The Sound of One Hand Clapping

The Sound of One Hand Clapping

First edition
Author Richard Flanagan
Country Australia
Language English
Publisher Pan Macmillan, Australia
Publication date
1997
Media type Print Hardback & Paperback
Pages 425 pp
ISBN 0-7329-0896-5
OCLC 37931627
823 21
LC Class PR9619.3.F525 S68 1997
Preceded by Death of a River Guide (1994)
Followed by Gould's Book of Fish (2001)

The Sound of One Hand Clapping is a 1997 novel by Australian author Richard Flanagan. The title is adapted from the famous Zen kōan of Hakuin Ekaku. The Sound of One Hand Clapping was Flanagan's second novel.

Plot summary

The book focuses the relationship between a woman, Sonja Buloh, and her father Bojan. Bojan is a Slovenian immigrant from the post-World War II period who came to work on the Tasmanian Hydroelectric Schemes, and a drunkard. While working on a remote construction camp in the central highlands in the winter of 1954, when Sonja was just three, Bojan's wife walked into a blizzard never to be seen again and leaving Bojan to raise his daughter. When Sonja returns to visit Tasmania and her father in 1989 as a balanced middle-aged woman, the past begins to intrude, changing both their lives forever.[1]

Awards

Notes

Reviews

Interviews

Film adaptation

A film adaptation of this novel was released in 1998, directed by Richard Flanagan (who also wrote the screenplay), and featuring Kerry Fox, Kristof Kaczmarek, Rosie Flanagan and Arabella Wain.[2] The film was produced by Rolf de Heer who encouraged Flanagan to direct the film, and broke into tears and "was a mess for four days" when he first read the script. Flanagan first read the phrase "the sound of one hand clapping" in an essay about feminist influence on the early English co-operative movement. The film competed for the Golden Bear at the 48th Berlin International Film Festival.[3][4]

References

  1. Flanagan, Richard (1997). The Sound of One Hand Clapping. Pan Macmillan Australia. pp. Cover blurb. ISBN 0-330-36042-6.
  2. Internet Movie Data Base
  3. "Berlinale: 1998 Programme". berlinale.de. Retrieved 2012-01-22.
  4. "Wettbewerb/In Competition". Moving Pictures, Berlinale Extra. Berlin. 11–22 February 1998. p. 33.


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