Australian Women’s Weekly NZ

Literary reads

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The Drover’s Wife

by Leah Purcell,

Hamish Hamilton

Actor, playwright and author Leah Purcell grew up reading Henry Lawson’s famous

1892 short story The Drover’s Wife, carrying around her own battered copy of the book and annotating it with her childish sketches. The tale of the pregnant woman isolated in the family’s two-bedroom hut with her four children in Australia’s high country reached into her soul.

This novel, which also incorporat­es some of Purcell’s family history, is just one of her reworkings of the tale – first came the stage play and soon there’s a film.

And in this courageous reimaginin­g of the classic, she has created something of a thriller, with the woman now named Molly Johnson and Aboriginal. The result is engrossing and truly powerful.

INLAND by Téa Obreht,

Hachette

The American dream comes under the microscope in this lyrical tale of Arizona frontiersw­oman Nora Lark. Her husband has disappeare­d while searching for water, and her elder sons have also vanished. As Nora waits with her youngest son and hopes for the return of her menfolk, we also meet Lurie Mattie, a murderer on the run. Superb storytelli­ng with a mythical aura.

MAYBE THE HORSE WILL TALK

by Elliot Perlman, Vintage

Black humour abounds in this slick and thought-provoking part thriller, part love story. The author has no doubt drawn on his own early experience as a junior lawyer in a commercial law firm, where bullying and intimidati­on were the norm. Protagonis­t, married father-of-two Stephen Maserov, has swapped teaching for law and now realises he is stuck working all hours in a job he hates.

When his wife asks him to move out, he gets desperate and embarks on a risky assignment to defend a company besieged by sexual harassment accusation­s.

AKIN

by Emma

Donoghue, Pan Macmillan Michael is a boy in need. His father died of an overdose 18 months ago, his mother is in prison for drug possession and his grandma, who was looking after him, has just passed away. His new guardian is greatuncle Noah, a retired chemistry professor who lives in New York’s Upper West Side and opts to take Michael with him on a visit to his childhood hometown of Nice in France. The duo is so very different, but what unites them is where the poignancy of this novel shines through.

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