Review: The Narrow Road to the Deep North

 

At this stage of my life, The Narrow Road to the Deep North reads as a study in justification.

Richard Flanagan moves through every camp, every mind, every moral universe. Prisoners. Surgeons. Lovers. Japanese officers bound to the Emperor. Each inhabits a logic that makes sense from the inside. Honour. Duty. Survival. Desire.

History turns on those private narratives. People act. Then they explain. The explanation hardens into belief. The belief becomes identity.

Flanagan’s range unsettles because it removes the comfort of certainty. He shows how lived experience shapes language, posture, allegiance. A man formed by hunger speaks differently from a man formed by command. A nation formed by defeat remembers differently from one formed by empire.

The novel widens the frame. It reveals how easily righteousness takes root. It shows how repetition grows from persuasion rather than ignorance.

The horror sits in the background. The real force lies in the anatomy of self-justification.

I read “The Narrow Road to the Deep North” in the way I now read many war novels, I moved past much of the graphic brutality. I understand what the railway was. I did not need every blow described. I was fascinated by Flanagan’s willingness to enter the minds of the Japanese officers and show how honour, obedience and Emperor worship formed a moral world in which cruelty could be framed as as duty, even virtue, and suffering recast as proof of loyalty.

This mythic language, set inside an operating theatre, shifts the scale. A surgeon who once carried himself with absolute command feels the weight of his own humanity. The hand that once cut clean now trembles.  The body remembers. The past intrudes.

“He had stolen light from the sun and fallen to earth. For a moment he had to turn away from the table and compose himself, so that the rest of the team would not see his scalpel shaking.”

The horror in the book becomes more unbearable because the prose is so luminous. Beauty heightens contrast. When a writer can render tenderness, love, memory, even desire with such precision, the brutality feels sharper.

You do not need to read every detail of suffering to recognise that power. The architecture of the book carries it. The moral weight is present in the pauses, in the fractured relationships, in the way time folds back on itself.

Flanagan writes extremity, yet he also writes longing. He writes shame. He writes the ache of love that never resolves. That is what makes the novel extraordinary.

The railway is the crucible, yet the book is about what remains afterwards.

I responded to the beauty of the sentences as much as the history.

For me that is enough.

The story that waited for me

I’ve been commissioned to write a book. That still feels extraordinary to say. Not because I didn’t think I had it in me – but because this book has reminded me of skill sets I had tucked away. Some I’d forgotten. Others I never knew were there.

I can’t give away the title, and I won’t walk you through the plot. But I can offer glimpses. .

A barefoot child on a dairy farm. A marriage that unsettles the whole village. A funeral, too soon. A son who breaks. A woman who does not.

The book is set in the Jamberoo of the early 1900s -back when the land ruled daily life, and community reputation could make or break you. It’s a chance for me to write about the complexity of family grief, the silence that follows a child’s death, and the way small towns handle trauma. It’s also letting me reflect on the burden of stoicism, the quiet strength of women, and the weight of religious and cultural expectations.

At its heart, this is a story about forbearance. About the kind of dignity that doesn’t ask for applause. About how people endure the unthinkable and still show up to milk the cows.

It’s personal work, but not confessional. I’m drawing on history, memory, imagination, and finding in myself a storyteller I didn’t expect to meet again.

This book is not about Jamberoo alone. It’s about what binds all of us, wherever we live. Compassion, endurance, resilience. Love that doesn’t announce itself. Grace in the everyday.

I’m grateful to be writing it. Grateful for the trust, the challenge, and the reminder that even now, especially now, I still have something to say on behalf of the people who came before me .

#TheStoryThatWaitedForMe #WritingJourney #HistoricalFiction #Jamberoo #RuralStories #CreativeProcess #Rediscovery #Forbearance #WomenInHistory #Resilience

 

 

Reflecting on Patriarchal Legacies in Pip Fioretti’s “Bone Lands”

 

Pip Fioretti’s “Bone Lands” offers a stark reflection on the deeply ingrained patriarchal norms of early 20th-century Australia, particularly within pastoral communities. Through its vivid narratives and complex characters, the novel highlights the significant disparities between the rights and roles of men and women, with a specific emphasis on inheritance and marriage.

The character of Robert Kirkbride embodies the quintessential patriarchal figure in pastoral societies, where land and property succession is dominated by male heirs. His authority and influence in the community are significant, yet the personal toll of his decisions is deeply felt by his family. The scenes at his homestead, resonant with grief and loss, underline the consequences of a life governed by stringent patriarchal rules. His distress over the possible tarnishing of his daughter Flora’s reputation, to the extent of covering up a crime, underscores the societal importance placed on female virtue and the family’s public image, often at the expense of justice and personal integrity.

The novel poignantly critiques the treatment of women as commodities within marriage transactions that are designed to augment familial wealth and social standing. The dismissal of the governess who sympathised with Kirkbride’s daughters, Nessie and Flora, reveals the extent to which women’s desires and voices were suppressed. Women, like livestock, were paraded before potential suitors, with their personal feelings sidelined in favour of strategic alliances.

The tragic case of Grace, a young girl coerced into an unwanted situation that ends disastrously, serves as a grim example of the expendability of women in these societal constructs. The handling of her pregnancy, shrouded in secrecy and shame, not only highlights the social stigmatisation but also the harsh measures taken to maintain a façade of decency.

Violence against women, both physical and psychological, is a recurring theme in “Bone Lands.” Mrs. Fletcher’s narrative of abuse and manipulation is heart-wrenching. Her affair, initially a rebellion against a stifling life, turns into a cycle of violence and degradation, illustrating the severe limitations placed on women’s autonomy and the brutal repercussions of stepping outside societal norms.

“Bone Lands” is a powerful exploration of the legacy of patriarchy in pastoral Australia. Through its vivid storytelling, it not only paints a picture of the era’s social landscapes but also challenges the reader to reflect on the ongoing issues of gender inequality. The novel’s portrayal of women navigating these oppressive structures, seeking agency in a world that relentlessly seeks to define them through the lens of male desire and convenience, resonates deeply, urging a reconsideration of the narratives we have inherited and the ones we continue to forge.

#BoneLands #PipFioretti #HistoricalFiction #InheritanceRights #GenderRoles #Patriarchy #AustralianLiterature #PastoralLife  #WomenInHistory #FeministReads

You can read an interview with the author  in the Australian Rural & Regional News here