Het goud van Papua is het eerste deel in een episch tweeluik waarvan het tweede deel, Schaduw over Eden, in 2005 bij Karakter Uitgevers zal verschijnen. Het is een groots opgezet epos vol dramatiek, uiteenlopende personages en settings, met noodlottige wendingen en gewone mensen wier leven bepaald wordt door de grote historische gebeurtenissen van hun tijd als oorlog, goudkoorts en politieke systemen. Met als centrale punt twee mannen van wie het leven door het toeval onlosmakelijk met elkaar verbonden wordt en wier families generatie na generatie met elkaar te maken zullen hebben.
Als Jack Kelly, een kapitein in het Australische leger, in de loopgraven van de Eerste Wereldoorlog genade betoont aan zijn gevangen Paul Mann, een dappere en hoge Duitse officier, ontstaat er een band tussen deze zo verschillende mannen. Als de Grote Oorlog voorbij is, keren beiden terug naar hun vroeger levens, maar ze komen al snel tot de ontdekking dat tijdens hun afwezigheid hun wereld veranderd is. In Australië is Jack opeens alleen verantwoordelijk voor de vierjarige Lukas, die hij nog nooit gezien heeft. Hij brengt Lukas onder bij zijn zuster Mary wanneer hij zich door zijn vroegere Engelse strijdmakker George Spencer laat overhalen om de jungle van Papua in te trekken: hijzelf om goud te zoeken en de Engelsman om studie te doen naar de wilde volkeren. Maar de expeditie verloopt rampzalig: George wordt door de wilden vermoord en Jack keert zonder goud terug naar de bewoonde wereld...
Paul Mann is teruggekomen in een berooid Duitsland dat prooi is van allerlei twijfelachtige politieke stromingen. Zijn jongere zuster Erika is volledig in de ban van de Oostenrijker Adolf Hitler en doet alles voor diens zaak.. Maar Paul besluit met zijn gezin te emigreren naar Papua, waar hij de familieplantage die de Australische regering kort daarvoor heeft onteigend, terug kan kopen. Maar helaas, bij aankomst op het nieuwe continent blijkt het aanbod ingetrokken en de familie moet op een andere manier aan de kost zien te komen.
In Townsville in het noorden van Australië, in het huis van de rijke Chinese zakenman Sen, lopen Jack en Paul elkaar weer tegen het lijf en daar worden ze mates voor het leven...
Peter Watt's life experiences have included time as a soldier, articled clerk to a solicitor, prawn trawler deckhand, builder's labourer, pipe layer, real estate salesman, private investigator, police sergeant and adviser to the Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary. He has lived and worked with Aborigines, Islanders, Vietnamese and Papua New Guineans.
He speaks, reads and writes Vietnamese and Pidgin - and has a reasonable grasp of the English language. He currently lives in Maclean, on the Clarence River in Northern NSW.
Good friends, fine food, fishing and the vast open spaces of outback Queensland are his main interests in life. He also enjoys SCUBA diving, military history, crosswords (but not the cryptic kind) and teaching.
He is a member of the Australian Institute of Management, the Australian Institute of Training and Development and the Australian Society of Authors.
He holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree (University of Tasmania), Post Graduate Diploma of Training & Development (University of New England) and an Associate Diploma of Justice Administration (Sturt University).
This is my second Watt story. He seems to have a recipe. A steely Australian hero supported by a loyal friend. Beautiful women. An illegitimate birth or two. A murderous bad guy. A surprising inheritance. Battles and fighting. Exotic locations. It all reminds me of H. Rider Haggard with a modern twist. In this book we have two guys, one Australian one German, who meet on a battlefield in France. Later they reunite and become great friends and work together in PNG. The hero gets a few women pregnant, one of them goes back to Germany and becomes a Nazi, there's a few spies for various nations, fortunes are won and lost and before long the book ends with enough open storylines for another two books in the series.
3,5 sterren. Een Roman, historische roman, avontureneoman. Alles in een over een tijd, vlak na de eerste wereld oorlog. Over een "onmogelijke vriendschap tussen een Australiër en een Duitser in Papoa New Ginea. Heeft zeker vaart. Loopt goed door. Spanning niet altijd even goed omdat er veel al "weg" wordt gegeven voor de lezer, terwijl de personages nog in het duister tasten.
Great engaging yarn, interesting characters, good insight into life in early north Queensland and Papua New Guinea. I have liked most novels by Peter Watt.
Харесвам приключенски истории на екзотични места. Тази не беше, да речеш, твърде приключенска, но си имаше и война, и любов, и приятелство и предателство, а историята се разви в около десетина години, така че го нямаше и неприятния момент герои, към които в някаква степен си се привързан, докато си следвал житието им като млади, здрави и борбени, накрая да кретат с последни сили и да измират с цел успешен завършек на сагата. Щях да направя забележка за една сюжетна линия, която ми поразвали относително доброто впечатление, но сега видях, че книгата е първа част от трилогия, така че е много вероятно този "пропуск" да е поправен още във втората част.
