Davies sent his first manuscript,
Revival House, to Penguin unsolicited in 1990, where it was published in 1991. While the book proved controversial, it received many enthusiastic reviews. Helen Elliott wrote in the
Melbourne Herald: ‘The prose is spare and clean, the assurance is enviable, the tone measured, infallible...’ and Rob Johnson wrote in the
Adelaide Advertiser: ‘...a tour de force... a strikingly accomplished performance.’ Davies’ novels are considerably varied in their stylistic approach and thematic concerns but share an overall interest in the relationship between sensual experience and how we conduct our lives, between our passions and our ethical concerns. James Bradley wrote for the
Sydney Morning Herald, ‘The point for Davies, in this beautifully crafted and exquisitely controlled novel (
The Beholder) is that... it is only through affection and engagement that we can ever truly live nobly.’ Fiona Capp, writing for
Australian Book Review, stated that
Revival House was ‘...tremendously impressive... the writing is controlled and elegant,’. Pete Wolfe, a professor for the University of Missouri, wrote that ‘The area where he (Davies) exerts his mastery with most cunning is that of language. Luminous and tactile, the prose tracks so smoothly it conceals the grip it exerts. Again and again, he finds the right word, the right inflection, and the right angle... Style lends distinction of all kinds... His most recent novel, with drawings on nearly every page by
Phil Day (artist), takes the novel to a new place. 'Crow Mellow makes no secret of its strangeness... (it) wants not simply to look different but to be read differently too.’ (Michael Richardson,
The Newtown Review of Books). ==Acclaim==