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Social Impact and Interaction Christian C. Young the “laws of life, the reality of the struggle for existence, the appearance of variations, and the For example, humans do not raise apple trees for the sake of raising more apple trees, but Many naturalists embraced this view during the late nineteenth century, especially.
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Eleanor Dark, Storm of Time , about a family struggling to survive in Sydney Cove in ; 2 in the Timeless Land trilogy; published in Eleanor Dark, No Barrier , about a family in the developing town at Sydney Cove as the discovery of a route over the barrier of the Blue Mountains offers the opportunity to move west; 3 in the Timeless Land trilogy; published in Robert Edric, Elysium , a literary novel about the battle of wits between the last full-blood native Tasmanian and the English scientist who interviews him in Barnard Eldershaw, A House is Built , about a nineteenth century merchant on the Sydney waterfront whose intense focus on building his business ends in a tragic irony.

Richard Flanagan, Gould's Book of Fish: A Novel in 12 Fish , a literary novel about a convict on Sarah Island, off the Tasmanian coast, in the s who creates an elaborate illustrated manuscript. Aaron Fletcher, Walkabout , a family saga set in nineteenth century Australia; 4 in the Outback Saga. John Fletcher, A Far Country , about a young man shipwrecked off the coast of Australia and taken in by a native clan on the eve of conflict between Australian natives and white settlers.

Miles Franklin, My Brilliant Career , about a spirited girl growing into young womanhood in the outback of New South Wales; contemporary at the time it was written. Kimberley Freeman, Wildflower Hill , about a contemporary woman who inherits her grandmother's farm in Tasmania, and about her grandmother's life in the s. Kimberley Freeman, Lighthouse Bay , love stories about a woman who survives a shipwreck off the coast of Australia's Lighthouse Bay and a present-day woman who leaves Paris to return to Lighthouse Bay, her hometown.

Kimberley Freeman, Ember Island , about an Australian woman of the present day who retreats to an old house after her boyfriend breaks up with her, and the woman who lived in the same house in and left pages of her diary in the walls. Kimberley Freeman, Evergreen Falls , about a woman in the present day and a woman in who work at the same resort in Australia's Blue Mountains.

Catherine Gaskin, Sara Dane , about a woman convict transported to Australia and her rise to become a landowner, ship owner, and pioneer of the wool industry.

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Goldie Goldbloom, The Paperbark Shoe ; originally titled Toad's Museum of Freaks and Wonders , about an albino pianist and her husband whose lives are disrupted when two Italian prisoners of war arrive on their farm during World War II. Review at The Huffington Post. Evan Green, Adam's Empire , about an orphaned boy who grows up roaming the harsh and dangerous Outback during the early twentieth century. Kate Grenville, Lilian's Story , about a woman born into a middle-class Australian family in the early twentieth century, who ends up as "a cheerfully eccentric bag-lady living on the streets, quoting Shakespeare for a living.

Kate Grenville, Dark Places , a prequel to Lilian's Story which tells the same story from the perspective of Lilian's abusive father. Kate Grenville, Joan Makes History , about an "everywoman" named Joan who witnessed all the famous events in Australian history and gives her irreverent perspective on what happened.

Kate Grenville, The Secret River , about a pardoned convict in nineteenth century New South Wales who settles on acreage already occupied by native Australians; 1 in the Secret River trilogy. Kate Grenville, The Lieutenant , about an eighteenth century naval astronomer who lands on the unexplored shores of New South Wales with a ship carrying convicts for resettlement and becomes involved with an Aboriginal child; 2 in the Secret River trilogy. Kate Grenville, Sarah Thornhill , about the daughter of an ex-convict, now a wealthy landowner, and the family secrets that begin emerging when she falls in love; 3 in the Secret River trilogy.

Ernestine Hill, My Love Must Wait , about Matthew Flinders, the nineteenth century explorer who left his young bride behind in England while he become the first man to circumnavigate Australia. Anna Jacobs, Lancashire Lass , about a young woman from England who emigrates to avoid being forced into an unpleasant marriage and migrates to the Peel Region of Western Australia.

