The Sponge Divers Explained

The Sponge Divers
Author:Charmian Clift and George Johnston
Country:Australia
Language:English
Genre:Literary fiction
Publisher:Collins
Release Date:1955
Media Type:Print
Pages:318 pp
Preceded By:The Big Chariot
Followed By:Walk to the Paradise Gardens, The Darkness Outside

The Sponge Divers (1955) is a novel by Australian authors Charmian Clift and George Johnston. The novel was also published in the USA under the title The Sea and the Stone.[1]

Plot outline

The novel is centred around the Greek island of Kalymnos where, for thousands of years, the locals have put out to sea to dive for sponges. But now a chemist has developed a synthetic substitute and the locals must learn to deal with the consequences of that discovery.

Critical reception

Don Edwards, reviewing the novel in The Sydney Morning Herald, found that the authors "have an exotic setting that gives them opportunities for the descriptive writing they favour." And "Ultimately, the strength of their achievement lies in their creation of background."[2]

A reviewer in The Bulletin was not impressed with the novel: "In general the imagery is laid on too thickly, the rhythms too obvious, the manner too portentous. Passages of colorful prose follow one another in such quick succession that the reader is first dazzled and then benumbed. The book seeks to deal with the fundamentals, the simplicities of life. A less decorative style would have served it better."[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/C116210 Austlit - The Sponge Divers by Charmian Clift and George Johnston
  2. "Descriptive Talents" by Don Edwards, The Sydney Morning Herald, 17 November 1956, p15
  3. "The Sponge Divers", The Bulletin, 30 January 1957, p2