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Author: Paul Daley

Category: Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945), Thriller / suspense

ISBN: 9781760529789

RRP: 32.99

Synopsis

From award-winning journalist Paul Daley comes a gripping multi-generational saga about Australian frontier violence and cultural theft that will capture the national imagination.

‘This is a story-a great story-with all the tragedy and lies that is colonial Australia. Our circle of tragedy.’ Thomas Mayor, author of Finding the Heart of the Nation

‘Poignant and powerful; the best book I’ve read this year.’ Chris Hammer, author of Scrublands

‘A challenging statement about the mythology of Australian colonial history. It confronts the hard questions with intense sensitivity and a smattering of humour.’ Professor Brownyn Carlson, Department of Indigenous Studies, Macquarie University

‘At long last, here is a novel that looks Australia’s brutal, murky frontier-one that left generations traumatised-straight in the eye.’ Mark McKenna, author of Return to Uluru

Morally bereft popular historian Patrick Renmark flees London in disgrace after the accidental death of his infant son. With one card left to play, he reluctantly takes a commission to write the biography of his legendary pioneering adventurer-anthropologist grandfather.

With no enthusiasm and even less integrity, Patrick travels to Jesustown, the former mission town in remote Australia where his grandfather infamously brokered ‘peace’ between the Indigenous custodians of the area and the white constabulary. He hasn’t been back there since he was a teenager when a terrible confrontation with his grandfather made him vow never to return.

Of course nothing is as it seems or as Patrick wants it to be. Unable to lay his own son to rest, Patrick must re-examine the legacy of his renowned grandfather and face the repercussions of his actions on subsequent generations. Will what he finds bring him redemption or add to the vault of family secrets and terrible guilt he keeps uncovering?

From award-winning journalist Paul Daley comes a gripping multi-generational saga about Australian frontier violence and cultural theft, and the myths that stand between us and history’s unpalatable truths.

‘An unflinching examination of the truths white Australia refuses to acknowledge.’ Jock Serong, author of Preservation

‘A searing dissection of the arrogance of white history and generations of moral failure.’ Michael Brissenden, author of Dead Letters

‘Asks challenging-and important-questions about the stories families tell themselves, and about the myths, lies and half-truths that form the core of Australia’s “official history”.’ Nigel Featherstone, author of Bodies of Men

Jesustown is nothing less than the story of Australia, but with the distance between its “story-ist” myths and harsh and human reality laid bare. A brilliant novel.’ David Whish-Wilson, author of True West

Jesustown

Good Reading Review

Historian Patrick Renfield is at his son’s funeral. The size of the tiny coffin reveals a premature tragic death. Renfield is shunned by everybody, contempt written on the mourners’ faces. The author leaves us guessing how this tragedy has unfolded, yet there is no doubt that Renfield is responsible.

Renfield is a celebrity in the world of military historical fiction. Criticised by academics and peers, his colourful retellings of historical battles and personalities fly off the shelf. He is not afraid to embellish and exaggerate, negotiating the grey nuances of history. But a scandal has seen publishers scuttle away and his wife has kicked him. Renfield decides to write a biography on his famous grandfather, Nathaniel.

‘Rennie’ is a famous anthropologist known as the saviour of Jesustown, an old mission town of Indigenous people. He spent most of his adult life living with them studying their way of life and fighting for their rights. The narrative is told in the present by Patrick, but also in the past by Rennie, through a collection of audio tapes that Patrick is transcribing for his book.

Daley uses the insidious behaviour and immoral crimes that the colonists perpetrated on the Indigenous population and culture of Australia as a backdrop, shedding light on the theme that history, and indeed people, are not always what they seem. As Patrick researches the biography, he discovers much more than he bargained for, and is left with the dilemma of how to write Rennie’s story.

A brilliant novel.

Reviewed by Neale Lucas

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