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Tree Palace

Craig Sherborne

$29.99

Paperback

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English
Text Publishing Company
26 March 2014
Shane, Moira and Midge, along with young Zara and Rory, are 'trants'-itinerants roaming the plains north-west of Melbourne in search of disused houses to sleep in, or to strip of heritage fittings when funds are low. When they find their Tree Palace outside Barleyville, things are looking up. At last, a place in which to settle down.

But Zara, fifteen, is pregnant and doesn't want a child. She'd rather a normal life with town boys, not trant life with a baby. Moira decides to step in: she'll look after her grandchild.

Then Shane finds himself in trouble with the local cops...

Warmly told and witty, Craig Sherborne's second novel is a revelation - an affecting story of family and rural life.

By:  
Imprint:   Text Publishing Company
Country of Publication:   Australia
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 153mm,  Spine: 25mm
Weight:   445g
ISBN:   9781922147325
ISBN 10:   192214732X
Pages:   288
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Craig Sherborne's memoir Hoi Polloi (2005) was shortlisted for the Queensland Premier's and Victorian Premier's Literary Awards. The follow-up, Muck (2007), won the Queensland Premier's Literary Award for Non-fiction. Craig's first novel, The Amateur Science of Love, won the Melbourne Prize for Literature's Best Writing Award, and was shortlisted for a Victorian Premier's Literary Award and a NSW Premier's Literary Award. Craig has also written two volumes of poetry, Bullion (1995) and Necessary Evil (2005), and a verse drama, Look at Everything Twice for Me (1999). His writing has appeared in most of Australia's literary journals and anthologies. He lives in Melbourne.

Reviews for Tree Palace

'Tree Palace intelligently muses on the nature of human connections, to place and to one another.' * Sun Herald * 'Warmly told and witty, Craig Sherborne's second novel is a revelation - an affecting story of family and rural life.' * Shepparton News * 'Sherborne writes movingly and with poetic grace. Characters come across as an extension of the landscape: a landscape that will outlive the characters as they move through fleetingly. It is a relief to read this novel from a distance. While it is fascinating in a voyeuristic, readerly way to follow the plot twists that is about as close as we are willing to go. This is a great novel and Sherborne is a novelist to look out for.' * Otago Daily Times * 'Sherborne has woven an ultimately heart-warming tale. He tells it in simple language with great touches of humour and humanity, and has a fine way of describing his settings too. He draws his sultry rural locality well-its many sudden climate changes are almost characters themselves. It's not hard to see why he's capable of winning awards for his work. This is good story-telling and well worth reading.' * Waikato Times * `A delightful take on what it means to be family.' -- Hoopla '[Tree Palace has] insight, empathy and supple, observant prose.' * Advertiser * 'Sherborne had me at chapter one. Yes this comes down to the writing, which is, quite simply, sublime, but it goes further than that. There's such feeling; such heart that it's impossible not to fall for Moira, Shane & co. Tree Palace is a reminder that even inside the smallest of stories there's room enough for the stirring of universal themes...This is timeless, universal storytelling that is nonetheless quintessentially Australian.' * Eureka Street * 'Sherborne's descriptions of landscape are poetic and powerful, reinforcing a sense of identity that is deeply connected to a sense of place.' -- Readings `[Tree Palace is] moving, terrifying and wonderfully well observed and, as with all the strange books Sherborne writes, a triumph...The main character [is] one of the great portraits of up-against-it Australian womanhood in our literature, a figure to put with Lawson's Drover's Wife and Barbara Baynton's women.' -- Peter Craven * Sydney Morning Herald * 'With the crystallisation and compression of poetry, Sherborne explores ideas of property, freedom and loyalty, and produces a novel as beautiful in its conjunctions as the chandelier swinging over its landscapes.' * Australian * 'Much of the novel's action and characterisation unfolds through its authentic dialogue, and Sherborne's skills as a poet and playwright shine through. Readers will also enjoy his vivid depictions of nature-another strong feature of the novel is its rural setting. Told with warmth and humour, this contemporary, distinctly Australian story explores teen pregnancy; motherhood and parenthood; love and family; the roles and feelings of men and boys; and the power plays inherent in all human relationships. Tree Palace serves up a full slice of life-the bitter with the sweet.' 4 stars * Bookseller & Publisher *


  • Short-listed for Miles Franklin Award 2015 (Australia)
  • Short-listed for Miles Franklin Literary Award 2015 (Australia)
  • Shortlisted for Miles Franklin Literary Award 2015.

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