Another great story by this author hence the 5 stars. Friends are made when trying to kill each other in battle. You will have to read the book to find out more about there life's.
Took me a while to read. I learnt a lot about Papua New Guinea and Germany and many other things between the two wars. Some interesting characters and intertwined plots.
In this book Peter has exchanged the rugged and often barren Queensland landscape for the tropical jungle and steamy wildness of the Papua backdrop.
The dangers of native cannibals and tribal culture, surrounding a small outcrop of civilized humanity, creates a hardy and intriguing character Jack Kelly. He has returned to a former world after the battlefront of The Great War with memories of horrors and the humility of finding admiration in an aggressive and like-minded opponent Paul Mann, during those dark days. Back in Australia Jack found himself widowed with a young son he doesn’t know, he promptly leaves the boy with his sister and brother-in-law to return to Papua to make his fortune with his friend George Spencer. Gold prospecting success combined with failure in a dangerous excursion causes Jack to loose his good friend George.
Meanwhile, in Germany, Paul Mann finds his manipulative sister Erika causing problems with her obsession with Heir Hitler and his followers, making their lives untenable. Paul plays a dangerous game in the German Intelligence machine, one that eventually puts himself and his family at risk and in a bold move causes distrust by the new regime for his sister Erika. He flees the country with his sister, wife Karin and son Karl. In Port Moresby Paul meets his former enemy Jack and they form a close friendship. Jack returns to Australia due to his sisters’ illness. Karin takes in Jacks’ son Lukas when his sister dies. Erika then takes her chances and leaves her sister-in-law to scheme her way back to Germany and her beloved Heir Hitler.
Jack and Paul are loveable characters that strive to make a place in the world for their families. A man named O’Leary, a slave trader holding a grudge against Jack from an encounter prior to the war, crosses their path and eventually attempts a fatal attack. I have not mentioned the other worthy characters that enter their lives along the way, all in all, the book is enthralling and the conclusion is apt.
If you have yet to read and enjoy Peter Watt’s excellent work, start with this one. You will soon realise Peter makes every word count and you will be carried along a journey through a savage land with characters you come to know as friends. Having read Papua, this will entice you to go on by reading the authors other excellent series commencing with ‘Cry of the Curlew’ and continuing with ‘Shadow of the Osprey’ and ‘Flight of the Eagle’.
Merged review:
In this book Peter has exchanged the rugged and often barren Queensland landscape for the tropical jungle and steamy wildness of the Papua backdrop.
The dangers of native cannibals and tribal culture, surrounding a small outcrop of civilized humanity, creates a hardy and intriguing character Jack Kelly. He has returned to a former world after the battlefront of The Great War with memories of horrors and the humility of finding admiration in an aggressive and like-minded opponent Paul Mann, during those dark days. Back in Australia Jack found himself widowed with a young son he doesn’t know, he promptly leaves the boy with his sister and brother-in-law to return to Papua to make his fortune with his friend George Spencer. Gold prospecting success combined with failure in a dangerous excursion causes Jack to loose his good friend George.
Meanwhile, in Germany, Paul Mann finds his manipulative sister Erika causing problems with her obsession with Heir Hitler and his followers, making their lives untenable. Paul plays a dangerous game in the German Intelligence machine, one that eventually puts himself and his family at risk and in a bold move causes distrust by the new regime for his sister Erika. He flees the country with his sister, wife Karin and son Karl. In Port Moresby Paul meets his former enemy Jack and they form a close friendship. Jack returns to Australia due to his sisters’ illness. Karin takes in Jacks’ son Lukas when his sister dies. Erika then takes her chances and leaves her sister-in-law to scheme her way back to Germany and her beloved Heir Hitler.
Jack and Paul are loveable characters that strive to make a place in the world for their families. A man named O’Leary, a slave trader holding a grudge against Jack from an encounter prior to the war, crosses their path and eventually attempts a fatal attack. I have not mentioned the other worthy characters that enter their lives along the way, all in all, the book is enthralling and the conclusion is apt.
If you have yet to read and enjoy Peter Watt’s excellent work, start with this one. You will soon realise Peter makes every word count and you will be carried along a journey through a savage land with characters you come to know as friends. Having read Papua, this will entice you to go on by reading the authors other excellent series commencing with ‘Cry of the Curlew’ and continuing with ‘Shadow of the Osprey’ and ‘Flight of the Eagle’.
A sweeping powerhouse of a novel this book follows a friendship between Jack Kelly and Paul Mann after an unusual meeting in the trenches of WW1, beautifully written and evoking the time and exotic locations so well this book is well worth a read. Easily as good as some of Wilbur Smith's earlier books and definitely better than the later ones......
This is gripping adventure from the trenches of the first world war to Papua where the Mann's and Kelly's interact through Faith and destined. Great read gripping adventure recommend to all adventurers out there ,
Although this is one of the earlier books by Peter Watt, in my opinion, it is as good as any of the books he has written since. A very exciting read, I found it hard to put down.