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Holden's Performance:

A Novel
Front Cover
1 Review
Macmillan, May 1, 2002 - Fiction - 384 pages
Holden's Performance is the story of Holden Shadbolt, a guileless and matter-of-fact innocent as he passes through the cities and landscape of Australia. His reassuring silent presence and photographic memory make him useful to men of power and women who appear to need his protection. He is surrounded by larger than life figures whose exploits and adventures Holden follows—ex-Corporal Frank 'Bloodnut' McBee, the scrap dealer who woos his mother; his uncle Vern, a shortsighted proofreader who likes facts and eating newspaper with is breakfast cereal; and the crippled artist Harriet, whose twists and curves appeal to Holden as he holds to his own unswervingly straight lines.
  

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Review: Holden's Performance: A Novel

User Review  - Tami - Goodreads

the writing style was very matter of fact, which tends to slow me down. Read full review

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Contents

I
1
II
140
III
224
IV
294
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About the author (2002)

Murray Bail's fiction, which includes Eucalyptus, Homesickness, The Drover's Wife and other Stories and Camouflage, has received many major awards, among them the Miles Franklin Award in Australia and the Commonwealth Writers Prize. He is also the author of two works of non-fiction, Ian Fairweather and Longhand: A Writer's Notebook. He lives in Sydney.

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