The best-selling novelist Bryce Courtenay is dead at 79, after a battle with stomach cancer.


The acclaimed author has sold more than 20 million copies of his novels. He’ll particularly be remembered for The Power of One, the story of South African boy Peekay growing up under apartheid.

April Fool’s Day, Courtenay’s 1993 foray into non-fiction, was another of his best reads. Fools told the story of his son Damon, who had haemophilia, and Damon’s partner Celeste.

Damon contracted HIV/AIDS from his regular transfusions and died on the first of April 1991. The book was beautifully written.

Bryce came late to writing, jumping into the field after 30 years in advertising. Shows it’s never too late to start chasing a dream.

His narratives will live on. And, as he said in a video he taped to coincide with his last book, he’s had “an incredible journey”.

Journeys: what all good stories are about.

What was your favourite Courtenay read?

Comments on this post close at 8pm AEST.

Most commented

21 comments

Show oldest | newest first

    • Nick says:

      11:43am | 23/11/12

      I’ve only read a couple of his books but one of them was April Fool’s Day some time in the early 90’s and it’s stuck with me ever since.

    • Caedrel says:

      11:49am | 23/11/12

      My wife lived in South Africa for the first 8 years of her life, so she found The Power of One quite powerful - I thought it wasn’t bad, but I was very amused that Hollywood couldn’t bear to name their hero “The Tadpole Angel”

    • Amac says:

      11:50am | 23/11/12

      Farewell old friend. Spent many times deeply immersed in your stories.
      The Power of One is my all time favourite
      with a special mention to April Fools Day.

    • Amanda says:

      11:56am | 23/11/12

      The Power of One - a very powerful read.

    • Sonia says:

      11:57am | 23/11/12

      Youve just mentioned both of mine. The sequel to Power of
      one had me crying for days

    • ruru says:

      12:07pm | 23/11/12

      I’m halfway through ‘Four Fires’ ..RIP BC

    • Jamie says:

      12:11pm | 23/11/12

      April Fools Day is still the only book that has ever broken me down. Such a heartbreaking, but beautiful read.
      Thank you Bryce

    • seniorcynic says:

      01:58pm | 23/11/12

      Generally I don’t like his Aussie books as they are too “ocker” for me but I was touched by April Fools Day although I disagreed with his view that the blood transfusion service was responsible for his son acquiring HIV.

    • George says:

      12:24pm | 23/11/12

      I read Jessica, the Tommo and Hawke trilogy, and in a second hand bookshop I found a book that was a collection of his opinion articles he wrote for The Australian, I think they were written around the 80s or early 90s.

      I think I enjoyed that one the most, as I was in my early 20s and yet to get a clue about the world of business and politics. I think I learned a thing or two from it.

      79, not too bad, although I think he deserved 90, or maybe 100. So it’s a little bit sad.

    • Daniel Piotrowski

      Daniel Piotrowski says:

      12:27pm | 23/11/12

      April Fool’s Day was phenomenal.

    • Reg Whiteman says:

      04:01pm | 23/11/12

      Yes it was. As many others have mentioned it was a book that, once read, never needed re-reading. It stayed with you forever. I read it when it first came out about 20 years ago and still remember so many incidents: the “professor” at the hospital; the fall in the swimming pool; the butterfly needles; the Fiat; Celeste; the thrush in the mouth; the double sun rise caused by Mount Pinatubo.

      I also enjoyed the “Peekay Books” and Tommo and Hawk. He was a great writer, that’s for sure. May he meet up with Damon across that rainbow bridge.

    • Philosopher says:

      12:33pm | 23/11/12

      I tried to read Jessica once; clunky writing and some pretty dodgy scenes, let me tell you (the nun incident?). Bad writer, lovely guy: RIP Bruce.

    • Audra Blue says:

      12:51pm | 23/11/12

      How sad that such a beloved author is now more.

      I could never get into Bryce’s books.  I didn’t find them terribly interesting.

    • Philosopher says:

      01:15pm | 23/11/12

      that’s because they weren’t terribly interesting.

    • Sue C says:

      12:53pm | 23/11/12

      Bryce Courtenay was a simply extraordinary writer - I own every single one of his books, and bought Jack of Diamonds just yesterday.  Bryce Courtenay was able to give me a very powerful sense of my Australian identity, from books such as Four Fires and many others, that I never seemed to get from all my years at school, and I will be forever grateful to him for that.  His writing allowed me to feel what a unique and special country I was born and raised in, and the subsequent pride in being Australian that I will carry with me my whole life.  I shed tears that we have lost such a man, but he has left a legacy for generations to come.  RIP Bryce Courtenay, thank you for sharing your gift with us all.

    • Ben C says:

      12:54pm | 23/11/12

      April Fool’s Day is the only Bryce Courtenay book I’ve ever read. Probably the most powerful book I’ve ever read, such was the passion and emotion that Bryce devoted to the memory of his youngest son.

      Rest in peace, Bryce, I’m sure Damon’s up there with open arms.

    • TheRealDave says:

      01:12pm | 23/11/12

      I enjoyed the Power of One waaaay back in the early 90’s I think. But I enjoyed Solomons Song and Brother Fish lot more. I think I have read and re-read Brother Fish about 10 times now….

    • St. Michael says:

      01:41pm | 23/11/12

      Personally speaking I could never really get into Courtenay’s books - for whatever reason his writing style or something about it didn’t click with me.

