A Woman of the Future
A Woman of the Future (1979) is a novel by Australian author David Ireland. It won the Miles Franklin Award in 1979 and was joint winner of the Age Book of the Year award in 1980.[1] As a result of this novel, Ireland was "being hailed as the successor to Patrick White and the antipodean rival of the great American satirist Kurt Vonnegut".[2] Originally published in 1979, it was re-issued in 2012 as part of the Text Publishing Text Classics series.[3] This edition carried an introduction by Kate Jennings. Critical receptionOn the announcement of the Miles Franklin Award win, The Canberra Times stated: " A Woman of the Future was rejected by Macmillans at first because it was too long and too complex or, as Mr Ireland put it yesterday, 'too incomprehensible' ".[4] Following this, one of the award judges, Emeritus Professor Colin Roderick, described the book as "literary sewage",[5] and stated it was "a dreadful, sex-ridden fantasy, doomed to oblivion."[5] Writing in 1980 for Woroni, Andrea Mitchell noted a
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