Research Catalog

Owls do cry / a novel by Janet Frame.

Title
Owls do cry / a novel by Janet Frame.
Author
Frame, Janet
Publication
Berkeley : Counterpoint, [2016]

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance PR9639.3.F7 O94 2016Off-site

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Details

Description
213 pages; 23 cm
Summary
First published in New Zealand in 1957, Owls Do Cry , was Janet Frame's second book and the first of her thirteen novels. Now approaching its 60th anniversary, it is securely a landmark in Frame's catalog and indeed a landmark of modernist literature. The novel spans twenty years in the Withers family, tracing Daphne's coming of age into a post-war New Zealand too narrow to know what to make of her. She is deemed mad, institutionalized, and made to undergo a risky lobotomy. Margaret Drabble calls Owls Do Cry "a song ofsurvival"--it is Daphne's song of survival but also the author's: Frame was herself misdiagnosed with schizophrenia and scheduled for brain surgery. She was famously saved only when she won New Zealand's premier fiction prize. Frame was among the first major writers of the twentieth century to confront life in mental institutions and Owls Do Cry is important for this perspective. But it is equally valuable for its poetry, its incisive satire, and its acute social observations. A sensitively rendered portrait of childhood and adolescence and a testament to the power of imagination, this early novel is a first-rate example of Frame's powerful, lyric, and original prose.
Subject
  • Mental illness > Fiction
  • Alienation (Social psychology) > Fiction
  • New Zealand
Genre/Form
Fiction
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
Part one. Talk of treasure -- Part two. Twenty years after (Toby ; Chicks ; Daphne) -- Epilogue. Anyone we know?
ISBN
  • 1619028409
  • 9781619028401
OCLC
  • 946975348
  • SCSB-12399095
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library