'At first glance, Landscape of Farewell (2007) appears a simpler, more streamlined
story than its predecessor, Journey to the Stone Country (2002). In the first
person, Max Otto, a widowed German professor specialising in the history of
massacres, tells of his journey to Mount Nebo in Central Queensland, a
journey precipitated by his encounter with visiting Aboriginal Australian
academic Vita McLelland. His journey is conducted in the context of his not yet
assuaged grief for his wife, and of his haunted suspicions about his father's
complicity in the horrors of wartime Germany. Peter Pierce (2004) has
identified some of Miller's enduring preoccupations: 'solitariness', 'artful
evocations of the visceral', tensions between ancestry, freedom and exile, and
the indeterminacy of memory. While many of these recur in Landscape, I focus
in this paper on how the theme of time is exercised in this novel, with its spare
but concentrated prose and apparently straightforward narration. How does
Landscape of Farewell draw us inwards as well as onwards, into an intricately
nested set of temporalities that speak to selfhood, truth and reparation, to
cross-cultural translation, to mortality and relinquishment, and to the
intractable terrain of moral debate about the past? What does Miller's mode of
narration bring to familiar questions, in Australian culture, of place and
belonging?' (Source: http://sydney.edu.au/arts/australian_literature/images/content/conferences/miller_abstracts2.pdf)