      On the other hand, he had three other important attributes which made me like him:

      (1) He believed this country held itself in mediocrity, but he also believed in its potential and always wanted more for it.  I remember an old interview - we’re talking 15 years ago now - in which he basically said “If we’re going to pull our beloved country out of the shit, we will not do it by living safe, pro forma lives.”

      (2) Even if I didn’t like his stories as such, I respect and admire his craft by virtue of him having sold a lot of books.  He talked the talk and had the sales to prove it worked.  That makes his advice on writing worth thinking about.  Popularity, like it or not, is one hallmark of a well-told story, even if the prose (Twilight, for example) makes you want to claw your eyes out, because it connects with a wide, wide array of readers.

      Consider advertising writers, of which Courtenay was one for decades before he started in fiction (although given he was in advertising you might say he always was writing fiction).  They have to grab your attention, make an emotional impact, get what may be a complex concept across as simply as possible, as quick as possible, and as memorably as possible - in a manner of seconds.  Courtenay treated his novel writing like his ad writing, and I’d wager that’s a big part of its popularity and its success.

      (3) He hated the artifice and the cultural cringe of career literati, and he wasn’t backward about calling Peter Carey (who was himself a former ad man) in particular an uppity arsehole: http://www.crikey.com.au/2010/06/09/peter-careys-a-snob-bryce-courtenay-in-defence-of-popular-storytelling/#respond

      Let me clarify: this doesn’t mean I hate F. Scott Fitzgerald’s books or John Steinbeck’s books.  I hate pretentious literati, not great books.  Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Steinbeck, they all wrote beautiful, brilliant pieces of work if you’re prepared to sit down and really savour them word by word.  No doubt about it; some of the authors who stay with us were brilliant.  Enduring popularity is the mark of a great book—something that speaks across the ages—but contemporary popularity is, like it or not, a pretty good indicator of something going right with a book.

      For example, people can and should mash Dan Brown and The Da Vinci Code.  Brown’s stories are a lot more comfortable in the fantasy section of the bookshop next to JRR Tolkien than sitting next to, say, James Michener.  But Brown knows pacing and how to trail the bread crumbs of a mystery; how to keep a reader’s heart rate up, keep them turning the pages.

      Or look at James Michener: dozens of location-based books (Poland, Centennial, South Pacific, Space)—generatioal sagas one and all.  Not so much “pace” as “crawling”.  But he sold in the millions, too—because he becomes the reader’s avatar.  He goes to the places he writes about, and when he writes, he puts you there.  And he knows his locations.

      Courtneay was an unashamed popular writer, and good on him for being so.  Maybe part of it is that he started writing so late—at 55, he was a mature man, had much of his life and had nothing to prove to anyone.  What a wonderfully refreshing attitude to have compared to the excuses for authors we fund on government grants for much of their careers.

    • sunny says:

      05:16pm | 23/11/12

      Interesting read St. Michael you’re not a bad writer yourself. I was not a huge fan of Bryce’s work either (it’s just that I love non-fiction a lot more than fiction) but agree on your first point, there was something extremely positive about the bloke when he spoke - he would always speak with a genuine energy and enthusiasm and I always liked listening to him for that reason.

    • dafall says:

      02:42pm | 23/11/12

      Vale and thank you Bryce.  Many of my most memorable moments were spent daydreaming with your stories.  4 fires, Tommo and Hawk, Fishing for Stars, Persimmon, I enjoyed them all. 
      Thank you.

    • Lails says:

      03:20pm | 23/11/12

      RIP Bryce! The Power of One is one of the most powerful and inspiring books I have ever read. It made me laugh and it made me cry. Whilst reading it my partner (who has no interest in reading) asked me what I was reading and what it was about as I looked like I was really into it. Fantastic book!

 

Facebook Recommendations

Read all about it

Punch live

Up to the minute Twitter chatter

Daniel Piotrowski

@SquigglyRick likewise!

Daniel Piotrowski

Hurray racism is fixed no protesters at anti-Islam demonstration http://t.co/hRFbZq8u9h

ToryShepherd

OI TWITTER! Need your best misheard lyrics pronto for @891adelaide's #thebuzz! Hit me, please!

Daniel Piotrowski

@SquigglyRick I really meant without me writing any news

Recent posts

The latest and greatest

The Punch is moving house

The Punch is moving house

Good morning Punchers. After four years of excellent fun and great conversation, this is the final post…

Will Pope Francis have the vision to tackle this?

Will Pope Francis have the vision to tackle this?

I have had some close calls, one that involved what looked to me like an AK47 pointed my way, followed…

Advocating risk management is not “victim blaming”

Advocating risk management is not “victim blaming”

In a world in which there are still people who subscribe to the vile notion that certain victims of sexual…

Nosebleed Section

choice ringside rantings

From: Hasbro, go straight to gaol, do not pass go

Tim says:

They should update other things in the game too. Instead of a get out of jail free card, they should have a Dodgy Lawyer card that not only gets you out of jail straight away but also gives you a fat payout in compensation for daring to arrest you in the first place. Instead of getting a hotel when you… [read more]

From: A guide to summer festivals especially if you wouldn’t go

Kel says:

If you want a festival for older people or for families alike, get amongst the respectable punters at Bluesfest. A truly amazing festival experience to be had of ALL AGES. And all the young "festivalgoers" usually write themselves off on the first night, only to never hear from them again the rest of… [read more]

Gentle jabs to the ribs

Superman needs saving

Superman needs saving

Can somebody please save Superman? He seems to be going through a bit of a crisis. Eighteen months ago,… Read more

28 comments

Newsletter

Read all about it

Sign up to the free News.com.au newsletter