Anna Jacobs, Lancashire Legacy , about an eighteen-year-old Australian girl who travels to England to meet relatives but is attacked on the docks and loses her memory; sequel to Lancashire Lass. Review at The Age. Thomas Keneally, The Playmaker , a novel based on a true story, about convicts in New South Wales staging what they believe to be the first play ever performed at so southern a latitude.

Thomas Keneally, Shame and the Captives , about a woman living near a World War II prison camp in Australia, the Italian prisoner sent to work on her farm, and the Japanese prisoners planning a break-out. Matthew Kneale, English Passengers , about three Englishmen hoping to find the Garden of Eden in nineteenth century Tasmania, and about native Tasmanians struggling to maintain their way of life as the British take over their island. Christopher Koch, Out of Ireland , a literary novel in the form of a journal kept by an Irish rebel convicted of sedition and transported to Van Diemen's Land now Tasmania.

John Lewis, Savage Exile , about two nineteenth century English girls imprisoned on false charges and transported to Australia where they must struggle for survival. Joan Lindsay, Picnic at Hanging Rock , about a girls' school excursion to Hanging Rock, where three girls and a teacher mysteriously vanish. William Stuart Long, The Traitors , about a rebellion against the king that threatens to destroy the hard-won gains of the Australian colonists; William Stuart Long was a pen name used by Vivian Stuart; 3 in the Australians series.

William Stuart Long, The Gallant , about native-born white Australians who enlist to fight for the British Empire as new settlers continue to arrive; William Stuart Long was a pen name used by Vivian Stuart; 8 in the Australians series. Bob Mainwaring, Escape to Van Diemen's Land , about a nineteenth century Englishman who commits a crime for the specific purpose of being transported to Australia, where he struggles to make a better life for himself. Colleen McCullough, The Thorn Birds , a family saga beginning in the early twentieth century about a woman who falls in love with a Roman Catholic priest.

Colleen McCullough, The Touch , about a nineteenth century English woman who goes to Australia to become the wife of a wealthy Scottish gold miner and finds he has an established mistress.

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Colleen McCullough, Bittersweet , about two sets of twin sisters, close friends, who leave their home in New South Wales and train to become nurses in the s. Kerry McGinnis, The Waddi Tree , a coming-of-age novel about a boy growing up on a cattle station. Tamara McKinley, Jacaranda Vines , a romantic family saga about an English girl who migrates to Australia in the s and builds a wine business.

Tamara McKinley, Undercurrents , about a young married couple who sail from Liverpool to make a new life in Australia in and encounter a terrible storm a few miles from their destination.

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Tamara McKinley, Lands Beyond the Sea , about the difficulties suffered by both the native Aborigines and the earliest white colonists in late eighteenth century Australia. Tamara McKinley, A Kingdom for the Brave , about an Aboriginal boy who survives the massacre of his tribe and must choose whether to ally himself with the white settlers or join a native rebellion; sequel to Lands Beyond the Sea. Alex Miller, Autumn Laing , about an elderly woman reflecting back on her tumultuous extramarital affair in the s when she was part of an artistic circle. Di Morrisey, Tears of the Moon , about a love affair in late nineteenth-century Australia between a young English bride and a man involved in the pearl industry, and a modern woman searching for her family roots.

Kate Morton, The Forgotten Garden , about a little girl abandoned on a ship to Australia in and the mystery of her origins.


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Nerida Newton, The Lambing Flat , about a young Chinese immigrant caught up in the nineteenth century Australian gold rush and a young woman on a Queensland cattle station who come to care for each other after he loses his father in the Lambing Flat riots. Judy Nunn, Beneath the Southern Cross , a family saga about a convict transported to Australia and his descendants. Kristina Olsson, Shell , about an Australian newspaper reporter who in puts her job at risk by getting involved in the anti-war movement during the Vietnam War.

