Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%
Print this page

Justice and identity

Jon Faine’s compassionate approach to biography
by
August 2022, no. 445

Apollo and Thelma: A true tall tale by Jon Faine

Hardie Grant, $45 hb, 373 pp

Justice and identity

Jon Faine’s compassionate approach to biography
by
August 2022, no. 445
Paul Alexander McPherson Anderson, aka 'The Mighty Apollo' (photograph legendarystrength.com)
Paul Alexander McPherson Anderson, aka 'The Mighty Apollo' (photograph legendarystrength.com)

A lesser writer than Jon Faine would have found many more cheap laughs in this extraordinary story. One of the two central characters, Paul Alexander McPherson Anderson, was better known as The Mighty Apollo. In what feels like a bygone age, he was the proprietor of The Mighty Apollo Martial Arts centre in West Melbourne. He lived there in spartan quarters, above a panel beater.

His modest circumstances did not imply much modesty of spirit. Paul, ‘Australia’s indestructible man of steel’, was a tireless self-promoter. He performed endless improbable feats such as being stood on by an elephant, being run over by vehicles while lying on a bed of nails, and pulling trams and buses with a bit between his teeth. This last achievement beggars the imagination, especially since, on at least one occasion, he had to repeat the effort for the sake of the newsreel cameras. In between times, Apollo was an oracle with much to say about God and everything else. Yet his communication with his three sons was not so sure.

Michael McGirr reviews 'Apollo and Thelma: A true tall tale' by Jon Faine

Apollo and Thelma: A true tall tale

by Jon Faine

Hardie Grant, $45 hb, 373 pp

From the New Issue

You May Also Like