Carey, Peter, 1943-, Australian novelist, b. near Melbourne. Carey's combination of science fiction and fantasy motifs with a realistic style, displayed in such short-story volumes as
The Fat Man in History (1974),
War Crimes (1979), and
Collected Stories (1995), has invited comparison with such modern masters as
Borges and
Grass. In longer works of fiction, such as
Bliss (1981, his first novel),
Illywhacker (1985), and other books, Carey confronts the realities and myths of Australian history and society. Two later novels of Australia, the Victorian-style
Oscar and Lucinda (1988) and
The True History of the Kelly Gang (2001), a legandary outlaw's supposed memoir, won Booker Prizes. Carey's other novels include
The Unusual Life of Tristan Smith (1994);
Jack Maggs (1997);
My Life as a Fake (2003), a complex and ironic treatment of literary life;
Theft: A Love Story (2006), which takes a similar approach to painting and the art market; and
His Illegal Self (2008). Carey, who moved to New York in 1991 and has taught writing at New York Univ. and Barnard College, has also written screenplays, a children's book (1995), and
30 Days in Sydney (2001), a portrait of his one-time hometown.
See critical studies by H. Krassnitzer (1995), G. Huggan, ed. (1997), B. Woodcock (1997, repr. 2003), and A. J. Hassall (rev. ed. 1998).
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