To become a whale / Ben Hobson.
Momo rauemi: TextKaiwhakaputa:Allen & Unwin, 2017.Whakaahuatanga: 394 pages ; 24 cmISBN:- 176029439X
- 9781760294397
- Fathers and sons -- Fiction
- Single fathers -- Australia -- Fiction
- Life change events -- Fiction
- Whaling stations -- Australia -- Fiction
- Whaling -- Queenslands -- Fiction
- Nineteen sixties -- Fiction
- Australia -- Social life and customs -- 20th century -- Fiction
- Moreton Island (Qld.) -- History -- Fiction
- Noosa Heads (Qld.) -- History -- Fiction
Momo tuemi | Tauwāhi onāianei | Kohinga | Tau karanga | Tūnga | Rā oti | Waeherepae | Ngā puringa tuemi | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fiction | Stratford Fiction | Fiction | HOB (Tirotirohia te whatanga(Opens below)) | Wātea (Available) | A00796995 |
Tells the story of 13-year-old Sam Keogh, whose mother has died. Sam has to learn how to live with his silent, hitherto absent father, who decides to make a man out of his son by taking him to work at Tangalooma, then the largest whaling station in the southern hemisphere. What follows is the devastatingly beautiful story of a gentle boy trying to make sense of the terrible reality of whaling and the cruelty and alienation of his new world, the world of men. Set around Moreton Island and Noosa in 1961, To Become a Whale is an extraordinarily vivid and haunting novel that reads like an instant classic of Australian literature. There are echoes of Craig Silvey, Favel Parrett, Tim Winton and Randolph Stow in this moving, transformative and very Australian novel.
There are no comments on this title.