[1] As a result of this novel, Ireland was "being hailed as the successor to Patrick White and the antipodean rival of the great American satirist Kurt Vonnegut".
On the announcement of the Miles Franklin Award win, The Canberra Times stated: " A Woman of the Future was rejected by Macmillans at first because it was too long and too complex or, as Mr Ireland put it yesterday, 'too incomprehensible' ".
[4] Following this, one of the award judges, Emeritus Professor Colin Roderick, described the book as "literary sewage",[5] and stated it was "a dreadful, sex-ridden fantasy, doomed to oblivion.
"[5] Writing in 1980 for Woroni, Andrea Mitchell noted a "different and more rewarding perspective on women in society" from the author.
Must feminism adjust to the mainstream of modern culture, training girls up to become pseudo-men in order to compete for power and privilege in an unequal and vicious society — or can it work to undermine such qualities and recreate the world with a human face?