Lee Pattinson, Winds of Change , about a girl from an English work-house who rises to become a wealthy landholder in Australia. Lesley Pearse, Remember Me , about a Cornish fisherman's daughter transported to Australia as a convict, who escaped and was subsequently captured and returned to England for trial, but freed after being defended by James Boswell.

Jean Plaidy, Beyond the Blue Mountains , a saga about three generations of women, beginning with a convict transported to Australia with her baby in the eighteenth century. Jem Poster, Rifling Paradise , about a nineteenth-century Englishman who goes to Australia to collect bird specimens and travels into the outback with a brutish colonial guide and an intuitive part-Aboriginal boy.

Kev Richardson, Letitia Munro , about the first white settlement in Australia; from a publisher specializing in ebooks; 1 in a series. Kev Richardson, To Plough Van Diemen's Land , about the children of convict settlers in Australia; from a publisher specializing in ebooks; 2 in a series. Kev Richardson, The Terrible Truths , about the children and grandchildren of convict settlers in Australia; from a publisher specializing in ebooks; 3 in a series.

Kim Scott, That Deadman Dance , about a native Australian who is friendly with the white colonists and falls in love with a colonist's daughter. Patricia Shaw, Storm Bay , about a clergyman ministering to transported convicts who suspects a conspiracy to empty British prisons when he finds most aboard the Veritas have committed trivial offenses. Patricia Shaw, A Cross of Stars , about conflicts between Aborigines and a family who run a sheep station. Patricia Shaw, Fires of Fortune , about a wealthy nineteenth century man with an Aborigine mother, who becomes embittered by his experience of prejudice after a doctor refuses to treat his dying mother.

Patricia Shaw, The Five Winds , about the passengers taken hostage when a ship's crew mutinies as it nears Australia's Gold Coast. Patricia Shaw, On Emerald Downs , about an escaped convict who has taken shelter with the Aborigines and finds himself at odds with white society over its attitude toward them when he decides to return to civilization. Patricia Shaw, Orchid Bay , about two young London women who emigrate to Australia to work as governesses, but find the jobs do not exist when they arrive.

Patricia Shaw, River of the Sun , about two young women during the nineteenth century gold rush, one a young widowed housemaid who inherits her husband's distant landholdings, the other a beautiful Aborigine who helps her trek crosscountry to claim them. Patricia Shaw, The Feather and the Stone , about a wealthy and attractive English girl orphaned in a shipwreck in the s and rescued by an attractive rake and a group of Aborigines.

Patricia Shaw, The Glittering Fields , about a man and his wife separated by his dream of striking gold. Patricia Shaw, Where the Willows Weep , about a young woman who runs away from the party celebrating her engagement to the man her parents expect her to marry. Patricia Shaw, Valley of Lagoons , about nineteenth century settlers who make claims on vast tracts of land for cattle grazing, and find themselves in conflict with Aborigine tribes.

Stedman, The Light Between Oceans , about a man who takes a job as a lighthouse keeper on a remote island in with his young wife, and what happens when a dead man and a living baby are washed up on their shore. Sarah Stovell, The Night Flower , about a governess who was caught stealing and a Romany girl who meet aboard the ship transporting them to Van Dieman's Land now Tasmania.

Jane Sullivan, Little People , about a poor governess who rescues what she believes is a child from drowning and discovers it is the famed midget General Tom Thumb on his tour of Australia.

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Veronica Geoghegan Sweeney, The Emancipist , about an Irish convict transported to Australia who survives the brutal life in the penal colony, then struggles to make it as an "emancipist," an ex-convict. Janet Tanner, The Years to Come , romantic suspense about a beautiful young woman who must struggle to survive and protect her siblings after her father's murder in nineteenth century New South Wales.

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Margaret Tanner, Savage Utopia , historical romance about a young man and woman who meet and fall in love aboard a convict ship on its way to Australia. Margaret Tanner, Stolen Birthright , historical romance about a convict's daughter and an English aristocrat in the s; sequel to Savage Utopia.