First edition cover | |
| Author | Patrick White |
|---|---|
| Cover artist | Sidney Nolan,Mrs Fraser and Convict (oil and enamel on composition board, 1962–64) in the collection of theQueensland Art Gallery. |
| Language | English |
| Genre | Novel |
| Published | 1976 (Jonathan Cape) |
| Publication place | Australia |
| Media type | Print (hardback and paperback) |
| Pages | 405 pp |
| ISBN | 0-224-00902-8 |
| OCLC | 1147089 |
| 823 | |
| LC Class | PR9619.3.W5 E9 1973 |
A Fringe of Leaves is the tenth published novel by the Australian novelist and1973 Nobel Prize-winner,Patrick White.[1]
A youngCornish[2] woman, Ellen Roxburgh, travels to the Australian colony ofVan Diemen's Land (now "Tasmania") in the early 1830s with her older husband, Austin, to visit his brother Garnet Roxburgh.[3][4] After witnessing the brutalities ofVan Diemen's Land, the Roxburghs embark on their return trip to England on theBristol Maid. But the ship runs aground on the coral reef off the coast of what is now Queensland. Ellen is the only survivor from the leaky vessel in which the passengers and crew travel to the shore. She is rescued by theAboriginal people of the island, and she later meets Jack Chance, a convict who has escaped fromMoreton Bay (now Brisbane), the brutal penal settlement to the south. It is Chance who escorts her through the dangerous coastal territory south to the outskirts of the settlement, but who refuses to accompany her further and returns to his exile. She returns to "civilisation" transformed and tormented by her experience with Garnet in Van Diemen's Land, with the Aboriginal people, and with Chance.
The novel sets in sharp relief the distinctions between men and women, whites and blacks, the convicts and the free, and English colonists and Australian settlers. The contrast between Ellen's rural Cornish background and the English middle class she has married into is also highlighted.[5]
The shipwreck and rescue parts of the novel reflect the experiences ofEliza Fraser, who was also shipwrecked onthe island that bears her name, met with an escaped convict who had lived alongside the island's Aboriginal people, and married a "Mr Jevons". She, however, eventually returned to the UK.
White's novel is (arguably recursively) often cited about Fraser Island and Eliza Fraser.[6][7]
This article about ahistorical novel of the 1970s is astub. You can help Wikipedia byadding missing information. See guidelines for writing about novels. Further suggestions might be found on the article'stalk page. |