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Stormy Weather: A Novel

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A poetic, yet darkly humorous, retelling of Shakespeare's The Tempest follows a troupe of vaudeville artists, who arrive in a rainy Australian town to give a performance, as they are all faced with shattered dreams and unfulfilled desires, forever tied together by the transformative power of art.

204 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2000

15 people want to read

About the author

Michael Meehan

18 books5 followers
Michael Meehan’s novels –The Salt of Broken Tears, Deception, Below the Styx and Stormy Weather – have been shortlisted for and won many awards and have also been published internationally. He is an Emeritus Professor at Deakin University and was for many years the chair of Adelaide Writers Week. He currently lives in Adelaide, South Australia

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
33 reviews
November 7, 2022
Fascinating little novel - novella really I suppose - read it in one sitting. The structure was clever; the slow build up to the performance and its aftermath so compellingly done, as was the description of the no-time, the vacuum of boredom and tension that characterise the wait performers endure before a performance. The characters are a rag-tag of emotionally-charged misfits, each battling a gruelling loneliness and sense of dislocation from everything and everyone, but struggling each in his or her own way to survive. The gorgeous language used to evoke the atmosphere of torrential rain and a soaked landscape was mesmerising; the author found a thousand different ways in which to describe water. The final absolution and redemption was unexpected and beautifully crafted. I see it as an existential study of lost beings flung by events, fate, circumstances, into this maelstrom, this terminus, paradoxically a parochial, hopeless little joke of a town, where all will be either broken forever or somehow miraculously rescued. This book will be added to my collection to be enjoyed again.
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242 reviews8 followers
December 2, 2011
In my view, a pretty average book. Far too wordy - I mean some sentences were a paragraph in themselves. There's nothing wrong with a few full stops here & there. The character of "Rabbiter" was not "subversive" - he was perverse & cruel. I cheered when he got beaten up by Lucille, the digruntled gymnist. The story is set over one day in north-west Victoria (Australia) where this rag-tag theatre troupe (for want of a better description) are performing a Charity Concert. It just did not hold my interest.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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