What a story! On the eve of a Federal Election in Australia, this book has a very powerful message to all. It has many layers, each character with a different version to make up a spellbindingly emotional story. The book is about one woman, striving to survive the aftermath of a domestically abusive marriage. It is about another woman, trying to find justice and safety for all woman. It is about a woman who is bent on revenge. It is about a woman, trying to make things right for all minorities. It is about women coming together to make themselves heard and to change the world they live in for the better. It is about a man who perpetuates the myth that woman are inferior and another man who has suffered at the hands of just such a man and who also wants the world to change for his best friend, all women and all victims.
This is not a fairytale or romance, it is hard-hitting and even a little disturbing at times. It is political, ideological and optimistic. It makes you think, makes you sympathetic, angry, frustrated, shocked and sad. This is a story about injustice and how a group of women took an idea, made it a powerful movement and set their sights on parliament.
Queentide has such a diverse and riveting assortment of characters. The three main characters, Bodie, Lilith and Insley, fom their age, to their personalities they are unalike, but they share a common thread which ties them together. Bodie, the mother of all, calm and good, The Dragontamer. Lilith, escaping from living 'the perfect life', at first wanting only to be invisible, finding her new way. Insley, the warrior, once the victim, angry and now out for revenge.
I am a little lost for words to describe this book and do it justice. It has left me moved and thoughtful. The words flowed easily from the pages and it was gripping. The characters in this story were what kept me reading, not necessarily the political views. Their stories and how they moved forward was what captured my interest. It is a story of a political movement, but it is a story about people first.