Description
Dan Davin, one of New Zealand's acknowledged masters of the short story, was born in Invercargill in 1913.
The Gorse Blooms Pale gathers together twenty-six stories and a selection of poems reflecting his experiences while growing up in an Irish–New Zealand family in Southland. Comic, haunting, poetic, profound, and lyrical, the stories have a regional flavour quite unlike any other body of work in New Zealand literature. They insightfully capture the character of a close-knit rural community and its post-British social relationships and tribulations, with a flair equal to such other New Zealand writers as Sargeson, Frame, Middleton, or Marshall.
The Gorse Blooms Pale is a rare treasure in the landscape of twentieth-century New Zealand literature.