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Secrets of the Sea

Nicholas Shakespeare

$35

Paperback

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English
Vintage
01 August 2008
A breathtaking new tale from Nicholas Shakespeare, who The Times called 'One of our best and truest novelists'.

Following the death of his parents in a car crash, eleven-year-old Alex Dove is torn from his life on a remote farm in Tasmania and sent to school in England. When he returns to Australia twelve years later, the timeless beauty of the land and his encounter with a young woman whose own life has been marked by tragedy, persuade him to stay. They marry, and he finds himself drawn into the eccentric, often hilarious dynamics of island life.

Longing for children, the couple open their home to a disquieting guest, a teenage castaway, whose presence in their home begins to unravel their tenuously forged happiness.
By:  
Imprint:   Vintage
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 129mm,  Spine: 30mm
Weight:   341g
ISBN:   9780099507772
ISBN 10:   0099507773
Pages:   496
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 0 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

NICHOLAS SHAKESPEARE was born in Worcester in 1957 and grew up in the Far East and Latin America. He is the author of The Vision of the Elena Silves, winner of the Somerset Maugham and Betty Trask awards, The High Flyer, for which he was nominated as one of Granta's Best of Young British Novelists, and The Dancer Upstairs, selected by the American Libraries Association as the best novel of 1997 and adapted for the film of the same title directed by John Malkovich. His last book was In Tasmania, winner of the 2007 Tasmania Book Prize. He is also the author of an acclaimed biography of Bruce Chatwin.

Reviews for Secrets of the Sea

Set in Tasmania, an accomplished love story by British author Shakespeare (Snowleg, 2004, etc.).Shakespeare's perceptive, gently comic and lovingly visual novel charts the evolution of love in an out-of-the-way place - Wellington Point, population 327 - where two people marked by tragedy meet. After Alex Dove's farmer parents were killed there in a car accident when he was 11, he was brought up in England. Returning to Tasmania as an adult to close the farm down, he decides instead to stay. Merridy Bowman, in town to care for her dying father, is scarred by the unresolved mystery of her brother Hector's disappearance when she was a child - an event which caused her to decide she would not allow herself to love again. But Alex's courtship persuades her that love will come and she marries him. Initially happy, the couple starts to drift apart due to barrenness and the farm's shaky finances, until Merridy saves the day by starting up a successful oyster business. One stormy night, Alex rescues a shipwrecked problem teenager, Kish, and the couple tames some of his violence, but when Merridy confuses him with Hector he smashes up their home. Then she falls pregnant and Alex thinks the baby is Kish's. Separation follows, but Kish apologizes for the destruction and Alex chooses to accept and love the child as his own.Although oddly paced and occasionally quirky, this is both a skillful, empathetic tale and an affectionate portrait of a place and its community. (Kirkus Reviews)


  • Short-listed for Commonwealth Writers' Prize Best Book - Eurasia 2008
  • Shortlisted for Commonwealth Writers' Prize Best Book - Eurasia 2008.

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