Sarah Thornhill by Kate Grenville
Text Publishing $50, out September 1
A terrible thing happened, that day, up at Blackwoods' place, in The Secret River, the first of Grenville's historical novels set in the penal colony of New South Wales. The natives had been playing up, there had been "depredations and outrages. There had been an affray and the settlers had dispersed them". So the local paper reported. "It was not exactly false. Nor was it the way Thornhill remembered."
The Sarah of the title of this, the third of the Sydney stories, is the youngest child of William Thornhill who, in the last pages of The Secret River, surveyed his great estate on the Hawkesbury River. He is a convict turned settler; he has done well; he has money and land and a fine family. This, the land, taken fairly, surely, because nobody had ever before bothered to settle it, was his reward. On the very last page of The Secret River Willliam surveys his estate, and wonders, "... why it did not feel like triumph".
That "affray", for one thing, which is the central episode of Sarah's life, although it will remain for her, and for most of her story, in the unknown past (although those of us who have read The Secret River will remember), is the eventually revealed canker at the rotten core of William's success.
But at the beginning there is an unlikely love story: Sarah and Jack. Jack is the oldest son of Jack Langland, another rough and successful settler, but not the son of Jack's wife. "Jack's mother was not Mrs Langland. She was a darkie, long dead ... Everyone knew that Jack was half-darkie."