White Topee Explained

White Topee
Author:Eve Langley
Country:Australia
Language:English
Genre:Literary fiction
Publisher:Angus and Robertson
Release Date:1954
Media Type:Print
Pages:250 pp
Preceded By:The Pea-Pickers
Followed By:

White Topee (1954) is a novel by Australian writer Eve Langley.[1]

Plot summary

The novel is set in Gippsland, Victoria, which is depicted as an idyllic place with peoples from many nations working on the land in harmony. The novel is a sequel of sorts to the author's earlier book The Pea-Pickers, and features the same characters two years later.

Critical reception

Peter Harding, writing in The Sydney Morning Herald, found the novel "is, more than anything else, a poem. Plain prose and formal verse intersperse many of its 250 pages, but much of it is a poem disguised as prose. The poem is about Australia and Italians, and about a poet's ecstatic, anguished memories of youth in Gippsland and probably somewhere in northern Australia. And in reading it one is in the presence of something great amid a rambling eccentricity."[2]

Peggy Wright was impressed with the novel in The News (Adelaide): "It is impossible to be lukewarm about Eve Langley. Either you lap up her strikingly original prose, or you wonder what the heck she's writing about. Personally, I can take all Eve Langley likes to write, and come back for more...The book is packed with lively characters music-loving Italians, and casual Australians, university graduates and laborers. Every page is rich with a sincere, almost passionate love of Australia."[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/C217098 Austlit - White Topee by Eve Langley
  2. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article18423659 "The Burning Red Log" by Peter G. Harding, The Sydney Morning Herald, 21 August 1954, p11
  3. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article134753657 "Her Prose is Striking" by Peggy Wright, The News, 29 July 1954, p23