The Secret River
by
Kate Grenville
Order:
USA
Can
HarperCollins, 2006 (2006)
Hardcover
Reviewed by Michael Graves
T
he Secret River
starts in the early 17th century with William Thornhill in London trying against all odds to fend off hard times and enjoy a newly wedded life. As with many at that time, the road to some human comforts crossed the path of temptation to petty crime - crime, which in those days met with a hangman's noose. But in an act of partial clemency, William Thornhill and family were banished to the rugged environs of Sydney, Australia.
T
his tale by Kate Grenville takes us back to a time when Australia was a penal colony, with a story of the adventurers who found themselves tossed into that situation. The book is alive with strange characters - many unsavoury - who as pioneers develop this new land. But this is mostly a story of one family, who after suffering the '
outrages and deprivations
' of life in Sydney decide to move upriver to an area of land '
as remote from Sydney as Sydney was from London
'.
T
his is an epic novel of familial and environmental challenges, from which we truly feel how life must have been.
The Secret River
flows well with an excellent style that adds to the reading experience. Note that the novel won
The Commonwealth Writers' Prize
and is a
Booker
nominee.
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