Monday, October 25, 2021

A LAND THAT YOU DO NOT KNOW


Paperback versions of David Morisset's newest novel are available via Amazon in Australia and overseas. Various eBook editions can be purchased through Kindle, iBooks and other online retailers.

Many of Australia’s first European settlers were convicts transported across the seas from the British Isles. There were also free immigrants. They included entrepreneurs, farmers, soldiers, mariners, miners, and clerical and industrial workers. While online databases have made it possible for today’s Australians of European descent to trace their ancestry and acquire an understanding of the outline of their family trees, amateur genealogists usually confront baffling questions. What events led to criminal transgressions that deserved exile in a distant penal colony? How did convicts win their freedom and earn an ostensibly honest living in unfamiliar surroundings? Why did men and women leave urban slums and industrial occupations for rural lives on the other side of the world? How did their progeny — the sons and daughters of convicts and free settlers alike — fare as the decades unfolded?

Partly inspired by Patrick White’s ‘The Tree of Man’, David Morisset’s novel, ‘A Land that You do not Know’, imagines the lives and times of Hugh Wadkin, an English convict, and Maggie Kintyre, a Scottish free settler. Both became residents of the Hawkesbury District on the outskirts of Sydney — although Maggie arrived seventy years after Hugh had first trudged along the Windsor Road on his way to the foothills of the Blue Mountains. Their circumstances were dramatically different. They brought with them sharply contrasting expectations. Eventually, their Australian family trees would intertwine.

1 comment:

Jane said...

A wonderful read! I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The characters were vivid and the tone was perfect for the subject matter. It gave me a clear and detailed picture of the history of the time. A great way to learn about everyday life in England and Australia in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries.