Johnno

by David Malouf

Paperback, 1976

Status

Available

Call number

823

Collection

Publication

Penguin Books Australia Ltd (1976), Paperback, 170 pages

Description

"Despite Johnno's assertion that Brisbane was absolutely the ugliest place in the world, I had the feeling as I walked across deserted intersections, past empty parks with their tropical trees all spiked and sharp-edged in the early sunlight, that it might even be beautiful ... " Johnno is a typical Australian who refuses to be typical. His disorderly presence can disturb the staleness of his home town or destroy the tranquillity of a Greek landscape. An affectionately outrageous portrait, David Malouf's first novel recreates the war-conscious forties, the pubs and brothels of the fifties, and the years away treading water overseas.

User reviews

LibraryThing member shrubbery
Self-indulgent and yawn-inducing, I stopped after one hundred pages unable to discover anything resembling a plot.
LibraryThing member Vivl
I love Malouf's writing. It is so simple, direct, honest and sympathetic.

"Dante" and Johnno - the one relatively steady and conservative in outlook, the other a spirited, irreverent (in so many ways) force of nature, are children together in 30s/40s Brisbane. Their lives entwine for some time and
Show More
David Malouf shares their relationship with us. Johnno is a rebellious child who becomes a fairly unpleasant young man. Even so, he is strangely "attractive". Perhaps it is because he seems like something different - he's almost a sprite, or one of those Greek/Roman minor gods of the sulky and slightly malicious variety.

The thing that really attracted me about this book (aside from Malouf's beautiful writing), was not, however, the spirited Johnno (I can't say "free-spirited", as he spent his life seeking something, perhaps some extra thrill or risk that would really make him really BE, so he was never really "free") but rather the relationship of both young men with the changing face of their home town of Brisbane. Similar to Perth in so many ways, the charting of the changes and how they effected the lives of these young men for whom its landscape was the landscape of their youth struck a deep chord with me.

In particular, the following passage made me question my limpet-like attachment to Perth, a city which has become over time, since my birth in the early 1970s, a place whose urban landscape and societal values I actively dislike almost without exception. Like Dante, I have to ask myself, am I in a sort of state of suspended animation here? Have I never really "grown-up"?

"Brisbane, where I sometimes thought of myself as having 'grown-up', was a place where I seemed never to have changed. Just turning a corner sometimes on a familiar view, or a familiar sign [...] made me step back years and become the fourteen-year-old, or worse still, the twenty-year-old I once was, helpless before emotions I thought I had outgrown but had merely repressed. All my assurance, all my sophistication about foreign places and performances and food, like the growing heaviness round the shoulders, was a disguise that might fool others but could never fool me. Elsewhere I might pass for a serious adult. Here, I knew, I would always be an aging child. I might grow old in Brisbane but I would never grow up."

Unsettling thoughts.
Show Less
LibraryThing member edwinbcn
Johnno is a short novel by the Australian author David Malouf . The chapters devoted to telling the story of the main character Johnno are embedded in a framework of two chapters, the first and the last describing the narrator's days mourning the death of his grandfather. These chapters create the
Show More
setting for going through old things, papers and memories, and in this nostalgic mood the narrator remembers and tells the story of his classmate Johnno.

Although the narrator, Dante, and Johnno seem each other's opposites, in their adventures they are complementary, with Danta mostly poised to admire Johnno's audacity and Johnno at times showing unexpected loyalty to Dante. The novel is a tribute to pure, male friendship.

In this way, the novel tells the story of coming of age in the late 40s through early 60s, starting in Australia during the war and rather boring 50s, an opening up of an exciting stay on the European continent and final days back in Australia.
Show Less
LibraryThing member robfwalter
I did enjoy this book, but I struggled to get into the first 20 or 30 pages, and sort of rushed through the last 20 or 30 pages. It's only a small book, so that is a fairly significant portion of the book. The middle pages, however, were engaging and quite well written.

It has that very
Show More
self-conscious style that a lot of Australian "literature" has, which I've never really related to. He's a poet, so there is plenty going on between the lines if that's what you're into. I'm more into passion and life bursting out of the prose than subtext and implication carefully sequestred in it.

The titular character is very interesting and quite well drawn.
Show Less

Awards

The Age Book of the Year Award (Shortlist — Fiction — 1975)

Language

Original language

English

ISBN

0140042563 / 9780140042566
Page: 0.6658 seconds