A Cartload of Clay explained

A Cartload of Clay
Author:George Johnston
Country:Australia
Language:English
Series:Meredith trilogy
Genre:Fiction
Publisher:Collins
Release Date:1971
Media Type:Print
Pages:159pp
Preceded By:Clean Straw for Nothing
Followed By:

A Cartload of Clay (1971) is the last and unfinished novel by the Australian author George Johnston. It is a sequel to My Brother Jack and Clean Straw for Nothing, the third in the Meredith trilogy of semi-autobiographical novels by Johnson.[1]

Story outline

The novel follows David Meredith over the period of several hours as he contemplates his life, the death of his wife and his own impending end.

Critical reception

John Lleonart in The Canberra Times put the book into its context: "A Cartload of Clay is a mellow, often distinctly melancholy autobiographical essay. Johnston had intended it to be a novel but the fact that it is structurally incomplete does not detract from it. The absence of a contrived ending is, indeed, a factor in the book's impact as a human document...There is no doubt that the Johnston trilogy has reached a plane where neither the most determined parochial masochism and self-revelation can harm it. And even if, while writing this last painful episode, he was over-conscious about not being well-known outside Australia, that too may serve a worthwhile purpose. Any Australian writer who in future can produce work of the quality of the Johnston trilogy will surely know he does not have to apologise for it to anybody."[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/C89844 A Cartload of Clay by George Johnston
  2. John Lleonart, "A writer's swansong", The Canberra Times, 16 October 1971, p15