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Benevolence

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"How good it is to hear a Darug voice speaking of Darug history."—Kate Grenville, author of The Secret River, winner of the Commonwealth Prize

Blending the mythical power of Téa Obreht and the epic scope of Min Jin Lee, a searing historical novel that tells a story of colonization, survival, and resistance in a way never done before—a beautiful, brilliant, and brutal reimagining of the first contact between Indigenous people and white British settlers and the far-reaching consequences for one Aboriginal girl coming of age in an unsteady and dangerous world.

For all known time, Muraging's people, the Darug, have lived on this land between the river and the sea. But change comes swiftly in the early years of the nineteenth century when White settlers begin to arrive, laying claim to the continent, long inhabited by Aboriginal tribes like Muraging's, for the British empire.

At ten years old, Muraging is given over to the Parramatta Native School by her father, where the missionaries call her Mary James, force her to abandon her culture and language, and teach her subjects they believe will save her soul: English, Christianity, and housework. Six years later, seeking a brighter future, Muraging flees the school, embarking on a journey of discovery and a search for a safe place in an unfamiliar and unsteady new world—an odyssey far more winding and treacherous than she ever dreamed.

Spanning two decades, from 1816-1835, and set around the Hawkesbury River area, the home of the Darug people in Parramatta and Sydney, Benevolence sheds light on the heartbreaking violence and erasure of colonization, as well as remarkable survival and resistance—a vivid and compelling portrait of the Aboriginal Australians whose way of life is forever altered.

Award-winning Australian writer Julie Janson's draws on historical events to recreate this pivotal time—things that may have happened to her own ancestors—giving voice to an Aboriginal experience of early-settlement in Australia.

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    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2022

      A Burruberongal woman of Darug Aboriginal Nation, award-winning playwright/poet/novelist Janson draws on family history to tell the story of Muraging, who is still a child when white settlers violently seize what is now Australia for the British Empire, including in their claim the little strip of land between the river and the sea her family calls home. Soon Muraging is sent to the Parramatta Native School, where she is forced to abandon her language and culture, and she eventually runs away to face a strange and harsh new world. With a 40,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2022
      Although her father, a Darug tribal leader, may have been acting with laudable intentions when he delivered his daughter, Muraging, to a school where Aboriginal children were taught to read and write, the life she would lead as a girl now named Mary would be anything but one of privilege or, as the title suggests, benevolence. Instead, as an Aboriginal, hers would be a life filled with atrocities. She was demeaned, beaten, robbed, raped, imprisoned, maligned, starved, and hunted. Set in early-nineteenth-century New South Wales during Britain's intensely violent colonization, acclaimed Australian writer Janson's tale follows a quarter-century of Mary's experiences as an adept but reluctant student, early marriage to a tribesman eventually lost to war, servitude and seduction by British church and government officials, and eventual reunion with her tribe. Based on the life of her own great-great-grandmother, Janson's fictional interpretation of this dark period in Australia's history is presented in plain and unadorned prose as she exposes how horrific and harrowing Aboriginal lives were during this time of brutal conquest, attempted cultural obliteration, resistance, and survival.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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