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Crackling Good Yarns

by
June-July 2004, no. 262

Tom Appleby, Convict Boy by Jackie French

HarperCollins, $14.95pb, 224pp

Book 2 Cover Small (400 x 600)

Stoker's Bay by Peter Jeans

UWA Press, $16.95pb, 240pp

Ichabod Hart and the Lighthouse Mystery by James Roy

UQP, $18.95pb, 375pp

Crackling Good Yarns

by
June-July 2004, no. 262

In an era when so many young people seem to be cosseted and protected from anything harsh or dangerous, there are still good books to show them the darkness and complexity of real life. These three new titles are all emotionally and intellectually confronting, and none pulls any punches. In James Roy’s Ichabod Hart and the Lighthouse Mystery, convicts are deliberately mutilated to make them more efficient in the mines; in Peter Jean’s Stoker’s Bay, one character is flogged almost to death as a punishment for rape, and another is drowned with his hands bound; and in Jackie French’s Tom Appleby, Convict Boy, an otherwise light-hearted offering, there is a graphic hanging scene.

The most impressive of the novels is Ichabod Hart and the Lighthouse Mystery, with its skilful and entertaining mixture of colonial history, fantasy and science fiction, and with a crackling good mystery thrown in. It deals with technology and its grip on us all; and with greed and how it distorts the human character.

Tom Appleby, Convict Boy

Tom Appleby, Convict Boy

by Jackie French

HarperCollins, $14.95pb, 224pp

Stoker's Bay

Stoker's Bay

by Peter Jeans

UWA Press, $16.95pb, 240pp

Ichabod Hart and the Lighthouse Mystery

Ichabod Hart and the Lighthouse Mystery

James Roy

UQP, $18.95pb, 375pp

From the New Issue

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