great Austrian writer Thomas Bernhard's final novel, Woodcutters... If ever a novel could be said to exceed the sum of its many sensations, this masterful concoction engages, excites and perturbs with singular virtuosity."--Eileen Battersby, Irish Times
Review
"Curiously exciting: one reads in a permanent faint fever, on tenterhooks, never knowing quite where a sentence or a paragraph may veer off to."--John Banville, The Monthly
Review
"An extraordinarily original and compelling novel by the Australian fiction writer Murray Bail. It concerns the adventures of an inventor and piano maker, first in Vienna where he attempts to flog his 'perfect' piano and then, having placed only a single one, on shipboard back to Sydney. His encounters with the wealthy and influential von Schalla family, mother, daughter and father, are both hilarious and touching. Bail is one of the funniest writers alive and so subtle and crafty, he never needs to make the reader laugh."--Ploughshares
About the Author
Born in Adelaide in 1941, Murray Bail now lives in Sydney. His fiction, which includes Eucalyptus, Holden's Performance, Homesickness and The Drover's Wife and Other Stories, has been translated into more than twenty-five languages, winning a number of major awards.