Death of a River Guide (1994) is the first novel by Australian author Richard Flanagan.
As Aljaz Cosini lies dying at the bottom of a river in Tasmania he starts to experience a series of flashbacks, forcing him to re-examine his own life.
The reviewer on The Novel Approach website stated: "It's startling (and, quite frankly, a little depressing) to realise that Death of a River Guide is Flanagan's first novel. Not only is he in complete command of the languageâÂÂin his descriptions of Aljaz's interiority as well as his bountiful descriptions of the Franklin River and its surroundingsâÂÂbut structurally, too, the novel is almost perfect."
In The Canberra Times Marian Eldridge noted the connection between character and landscape: "Land use, convicts, brutality, migration, and racial prejudice all are strands in Aljaz's heritage. When, I wondered, are we going to consider the original inhabitants of this beautiful island? I was not disappointed. What the author has created is a picture of an individual that is also a mosaic of the history of Tasmania."
This novel has been translated into French (2000), Slovenian (2003), Dutch (2003), Spanish (2003), German (2004), Italian (2005), Polish (2017) and Bulgarian (2018).
It has been reported that this novel was inspired by the death in 1985 of Julien Weber, a tour guide who died on the Franklin river at âÂÂthe cauldronâÂÂ. Flanagan wrote in his 2023 book, Question 7, that Death of a River Guide was based on his own experience.