Border Districts Audiobook By Gerald Murnane cover art

Border Districts

A Fiction

Preview

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection of titles.
Yours as long as you’re a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for $8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Border Districts

By: Gerald Murnane
Narrated by: Andrew Martin
Try Standard free

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $14.65

Buy for $14.65

A bittersweet farewell to the world and the word by the Australian master

“The mind is a place best viewed from borderlands....”

Border Districts, purportedly the Australian master Gerald Murnane’s final work of fiction, is a hypnotic, precise, and self-lacerating “report” on a life led as an avid reader, fumbling lover, “student of mental imagery”, and devout believer - but a believer not in the commonplaces of religion, but rather in the luminescence of memory and its handmaiden, literature.

In Border Districts, a man moves from a capital city to a remote town in the border country, where he intends to spend the last years of his life. It is time, he thinks, to review the spoils of a lifetime of seeing, a lifetime of reading. Which sights, which people, which books, fictional characters, turns of phrase, and lines of verse will survive into the twilight? A dark-haired woman with a wistful expression? An ancestral house in the grasslands? The colors in translucent panes of glass, in marbles and goldfish and racing silks? Feeling an increasing urgency to put his mental landscape in order, the man sets to work cataloging this treasure, little knowing where his “report” will lead and what secrets will be brought to light.

Border Districts is a jewel of a farewell from one of the greatest living writers of English prose.

©2017 Gerald Murnane (P)2019 Audible, Inc.
Literary Fiction Genre Fiction

People who viewed this also viewed...

Stream System Audiobook By Gerald Murnane cover art
Stream System By: Gerald Murnane
No reviews yet