,
Les Murray

Les Murray’s Followers (60)

member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo

Les Murray


Born
in Australia
October 17, 1938

Died
April 29, 2019

Website

Genre

Influences


Leslie Allan Murray (born 1938) was the outstanding poet of his generation and one of his country's most influential literary critics. A nationalist and republican, he saw his writing as helping to define, in cultural and spiritual terms, what it means to be Australian.

Leslie Allan Murray was born in 1938 in Nabiac, a village on the north coast of New South Wales, Australia, and spent his childhood and youth on his father's dairy farm nearby. The area is sparsely populated, hilly, and forested, and the beauty of this rural landscape forms a backdrop to many of Murray's best poems, such as 'Spring Hail':

"Fresh-minted hills
smoked, and the heavens swirled and blew away.
The paddocks were endless again, and all around
leaves lay beneath their
...more

Average rating: 3.75 · 1,449 ratings · 215 reviews · 90 distinct worksSimilar authors
Killing the Black Dog

3.50 avg rating — 218 ratings — published 1996 — 11 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Fredy Neptune

4.10 avg rating — 150 ratings — published 1998 — 15 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Waiting for the Past: Poems

3.18 avg rating — 108 ratings — published 2015 — 10 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Subhuman Redneck Poems

3.68 avg rating — 90 ratings — published 1996 — 6 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Collected poems

4.15 avg rating — 66 ratings — published 1992 — 9 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Learning Human: Selected Poems

4.10 avg rating — 63 ratings — published 2000 — 7 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Continuous Creation: Last P...

3.18 avg rating — 79 ratings — published 2022 — 6 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Biplane Houses

3.62 avg rating — 66 ratings — published 2006 — 10 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Taller When Prone: Poems

3.50 avg rating — 64 ratings — published 2010 — 15 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
New Selected Poems

3.96 avg rating — 54 ratings — published 1998 — 12 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
More books by Les Murray…
The Best Australian Poems 2004 The Best Australian Poems 2005
(15 books)
by
3.63 avg rating — 290 ratings

Quotes by Les Murray  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Why write poetry? For the weird unemployment. / For the painless headaches, that must be tapped to strike / down along your writing arm at the accumulated moment. / For the adjustments after, aligning facets in a verb / before the trance leaves you. For working always beyond / your own intelligence.”
Les Murray, New Selected Poems

“When preparing for Book One, I talked to a couple of psychiatrists about psychosomatic phenomena, neuroses and dissociative conditions, for example the so—called hysterical blindness suffered by many who saw the Killing Fields in Pol Pot’s Cambodia: their eyes objectively see, but they are not aware of it and are blind because they believe they can’t see. One specialist told me that among modern Western people, ’metaphorical’ symptoms such as Fredy or those Cambodians evince are much rarer now than earlier in the twentieth century or before. Nowadays most people are better equipped by education to verbalise their neuroses, and have lots of jargon in which to do so. For most of the dissociative dimension, I could draw on things I knew from within myself.”
Les Murray, Fredy Neptune

“The horror of Time is, people don’t snap out of it.”
Les Murray
tags: time

Topics Mentioning This Author