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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
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English
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LOST VOICES

Christopher Koch

Christopher Koch, twice winner of the Miles Franklin Award, returns with a remarkable new novel of gripping narrative power.
Young Hugh Dixon believes he can save his father from ruin if he asks his estranged great-uncle Walter — a wealthy lawyer who lives alone in a Tasmanian farmhouse passed down through the family — for help. As he is drawn into Walter’s rarefied world, Hugh discovers that both his uncle and the farmhouse are links to a notorious episode in the mid nineteenth century.

Walter’s father, Martin, was living in the house when it was raided by members of an outlaw community run by Lucas Wilson, a charismatic ex-soldier attempting to build a utopia. But like later societies with communitarian ideals, Nowhere Valley was controlled by the gun, with Wilson as benevolent dictator. Twenty-year-old Martin’s sojourn in the Valley as Wilson’s disciple has become an obsession with Walter Dixon: one which haunts his present and keeps the past tantalizingly close.

As Walter encourages Hugh’s ambition to become an artist, and again comes to his aid when one of Hugh’s friends is charged with murder, the way life’s patterns repeat themselves from one generation to another becomes eerily apparent.

Dramatic, insightful and evocative, Lost Voices is an intriguing double narrative that confirms Koch as one of Australia's most significant and compelling novelists.

Christopher Koch was born and educated in Tasmania. His paternal ancestors were part of the German Lutheran diaspora that arrived in south Australia in the 1840s. His Anglo-irish maternal ancestors came to Tasmania in the same period. Most of his life has been spent in Sydney, where he worked for some years as a radio producer in the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. He has been a full-time writer since 1972, winning international praise and a number of awards for his novels. One of his novels, the Year of Living dangerously, was made into a film by Peter Weir. Koch has twice won the Miles Franklin Award for fiction: for "The Doubleman" and "Highways to a War". in 1995 he was made an officer of the order of Australia for his contribution to Australian literature.
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Book

Published 2012-11-01 by Harper Collins/4th Estate

Book

Published 2012-11-01 by Harper Collins/4th Estate

Comments

'Characteristic elegance and unforced lyricism paired with a Graham Greene-like facility for working up a cracking good plot.'

A tour de force at 80

Christopher Koch is a man of the world whose roots are deeply entrenchend in Tasmania.

'Australia's finest living writer of fiction . . . The qualities in his work can be measured on a scale we should all keep in mind while making imaginary hierarchies of literary merit. These standards . . . include such elements as plot, structure, characterization, depth of content, and, perhaps most importantly, prose style. When we open the pages of Lost Voices we find each of these elements refined and polished to the highest degree.'

Lost Voices feels like the first proper novel I've read in ages . . . The pleasures of Koch's often beautiful, often melancholy late work arise from his prose and its careful attendance to the lost world he describes.

'Readers will find much to admire in Christopher Koch's generously paced new novel . . . Koch's evocation of the ever-changing patterns of colour and light in that rugged territory of deep valleys and distant mountain peaks is highly accomplished. His descriptions of life in Wilson's little utopia are equally distinguished.'

'Completely absorbing, aesthetically satisfying and full of the dualities that this author is always most interested in exploring: past and present, good and evil, the seen and the unseen . . . Several good and gripping plots intermesh . . . propelled by engaging and memorable characters.'