The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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Restless Dolly Maunder
Women's Prizes
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2024 WP shortlist - Restless Dolly Maunder
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Hugh, Active moderator
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Mar 07, 2024 01:36AM


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I will note that much of the book was set in north western rural NSW where I grew up and then in various places where I have also lived - so much of my enjoyment came from the description these places (Tamworth, Manilla, Gooonoo Goonoo (pronounced Gun-ah-Gun-ooh BTW), Wahroonga, Newtown. They were very real to me. I rarely read fiction set in these areas - I think I read more books set in Maine in the last 12 months than I have read books set in NW NSW in my lifetime.
I am glad that she chose to end the book with the Chapter entitled 'Thinking About Silences' as ultimately this is another book about white people living on someone else's land.





Beyond that, I found this to be a profoundly feminist book, in a positive way - I thought it dug deeply into what it meant to be a capable, intelligent woman in the before times, Dolly both is and is not a sympathetic character at the same time. I was frequently infuriated by her (repeated) bad reactions to her children. At the same time, having experienced many of the same kinds of reactions from a very similar mother, the way her character was written also evoked a lot of empathy.
This is not a very clinical, literary review of this book! But I guess that's my point. This one was unique in evoking a very deep emotional reaction based on empathy, which I find is a pretty unusual thing. In a sense it makes it hard for me to judge this books literary value or worth, but it is a book that will stick with me for a long time, I think. Which is quite rare.


No Praiseworthy oddly.
Fiction
Anam by André Dao (Penguin Random House)
Restless Dolly Maunder by Kate Grenville (Text Publishing)
Edenglassie by Melissa Lucashenko (University of Queensland Press)
The Carnal Fugues by Catherine McNamara (Puncher and Wattmann)
Stone Yard Devotional by Charlotte Wood (Allen & Unwin)