The Lame Dog Man

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LanguageEnglish
SeriesTreelake
GenreLiterary fiction
The Lame Dog Man
AuthorGeorge Turner
LanguageEnglish
SeriesTreelake
GenreLiterary fiction
PublisherCassell
Publication date
1967
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePrint
Pages278 pp
Preceded byA Waste of Shame 
Followed byBeloved Son 

The Lame Dog Man (1967) is a novel by Australian author George Turner. It is the last in the author's "Treelake" series, following The Cupboard Under the Stairs and A Waste of Shame.[1]

The title character is Jimmy Carlyon, a young man employed as a Commonwealth employment officer. Carlyon moves among a group of psychologically disturbed people, attempting to rectify problems in others' lives while being totally unable to do anything about this own.

Critical reception

Reviewing the novel in The Age Neil Jillet noted that with this novel "George Turner ends his Treelake (Wangaratta ?) trilogy, one of the more quietly impressive achievements of Australian postwar literature." He did, however, have some reservations: "if the flesh of this novel is rather weak, its bones are in first-class order. Mr. Turner knows how Australians think and act, even though he has forgotten how they speak."[2]

In The Bulletin Nancy Keesing found the conclusion of the series "merits serious critical consideration." She went on: "Of the three books in the series which I have read, The Lame Dog Man is quite the best. Turner's always cryptic style is here fully developed. It has become an instrument on which he can play his un-merry tunes with absolute assurance...Turner always offers a large cast of people whose behaviour is sometimes capricious, but always, through his interpretation, believable."[3]

See also

Notes

References

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