Why did I love this book?
There was one night reading this, when the story affected my breathing, heart rate, and time left on this planet, for the worse, as I galloped through it even though I knew every paragraph could hold up to a few years worth of study, if I hadn’t been so impatient to learn more!
Very crudely, White seems to say that it doesn’t matter what people do, goodness matters and the imaginative and usually obtrusive ways in which he shows good is often quieter than evil, more basic and durable, but sometimes not as strong, seem to me the discipline he tried to train himself in, to get it all down and write the novel in the first place.
That story often feels more painted than written, and when written, written in Australian and not English; people seem to speak when its someone else’s turn to, and White’s dark sense of humour (and sometimes disgust with modernity and his homeland) very nearly subvert the more wholesome instruction he is putting across.
I found bits of Henry Green, Elizabeth Bowen, Henry James, and Flannery O Connor, but in the end, White is a genius and an original, and reading Riders In The Chariot has been one of the greatest literary experiences of my life.
2 authors picked Riders in the Chariot as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY DAVID MALOUF
Through the crumbling ruins of the once splendid Xanadu, Miss Hare wanders, half-mad. In the wilderness she stumbles upon an Aborigine artist and a Jewish refugee. They place themselves in the care of a local washerwoman. In a world of pervasive evil, all four have been independently damaged and discarded. Now in one shared vision they find themselves bound together, understanding the possibility of redemption.