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⇒ Libro Free Playmaker Thomas Keneally 9780340422632 Books

Playmaker Thomas Keneally 9780340422632 Books



Download As PDF : Playmaker Thomas Keneally 9780340422632 Books

Download PDF Playmaker Thomas Keneally 9780340422632 Books


Playmaker Thomas Keneally 9780340422632 Books

Good character development. At times, however, a rather tedious read.

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Playmaker Thomas Keneally 9780340422632 Books Reviews


I don't really like starting a review with the setting - as if that's more key than the quality of characters, plot, dialogue, style etc. - but that's what I feel like I have to do with this book. The setting overwhelms the story for me, the setting is where this starts and finishes. Of course setting is absolutely crucial for many stories - but I want more. Keneally does give more, but I still think he relies more on the presumed resonance of this (to an Australian anyway) famous historical time and place than actually evoking something that resonates on its own.

I felt at such a distance from most of the characters. Some of this is perhaps conscious as we see from Lieutenant Ralph Clarke's perspective, and his reserve is a key aspect of his character. However much of it felt condescending - smug tourists relishing a visit to colourful characters, smirking at their antics or being shocked at their bizarre practises, before returning to their air-conditioned hotels. The lags were so colourful - the whole `Tawny Prince' mythology, Dabby Bryant's mysticism, queen Goose, winking at the noose, Black Ceasar - that they stopped being people. They were more their trappings than individuals.

I fall back on it too often, but pretty much these days all the historical fiction I read is put up against Patrick O'Brian. Well, actually a lot of other fiction too - and that's the point Aubrey and Maturin are such triumphs as characters they're allowed to be different without becoming caricatures, and without losing the basic humanity that we can identify with; we don't have to dismiss them as fools or elevate them as fantastical heroes. The rich knowledge of their time and place (fairly contemporary with `Playmaker' as it happens) integrates with rather than overwhelms the people.
This finely crafted work is one of Keneally's most notable. Portraying a man in an agony of moral conflict over his love for a woman convict yet constantly aware of the family left behind in England, The Playmaker addresses human feelings at many levels. Like so many of his books, Keneally has taken figures from history, weaving a plausible tale of the life they might have led. His examination of the mind and heart of Lieutenant Ralph Clark, during the early years of the Port Jackson [Sydney] prison colony, a is deeply moving account. Far from home, these exiled people face disturbing choices. Keneally compares the founders of the Sydney colony with space travellers, isolated in a dangerous situation with limited resources.
Clark's task is the staging of a play in celebration of the king's birthday. Assembling a cast from the convicts, he's confronted with a range of personalities from house maids to forgers. Keneally's research has dredged up backgrounds of these transported felons; the thieves' guild oath is a particularly fine touch. His real talent, however, is in presenting this material through his characters . Each of his figures projects a reality surpassing other writers of historical fiction. While his descriptive narrative may make modern allusions, none of his persona are dragged out of their original time frame. Ralph Clark is particularly well drawn. Keneally has a special talent for presenting us with an 18th Century man's feelings and aspirations as much as it's possible for us to know them.
That this book has been returned to the active sales list is a testament to its value. It should be read by more people. The 18th Century setting is less important than what Keneally has to say about people. Add this book to your shelves with confidence. It's worth more than a single read.
In 1788, the First Fleet landed in Botany Bay to establish a penal colony. In 1789, Lieutenant Ralph Clark is commissioned by H.E. (unnamed in the novel but historically Governor Arthur Phillip) to stage a play in honour of the King's birthday. George Farquhar's comedy `The Recruiting Officer' (first performed in 1706) is the play the fact that the colony possessed only two copies of the script was the least of the handicaps to be overcome. Lieutenant Clark selects his cast from the convicts burglars, whores and highwaymen. Most of the convicts are illiterate, rehearsals will be challenging and costuming rudimentary.

There are many levels to this novel. Staging the play - bringing British culture to the Antipodes - provides a backdrop for this period of the tentative new colony. Ralph Clark himself is torn between the family he has left behind and his feelings for a female convict who is one of the actors in the play. Woven around historical fact, this novel brings people and place to life. The play, that civilizing event, is being staged in a struggling community formed by exile.

I enjoyed this novel and Mr Keneally's depiction of this period of Australia's colonial history. Thomas Keneally wrote in the epilogue `For yes, though they are fantastical creatures, they all lived.' Imagine that.

Jennifer Cameron-Smith
I enjoyed the book.
Great book!
Good character development. At times, however, a rather tedious read.
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