First US edition
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Author | Jon Cleary |
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Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Publisher | Scribners (US) |
Publication date
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1947 |
You Can't See 'Round Corners was the first published novel by Australian author Jon Cleary.
Frankie McCoy, a bookie from Paddington, Sydney, is drafted into the Australian Army during World War II. He ends up deserting and going on the run. His girlfriend Margie breaks up with him so he seeks solace in the arms of a more sexually experienced woman, Myra. He incurs gambling debts and robs a store, accidentally killing Myra. As the military police close in he is killed by a car.
The novel took Cleary over eight months to write. He began it during his war service in New Guinea and finished it on a boat trip from Sydney to England after World War II, the same voyage on which he met his wife Joy.
Cleary based the book on incidents and people he witnessed when he worked in the Sydney suburb of Paddington at age 18:
Frankie McCoy, the hero of the novel, is a composite of types I met, and who for all their faults I admire. When first I went to Paddington as a boy I tended to be snobbish about the people I met there. It.was not long before I learned to admire their pluck in the face of poverty, their generosity, and their dogged refusal to accept defeat – they battle on and don't whine. I always remember the case of one girl – she was not what nice people call nice, she was immoral and she swore. But one Christmas Eve, out of her week's earnings of 55/ she gave 20/ to a boy who was the eldest of a family of five in the poorest circumstances, and who was earning only 15/ a week. I never forgot that."
Cleary originally wrote the book in first person tense but later rewrote it in the third person. He says he wrote the novel on instinct. "You really can't sit down and plan it; you do it and there it is."
His editor for the UK edition was Graham Greene.
You Can't See 'Round Corners was well-received critically, winning second prize in the Sydney Morning Herald's novel contest, losing to Ruth Park's The Harp in the South. It was praised by such writers as Dymphna Cusack. But Cleary was not able to support himself full time with his writing until the publication of The Sundowners a few years later.