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A River Town

Thomas Keneally

$24.99

Paperback

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English
Hachette Australia
10 June 2014
In turn-of-the-century Australia, Tim Shea supports his young family by running a general store in a remote riverside town, where he finds the same hypocrisy and snobbery which made him emigrate from Ireland, and suffers a series of misfortunes which take him to the brink of disaster. Capturing the spirit of the times, this is the mesmerising tale of a flawed hero whose stubborn integrity is nearly his undoing.

By:  
Imprint:   Hachette Australia
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 137mm,  Spine: 27mm
Weight:   276g
ISBN:   9780340624746
ISBN 10:   0340624744
Pages:   330
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for A River Town

Keneally's 21st novel (Woman of the Inner Sea, 1993, etc.) - a story based on his own grandfather's life - is another morally weighted, if at times overdrawn, celebration of one man's dogged battle with forces larger than himself in turn-of-the-century Australia. Over the course of one hot summer, Irish immigrant and storekeeper Tim Shea will find his new life in small-town Kempsey nearly destroyed by a sequence of seemingly random events. As the story begins, this thoughtful, imaginative man, who's saved enough money to give up log-hauling and buy a general store - which he runs with the help of pragmatic, outgoing wife Kitty - is troubled by the death of a young woman at the hands of a local abortionist. Since no one has identified her body, the woman's head has been severed, preserved in a bottle, and given to a local policeman, who travels with it around the countryside seeking information about her identity. But only Tim, haunted by the sight of the head, seems to care; and while his rescue of two children from an overturned cart makes him temporarily a hero, his sense of alienation is intensified by an unfamiliar mood in the town. When leading citizens want to send troops to help Britain fight the Boers, Tim's opposition soon leads to a boycott of his store. Like Job, he's then visited by further disasters - the suicide of one of the rescued children, a bubonic-plague quarantine, false accusations, police entrapment, and imminent financial ruin. By autumn, though, as personal confessions and distant victories change the town's mood once again, Tim, who has his own prejudices to overcome, is at peace: For by then it was generally acknowledged that [he] wasn't the dangerous fellow some had earlier claimed him to be. Rich in period detail and local color, but, here, Keneally's penchant for moral tub-thumping mars an otherwise absorbing story. (Kirkus Reviews)


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