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S.J. Parris writes about her inspiration for Heresy, which masterfully blends true events with fiction into a page-turning murder mystery set on the sixteenth-century Oxford University campus.
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   Summary and Book Reviews

The Lieutenant: Summary and book reviews of The Lieutenant by Kate Grenville, plus links to an excerpt from The Lieutenant and a biography of Kate Grenville.

The Lieutenant The Lieutenant
by Kate Grenville
Hardcover: Sep 2009,
320 pages.

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Critics' Opinion:   good
Readers' Rating:  Four Stars
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Book Summary

As a boy, Daniel Rooke was always an outsider. Ridiculed in school and misunderstood by his parents, Daniel could only hope, against all the evidence, that he would one day find his place in life. When he enters the marines and travels to Australia as a lieutenant on the First Fleet, Daniel finally sees his chance for a new beginning.

As his countrymen struggle to control their cargo of convicts and communicate with those who already inhabit the land, Daniel immediately constructs an observatory to chart the stars and begin the scientific work he prays will make him famous. But the place where they have landed will prove far more revelatory than the night sky. Out on his isolated point, Daniel comes to intimately know the local Aborigines, and forges a remarkable connection with one young girl, Tagaran, that will forever change the course of his life. As the strained coexistence between the Englishmen and the native tribes collapses into violence, Daniel is forced to decide between dedication to his work, allegiance to his country, and his protective devotion to Tagaran and her people.

Inspired by the notebooks of astronomer William Dawes, The Lieutenant is a remarkable story about the poignancy and emotional power of a friendship that defies linguistic and cultural barriers, and shows one ordinary man that he is capable of exceptional courage.

Book Reviews

Very Good BookBrowse - BookBrowse First Impression Reviewers
The Lieutenant revisits the same period Grenville wrote about in The Secret River (2005), the first years of the Port Jackson penal colony, but this is a more compact, leaner work. Although based on the diaries of William Dawes this is not your typical historical fiction - Grenville is as much, if not more, focused on observing the mind of her protagonist than she is in exploring the vista he beholds. As we inhabit his mind, his moral dilemmas become ours, and we share his isolation. Written with a poet's sensibility, this is an adventure into the nature of language and culture and of how people can connect across seemingly impenetrable barriers.
Full Review Members Only (members only, 1128 words).


Good  Publishers Weekly
Grenville's storytelling shines: the backdrop is lush and Daniel is a wonderful creation—a conflicted, curious and endearing eccentric.

Good  Kirkus Reviews
... The narrative focuses on the meditative inner life of its main character; too many other possibilities are unexplored ... An involving, affecting novel that should have been even better.

Very Good  Library Journal
Starred Review. Grenville displays a graceful touch with the characters and the history that so clearly move her, and her writing sparkles with life. Highly recommended for readers of literary fiction.

Good  New York Times - Alison McCulloch
The Lieutenant” is less a story of colonial struggle and encounter than “The Secret River,” and more the richly imagined portrait of a deeply introspective, and quite remarkable, man.

Very Good  Los Angeles Times - Bill Marx
The Lieutenant compels as a historical novel exploring the sins of Australia's colonial past, an admirable testament to the necessity that the West learn to appreciate rather than condemn the Other. But Grenville's most thrilling achievement is to filter that lesson in social acceptance through the computational consciousness of a man whose head is in the stars.

Good  The Guardian - Jay Parini
Although based on the diaries of William Dawes, an English officer who travelled with a fleet bringing the first convicts to Australia in 1888, The Lieutenant should not be mistaken for history, as Grenville warns us in a detailed author's note. She has repossessed history here, transmogrifying what she has found. She occupies the mind of Rooke with a kind of vivid insistence, and his isolation - and moral dilemmas - become ours.

Good  The Independent - Katy Guest
Between the words and among them, this is a profoundly uplifting novel – one that leaves you understanding Rooke's premise: that "Truth [needs] hundreds of words, or none."

Very Good  The Telegraph (UK)
Basing her tale on real events and a real historical character, Kate Grenville has brought imagination and compassion to the source of so much of Australia’s retroactive hand-wringing. What distinguishes her portrayal of Aboriginal culture is that for once appreciation, sympathy and admiration get the better of impotent guilt.

Good  Sydney Morning Herald - Andrew Rimmer
When Rooke's and Tagaran's explorations of language flower into a relationship - half playful, half amorous - Grenville starts taking considerable risks. This kind of material bristles with opportunities for mawkishness. The coolness of Grenville's prose ensures, however, that matters do not get out of hand. This section of the novel is tender and touching and greatly enhanced by understatement....The other sections of The Lieutenant are, perhaps, a shade more predictable. But Grenville reveals throughout a highly professional writer's sureness of touch. ... I found much to enjoy and to admire in this relatively brief novel.

Very Good  The Age (Australia)
[The Lieutenant] glows with life: imaginative in its re-creations, respectful of what cannot be imagined, and thoughtful in its interrogation of the past. ... Grenville's most intellectually sophisticated novel to date.

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