Far Road
By (Author) George Johnston
HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty Ltd
HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty Ltd
31st October 1990
Australia
Tertiary Education
Fiction
A823
Paperback
258
Width 130mm, Height 196mm, Spine 17mm
291g
'Imagine the entire population of Melbourne abandoning their homes and taking to the road in flight from the city...' this was how the then war correspondent George Johnston described the Sino-Japanese uprising in 1944. From personal experience came his novel, the Far Road, a powerful story on the war in China. Amidst a landscape of corpses, two foreign correspondents, the American Bruce Conover and the Australian David Meredith, set out on an assignment into the interior of drought-stricken China. there they find the population in a state of panic - not from the invading Japanese, but from the local officials. through Johnston's self-critical and sensitive protagonist, David Meredith, 'hero' of My Brother Jack, Clean Straw For Nothing and A Cartload of Clay, George Johnston exposes the essential self-interest, not only of the role of the war correspondent, but of journalists in general.
George Johnston started his career in journalism with the Melbourne Argus when he was just sixteen. After his work as a correspondent during World War II Johnston began to focus on literature when he moved to the Greek islands with his second wife Charmian Clift. It was the strength of his honesty about humanity and relationships that earned him his place in Australias literary canon. Johnston in 1970 after a long battle with tuberculosis, but his enduring myth and greatness lives on through two semi-autobiographical works for which he was awarded the Miles Franklin Award in 1964 for My Brother Jack and in 1969 for Clean Straw for Nothing.