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The Bugger

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by Julian Novitz


  It’s okay, Adam wants to say as he looks up, you don’t have to do anything because you haven’t really seen me at all. When I’m on the job, mate, when I am on the fucking job I am untouchable. So don’t take that from me, please, I’m not ready to lose it yet.

  But the shearer would not understand, and Adam is not sure if he understands himself, and in fact, at that moment, neither of them can be said to understand a bloody thing. Two men, behind a couch in a shed in the hills at night-time, one of them looking up, one of them looking down, joined together by complete incomprehension. It is a beautiful moment, Adam thinks. He wishes it could last forever.

  ‘The Bugger’ was first published in The Best New Zealand Fiction: Vol 4, Fiona Farrell (ed.), 2007.

  About the author

  Award-winning short story writer and novelist Julian Novitz was born in Christchurch, New Zealand, and currently lives in Melbourne. His first book, a collection of short stories, won the New Zealand Society of Authors Hubert Church Best First Book of Fiction Award (2005) and he since published several novels.

  Early in Novitz’s career, Michael Larson identified his ‘sure sense of perspective’ and went on to say that it ‘stakes him out as a writer worthy of serious consideration’. Critics have noted the ‘passion of the ideas behind his writing’ and the eloquence of his stories, with Holocaust Toursdescribed as ‘darkly witty’ in the way it explored ‘questions of identity and history’ (Salient). In North & South, Paul Little wrote: ‘The way in which Novitz raises and defeats expectations … is masterful. At a time when contemporary fiction is bedevilled by a cautious gentility, Novitz, by taking a few chances and great care, produces something that, with its gloomy, bleak tone, stands out from most of the pack.’ In reviewing Little Sister, The New Zealand Listener noted that ‘Occasional nods to TS Eliot … add their own resonances to the deliciously rich atmosphere of unease.’ The reviewer continued: ‘Although it may take time and care in reading to get the full impact of the final pieces falling into place, it isn’t hard to accustom oneself to taking things slowly when the tension is so expertly and satisfyingly drawn out. That’s the mark of a fine psychological thriller, a standard Little Sister easily meets and surpasses.’ In Christchurch’s Weekend Press, Sean Monaghan hailed Little Sister as ‘a bold and precise book by a novelist on the ascent and it’s sure to garner him more accolades. With taut control and a subtle and precise ear, Novitz knows when to reveal detail and when to be restrained. He reels the reader in with controlled craft. Then he turns everything over, making the novel something that will resonate long after the final page.’

  Novitz has completed a PhD in creative writing and literary studies at the University of Melbourne, and has taught courses in creative writing, literature and communications at the University of Melbourne, Deakin University, and the Swinburne University of Technology. He won the Bank of New Zealand Katherine Mansfield Award for Short Fiction in 2008, and was a recipient of the Buddle Findlay Frank Sargeson Residential Writing Fellowship in 2009.

  Holocaust Tours

  Holocaust Tours is funny, fierce and unafraid: a first novel that questions what history means to us now.

  Taking time out in the UK, Daniel meets Anita. Getting involved with her means getting involved with her study of Holocaust memorials — and brings him face to face with his own Jewish heritage. Unfortunately it also brings him face to face with Josh, who shares Anita’s interests more than Daniel likes. Returning to New Zealand and starting a new job, however, Daniel soon realises he can’t escape the subject so easily — especially when his old friend Martin makes an appearance, he’s the author of a controversial new book, denying the Holocaust.

  Little Sister

  A noir novel, creepy and compelling.

  At 11.06 pm, on 6 September 2001, eighteen-year-old Shane stands near the house of his girlfriend’s father, staring at the hilt of a sword stabbed into the ground. The next morning, his best friend Will is sitting in a police station, trying to explain the tangled relationship between him, Shane, and Shane’s girlfriend Eileen. Ten years later, Eileen is living in a distant city under an assumed name. As she faces the tenth anniversary of the murder that re-defined her life, she is confronted by a young woman who claims to be the little sister that Eileen abandoned, all those years ago …

  And, on the morning of 7 September 2001, a failed teacher and father wakes up on his couch, unaware of what has transpired the night before and that he alone holds the key to these past and future events.

  How much do we know about the people closest to us? How much do we know about ourselves? Clever, creepy and compelling, Little Sister explores ideas of absent fathers, motivation and identity, while circling unexpected realisations’.

  Copyright

  A Random House ebook published by Random House New Zealand

  18 Poland Road, Glenfield, Auckland, New Zealand

  For more information about our titles go to www.randomhouse.co.nz

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the National Library of New Zealand

  Random House New Zealand is part of the Random House Group

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  This ebook first published 2013

  ‘The Bugger’ © 2007, 2013 Julian Novitz

  The moral rights of the author have been asserted

  ISBN 978 1 86979 960 1

  This book is copyright. Except for the purposes of fair reviewing no part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

 

 

 


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