A New York Times Bestseller. From the bestselling author of The Thorn Birds comes a family saga replete with tragedy, pathos, history and passion. At its center are Alexander, who fled poverty in Scotland to make his fortune in the American and Australian gold fields; his wife Elizabeth, a sixteen-year-old cousin sent from Scotland; and his mistress, Ruby, who is unknown to Elizabeth and is a partner in Alexander's rapidly growing company.
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After last year's The October Horse, the final installment in her series set in ancient Rome, McCullough returns to her native Australia to chronicle the adventures of Scotsman Alex Kinross, a headstrong and handsome former boilermaker's apprentice in Glasgow, now rich and the founder of an eponymous town in New South Wales. It is the late 19th century, and Alex, who has settled in Australia after finding gold both in America and Down Under, can find no suitable bride, so he sends to Scotland for one. Elizabeth, the backward 16-year-old beauty he marries, takes an instant dislike to him: he's no paragon of sensitivity; he bears an unfortunate resemblance to Satan; and neither his brilliance, his money or his influence can persuade her to love him. Elizabeth bears him two daughters-she almost dies giving birth to the second-and forges a deep friendship with the redoubtable Ruby Costevan, a former madam and Alex's longtime mistress. But poor Elizabeth just can't be happy, until she meets Ruby's half-Chinese son, Lee. Lee returns Elizabeth's regard tenfold, but because he's as upstanding as he is beautiful, he makes himself scarce to avoid upsetting Elizabeth or Alex, whom he loves. When he can bear it no longer, Lee decides Alexander must be told-but at what price? Frontier speculation, domestic strife, industrialization, a terrible rape and a brutal murder: all these mold and buffet the Kinross clan until a final, tragic act of generosity promises to end the pain. Though they are frequently at the mercy of the novel's complex plot, McCullough's characters win sympathy with their spirited striving for love and honor.Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From: Reed Elsevier Inc.
Copyright Reed Business Information
By the time Alexander Kinross arrives in Australia in 1872, he has traveled to the far reaches of the globe and acquired a fortune through good luck and business sense. Finding gold in New South Wales brings him even more incredible wealth. Although he loves his mistress, brothel-owner Ruby, he needs a respectable wife to bear sons. His choice is a woman half his age, his 16-year-old Scottish cousin, Elizabeth. Unfortunately for them both, wealth cannot substitute for love. Two life-threatening pregnancies yield daughters, brilliant Nell and brain-damaged Anna. The plot swirls around the lives of Ruby, Elizabeth, Nell, and Anna, plus their Chinese servants. Politics and business affairs transpire in the background as Alexander tries to manage his enterprises and control the community around them. However, the central plot questions concern whether and how any of the women can find happiness. Loose ends dangle from intertwining plot lines, but fans of McCullough's The Thorn Birds and other popular romances will ignore them to follow the characters through 25 years of joys and disasters to the requisite happy ending.-Kathy Piehl, Minnesota State Univ., MankatoCopyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From: Reed Elsevier Inc.
Copyright Reed Business Information
Ever-popular McCullough returns to her beloved Australia in this tale of intrepid pioneers looking for riches and gold during the second half of the nineteenth century. Alexander Kinross left Scotland when he was 15, goaded by the ill treatment doled out by his family and the minister. He goes to America and makes a fortune, then brings his rare gift for sensing where gold will be found to Australia and demonstrates good business sense by keeping what he mines. He goes into partnership with a Chinese immigrant and the owner of a brothel, creates a mining town called Kinross, and, now in his mid-thirties, writes to Scotland asking for a cousin to marry. Elizabeth Drummond, 16, who has never left her small town, is now forced by her strict father to travel to Australia and marry a man she has never heard of. The tale of this determined and wealthy entrepreneur and his marriage, family, love affairs, friendships, and all the dynamics of his town coalesces into a fantastic and exceptional saga about the lively personalities and explosive situations that shaped Australia. PattyEngelmann.
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Part 1 1872-1885 |
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1 A Change of Fortune |
11 |
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2 In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great |
95 |
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3 Finding a Reef and a Bride |
200 |
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4 Home Truths and an Unexpected Alliance |
232 |
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5 Motherhood |
269 |
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6 Revelations |
329 |
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7 A New Kind of Pain |
378 |
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8 Letters |
416 |
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Part 2 1888-1893 |
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1 Two Budding Young Women |
435 |
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2 Disputes, Industrial and Otherwise |
470 |
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3 Disaster |
513 |
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4 Birth and Death |
570 |
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5 A Man's World |
614 |
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6 Anna's Dolly |
649 |
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Part 3 1897-1900 |
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1 The Prodigal Returns |
673 |
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2 Enlightenment |
717 |
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3 Alexander in Control |
767 |
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4 The Lady Doctor |
834 |
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5 Alexander Rides Again |
851 |
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