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Synopsis
He is the world’s greatest film director. His characters, his scenery, his costumes―all are authentic, zestful, artistic, artful. But nobody knows he is the world’s greatest film director. Maybe nobody ever will. For all of his masterpieces are stored in an impregnable canister: the head of the film-maker. Inside his brain, nestling safely, reel upon reel of film, magnificently photographed, brilliantly edited, not a frame of it accessible to the viewing public. An Unusual Angle is about the making of this great film. It is also the film itself. Here is a blazing epic of stupendous events: four years of an ordinary Australian secondary school. Few would have suspected before that an ‘ordinary’ school could provide the material of rich humour, zany lunacy and near tragedy. Greg Egan was born in Perth in 1961. He was educated at the University of Western Australia. He has worked for mercifully brief periods as a kitchen hand, a milk-vendor’s runner, and as a public servant. Meanwhile, his real efforts have been directed towards writing novels and short stories (four novels and a book of short stories written so far) and making amateur films (a 65-minute, 16 mm film completed recently).
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Is An Unusual Angle appropriate for my child?
Suitable for most readers 13 and up.
This early Greg Egan novel is a meta-narrative about a young filmmaker documenting his Australian high school experience. It contains humor and ordinary teenage situations without violence, sexual content, or strong language.
What to know going in
This book has no graphic violence, no sexual content, and mild language.
Who'll love this
Teens interested in film-making, creative writing, or unconventional storytelling will appreciate this experimental novel about capturing high school life through a unique artistic lens.