THE LAND WILL MOLD ITS PEOPLE INTO WHAT IT NEEDS
Australia is a land of contradictions, where rain forests are not that distant from the desert. At its heart, it is a vast island. The original human inhabitants lived in difficult partnership with the rugged land, their method of subsistence dependant on their location.
Beginning after the American war for independence, the British court system established several penal colonies in specific parts of Australia. Although some sentences were for only a few years, transportation to the new world was, essentially, banishment from the old.
From the clash of these two different, and desperate, cultures, came a dramatic world. This story (romanticized, no doubt) attempts to chronicle a portion of that.
The author uses the intertwining of several different stories, from a young English boy with a convict mother, to an Aboriginal girl who becomes his wife, through their daughter and a woman who becomes her sister-in-law but is really perhaps a bit more. It chronicles their adventures, and the decisions they have to make to survive, and to some extent, how they impact people around them.
The summation of the character of almost all the main protagonists comes Elizabeth, the sister-in-law, long after most of the rest of the initial characters are gone:
"It takes a brain to say what to do, the sand to go ahead and do it, and the heart to hurt over it when it's done."
It ends with a definite plan for additional story - and leaves the reader craving that story. I ended up with all the books, and kept several for some years.