Recently, I’ve been spending a lot of
enjoyable time doing some online research about Tasmanian convicts.
Coincidentally – or is it cause and effect? – I have read
several books with Tasmanian convicts as an important part of the
tale. Here are two of them.
The first was an adult book, the
challenging Vogel-winner The Roving Party by Rohan Wilson.
It’s a complex story, set at the time of the Black Wars in
Tasmania, about John Batman, farm-hand Gould, four downtrodden
convicts and Black Bill, brought up by white society but retaining
his traditional point of view . It gives an interesting version of
the main character before he left his place of birth to establish
Melbourne. It’s a heart-wrenching novel with black humour but
elements of hope. Though adult in audience, it will appeal to some
mature young adults.
I then followed this with the CBCA
Younger Readers Short List Nanberry: Black Brother White by
Jackie French. It’s set in the first ten or so years of Sydney and
is a great mix of historical fact combined with the author’s
fictitious characters. The reader comes to understand life in those
early years: the squalor as well as the hardships, corruption and the
threats to and challenges for the Aboriginal population. It was a
book which sent me investigating because I wanted to know more about
that period of our history.
Historical novels for me create a sort
of time travel, allowing me to visit another era. The successful ones
mean that I have an improved understanding of the past and a personal
recognition that I may not have fared very well had I been alive at
that time. I come away from some of my research with the same
feeling. What would the convicts I have been investigating think of
what I am doing?
And now I have
just finished Orson Scott Card’s Pathfinder, written for
young adults. This is pure fantasy, set in Garden a world
established 11,191 years ago, with many similar elements to
historical fiction but nothing to do with Tasmanian convicts. Rigg is
able to see all the paths traced by people in the past as they move
through the landscape. Umbo can transport people to the past and, if
necessary, modify the future. Param can make herself invisible by
slowing down time. It’s a typical fantasy quest where the main
characters have to meet their challenges but the reader constantly
needs to keep thinking because there are some complex paradoxes
discussed. It’s long – 662 pages – so not for the
faint-hearted, but a good book to make the reader think.
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