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Journal Entry 1 by MRJIGGS from St. Louis, Missouri USA on Saturday, December 16, 2006
Pre-numbered label used for registration. discarded by library hardback 297pp published, 2001 From the Publisher On the edge of the remote salt flats of Australia, a young woman blows in from nowhere and disturbs the precarious equilibrium of a family farm. The boy is fascinated by her, his mother despises her, and the brutish farmhand wants to possess her. When the woman mysteriously disappears, the only trace of her a bloodied dress, the boy sets out in search of an Indian hawker who may or may not have the answers. As he journeys through the broken landscape, accompanied only by his horse and his dog, the boy becomes aware of another party converging murderously on his destination. Author Biography: Michael Meehan was educated in Australia and England at Monash, Adelaide, and Cambridge universities. He lives with his wife and son in South Australia. This is his first novel. From The Critics Library Journal ...an extraordinary and beautifully realized first novel...Meehan describes the unusual people...with language that approaches the condition of poetry...enthusiastically promoted... Publishers Weekly The vast, sparsely settled wilderness of the Australian outback is the setting and true protagonist of this manifestly heavy-handed and obscure (in both language and theme) debut "walkabout" novel, which was published in 1999 to high praise in Australia. A sensual, free-spirited young woman, hardly more than a teenager and offering few clues to her past, stumbles half-naked into the mundane existence of a family farming the margins of the desolate Australian salt flats. Accustomed to being the focus of male attention, the wife is jealous and resentful. Aroused by the young woman's sexuality, the farmer's postpubertal son indulges his voyeuristic obsession, spying on her clandestine late-night trysts with a loutish farmhand. She suddenly vanishes the morning after the boy sees the handyman strike her in anger, and the only clue is a bloody dress neatly laid out across the straw in the stable and a smashed cardboard suitcase spilling her possessions. Convinced she has gone off to join Cabel Singh, a charismatic, nomadic Indian peddler, the boy takes his horse and dog and sets out across the wasteland to find them. Repetitive, tedious, overly detailed descriptions (an exhaustive inventory of the contents of a minor character's car stretches over several pages) of featureless landscape and gratuitous characters mar this convoluted, disjointed narrative as the dispirited odyssey moves back and forth in time. Bright spots are a scattering of strongly crafted musings by the central characters. In the end, however, there is little resolution and virtually no sense of redemption. This is an extraordinary and beautifully realized first novel about a 12-year-old boy who lives on a farm in a remote region of Australia. The novel begins with an astonishing event: a young woman staggers out of the wilderness and on to the family farm. Bold and enchanting, Eileen is informally adopted by the family, and the boy is quickly enamored of her. When Eileen vanishes one night a year later under suspicious circumstances, the boy sets out on his horse to search for her a search that becomes an epic journey into a world of sudden violence, unexpected generosity, and dangerous passion. Meehan describes the unusual people the boy meets, the heartbreaking stories they tell, and the foreboding grandeur of the desolate landscape he traverses with language that approaches the condition of poetry. The boy emerges from this heroic journey at the end of the novel battered, exhausted, and transformed. Enthusiastically recommended for all libraries.
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