Never before published in the United States, Gerald Murnane's classic
collection of literary and personal essays, Invisible Yet Enduring
Lilacs, is the perfect introduction to, and gazetteer for, the
imaginary worlds created by one of the greatest living writers working
in English today.
Murnane writes of himself as a boy making racehorses of his marbles, a
pastime and obsession shared with Jack Kerouac; as a writer, working his
first ten years in secret; as a reader, trying to understand the mystery
of writing a good sentence by way of Virginia Woolf and Robert Frost;
and as a teacher, exploring the endless ways in which words can express
the contours of our thoughts. From these and other vantage points,
Murnane peers into the hidden landscapes that lie within, or just
beyond, the everyday details of Australian life.
Carrying the reader with him across the valleys, plains, and grasslands
of his mind, Murnane here gives us a guided tour through an immersive
landscape in which every word has its own space, shape and weight.