The final book in the Old Balmain House trilogy, Lizzie's daughter Catherine grows up, falls in love, marries, and has a child of her own. Catherine's life seems happy - co-owner of a hotel/bar with her husband, she has friends, and is close to her family, and her marriage is happy. But Graham Wilson likes to put his characters through the ringer, so Catherine's happy life is shattered when her daughter Amelie is diagnosed with aggressive cancer. Treatments are extremely brutal for the toddler (the story takes place in the 1980s, when radiation and chemo were the only options. Everything else we have today was experimental at the time). The treatments are also not working. To save her daughter's life, Catherine must seek out her birth father, one of three men who gang-raped her mother some twenty years ago. She must ask him to donate bone marrow to save her child's life. A few problems get in her way - All three men eventually went to jail for their crimes, but one is dead, the other is in the prison psych ward, and all three are despicable, unrepentant, evil men. And there is no guarantee that her birth father (when/if she finds him) will be willing to help.
Full of vivid desccriptions, it's hard to read of Amelie's struggles against the cancer growing inside her. She's only three years old and fading fast (she is almost literally fading away before her parents' eyes). I didn't want to stop reading, despite the harrowing descriptions, because Graham Wilson is not a cynical writer who torments his characters, and thereby his readers. There is always a kernal of hope, and the characters are so strongly written, you really want to rally around them.
The Old Balmain House Trilogy is really a sweeping generational saga about the power of family and memory, told in a simple, home-spun style, slowly drawing you into the history of Balmain, a suburb of Sydney, Australia, and the history of one house in particular. There is also a slight tinge of the supernatural, in the form of a ghostly Aboriginal girl who befriends the characters and helps them through their agony, something which I found quite beautiful.
Graham Wilson is a storyteller, who happens to tell his stories with written words, but they feel like stories being told to you at the kitchen table by your neighbor. I recommend making yourself a cup of tea or lemonade and having a slice of pie or cake, or some traditional Australian treat while you read this.