Big, brash and epic, The Potato Factory takes us back to early 19th century London and to the early years of England’s penal settlement in Tasmania, “Van Diemen’s Land”. This is the London of Charles Dickens, gritty with poverty, violence, brutality and crime, much of which we come to see, gets exported to Australia.
The Potato Factory is Courtenays’ fictionalized history of Ikey Solomon, his wife Hannah and his erstwhile mistress and business partner, Mary. Ikey is a London Jew, a master “fence”, crafty, despicable and the likely inspiration for Dicken’s Fagin in Oliver Twist. Ikey’s schemes and machinations eventually catch up with him, and he, and separately Hannah and Mary, get “transported” to Van Diemen��s Land.
This story, whether completely true or not, is a powerful tale of social injustice and greed and of our ability to overcome this. It is also a lush and vivid portrait of this time in English and Australian history, lovingly researched and clearly Courtenay’s homage to the grit and determination that characterized the European settlement of Down Under. The characters are all richly textured and memorable, truly Dickensian, and the story line, with its’ plot twists and intrigues, is an emotional roller-coaster of a ride. The Potato Factory is story-telling at its best.
And I cannot finish without giving another strong plug for the audiobook, narrated by Humphrey Bower. His voicings and narration bring a life to this story that is truly amazing. The Potato Factory is 4-½ star book, that I will easily round up to 5, and the performance by Mr. Bower, 5+ stars.