Alexis Wright is a member of the Waanyi nation of the southern highlands of the Gulf of Carpentaria. The author of the prize-winning novels Carpentaria and The Swan Book, Wright has published three works of non-fiction: Take Power, an oral history of the Central Land Council; Grog War, a study of alcohol abuse in the Northern Territory; and Tracker, an award-winning collective memoir of Aboriginal leader Tracker Tilmouth. Her work has been translated into Chinese, Polish, French, and Italian. She held the position of Boisbouvier Chair in Australian Literature at the University of Melbourne between 2017–2022. Wright is the only author to win both the Miles Franklin Award (in 2007 for Carpentaria) and the Stella Prize (in 2018 for Tracker).
"Praiseworthy blew me away…If you think you know what assimilation
is, you should read Praiseworthy and think again."
*Australian Book Review*
"An abundant odyssey that contains a formidable vision of
Australia’s future. This is a long journey through the imagination,
a novel both urgent and deeply contemplated…The rich interrelations
of ancestral spirits, larger-than-life characters, and Country all
derive from the Aboriginal traditions of storytelling. But there
are also signs of literary influence from every compass point on
the map, including, most notably, the surrealism and magic realism
of writers such as Jorge Luis Borges and Gabriel García
Márquez."
*The Age*
"A trippy, mind-blowing, allegorical, and powerfully political
book, Praiseworthy takes you to another world (the small titular
town of Praiseworthy, suffering under a haze cloud and under
racism), and makes that world real and makes you care
deeply. "
*TANK*
"I’m awed by the range, experiment and political intelligence of
Wright’s work: she is vital on the subject of land and people."
*Robert Macfarlane - The New York Times Book Review*
"Praiseworthy is Alexis Wright’s most formidable act of imaginative
synthesis yet. A hero’s journey for an age of global warming, a
devastating story of young love caught between two laws, and an
extended elegy and ode to Aboriginal law and sovereignty. . .
Wright has surpassed herself—Praiseworthy is the thing itself."
*Jane Gleeson-White - The Conversation*
"There are few books in Australian literature more epic than
Praiseworthy and few books as dense with poetry."
*Claire G. Coleman - The Saturday Paper*
"Wright has already proved herself one of Australia’s deepest and
most urgent thinkers. In her new novel Praiseworthy, she
synthesises the themes and forms of her past work—including
Carpentaria, The Swan Book and Tracker—and arrives at a furious and
dense epic satirising white Australia’s ongoing attacks on the
colonised."
*Steph Harmon - The Guardian (Australia)*
"Like opera, Wright’s writing operates in many modes, not just
satirical, but comedic, lyrical, absurd, a lament, a screed, a
manifesto, and often within paragraphs or even sentences that wind
on like the lines of migrating butterflies that flit through the
novel. . . It is one of the most exhilarating reading experiences I
can imagine."
*James Whitmore - The Library is Open*
"Praiseworthy is classic Wright: a book made of beautiful, mutable
and playful language. . . These seven hundred-odd pages are chock
full of stunning, exhilarating sentences that lead you around by
the nose, taking you to some very unexpected places. Wright
stretches sentences to their limits; when you think you’re over one
sentence, sick of it even, you land on the most satisfying
note."
*Mykaela Saunders - Sydney Review of Books*
"A shimmering vision of the legacy of colonialism in Australia, and
the reasons for optimism in hoping for greater justice and autonomy
for its Indigenous peoples."
*Kirkus Reviews*
"Alexis Wright's Praiseworthy should be the last novel ever
published: it's the ultimate expression of what fiction can do, a
marvelous beast that gobbles and spits up all genres; whispers and
screams and moans in all registers; and the vision of our world
that it casts back in its distorted funhouse mirror seems more real
than piddling reality itself. "
*Stephen Sparks, Point Reyes Books*
"This freewheeling and heartbreaking masterpiece from Aboriginal
Australian author Alexis Wright brims with the magic
of myth and the painful realities of present-day climate
change. At once lush and relentless, Wright’s looping tale
combines magical realism, absurdism, and maximalism in a rich
depiction of contemporary Aboriginal life. This is
unforgettable."
*Publishers Weekly (starred)*
"[An] extraordinary novel … which reveals an Australia where myth
and reality meet."
*Chris Power - BBC Radio Four, Open Book*
"A book you don’t so much read but experience and inhabit
... Praiseworthy says plenty worth saying, perhaps in the
only way it could be said. Praiseworthy indeed."
*Joshua Rees - Buzz Mag*
"Wright gives us the living and the dead, material and
non-material, Country and people; all the masters dreamed of, and
all they neglected to; the entire human (and non-human) comedy. The
sense is of Country cheerfully accommodating everything: high and
low, chaos and epiphany, farce and deep time. Long after the lesser
concerns of contemporary fiction have ceased to matter, the work of
Alexis Wright will remain."
*Declan Fry - The Guardian (Australia)*
"There are few books in Australian literature more epic
than Praiseworthy and few books as dense with
poetry."
*Claire G. Coleman - The Saturday Paper*
"A deeply contemplated novel concerned with issues of sovereignty,
ongoing colonisation and climate change that is both timely and
urgent. Praiseworthy is simultaneously satirical, comic,
and lyrical. A work of stunning exhilarating sentences that builds
to an extended elegy and ode to Aboriginal storytelling, lore, and
sovereignty."
*Queensland Literary Awards, judges’ comments*
"An impassioned environmental Ulysses of the Northern Territory.
Playful, formally innovative, multi-storied, allegorical, protean
and dizzyingly exhilarating, it is long, lyrical and enraged—James
Joyce crossed with Gabriel García Márquez, Jorge Luis Borges, Bruce
Chatwin and Arundhati Roy."
*Ruth Padel - The Spectator*
"I’m immersed in the incendiary beauty of Alexis Wright’s
Praiseworthy, a monumental novel that documents ecological
catastrophe and Aboriginal lives in blistering prose."
*Preti Taneja - The New Statesman*
"Incandescent… Praiseworthy suggests what would be lost
were assimilation to succeed: vital knowledge for the future of
humankind gleaned from the ‘biggest library in the world –
country.’ Yet its anguished elegy is offset by a confidence in
survival, born of a long view of tens of thousands of years."
*Maya Jaggi - The Guardian*
"The layering of time and the riot of language are Wright’s great
themes and raw materials, and in “Praiseworthy” — the most
ambitious and accomplished Australian novel of this century — they
twist and shimmer, doomed forever to their violent pas de
deux."
*Samuel Rutter - The New York Times Book Review*
"Thoroughly original and refreshingly honest."
*Ian Gill - The Tyee*
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