The Min-Min

The Min-Min
AuthorMavis Thorpe Clark
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
Genrechildren's fiction
PublisherLansdowne Press, Melbourne
Publication date
1966
Media typePrint
Pages206 pp
Preceded byThey Came South 
Followed byBlue Above the Trees 
1966 children's novel by Mavis Thorpe Clark

The Min-Min is a 1966 children's novel by Australian author Mavis Thorpe Clark, illustrated by Genevieve Melrose.[1] It won the Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers in 1967.[2]

Plot outline

Set in a squalid fettlers' siding on the east-west railway just south of Woomera, this novel follows the story of Sylvie Edwards and her younger brother Reg. After Reg destroys a teacher's record player the two children set off across the desert to the Tuckers' homestead.

Critical reception

Reviewing the novel in The Canberra Times Elizabeth Bray was disappointed with the book: "The author seems to have attempted to write the story on two levels - as an adventure story, and as the portrait of a girl passing from childhood into adolescence. The second aspect is tenuously linked with the "min-min", a light seen in the desert night sky; as the blurb puts it "the gleam in the dark is symbolic of her life and future". In spite of this, Sylvie's character remains one-dimensional."[3]

See also

  • 1966 in Australian literature

References

  1. ^ Austlit - The Min-Min by Mavis Thorpe Clark
  2. ^ "Children's Book Week 1967", The Canberra Times, 8 July 1967, p13
  3. ^ "Story on two levels" by Elizabeth Bray, The Canberra Times, 8 July 1967, p14

External links

  • https://archive.org/details/minminclar00clar
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