Nine parts engrossing narrative novel, and one part fairy tale, JEWEL SEA is a story of enchantment – with a rose coloured pearl, a blossoming love between opposites, and with the sea off the coast of Western Australia, where, in 1912, the luxury steamship, The SS Koombana, set sail off the West coast of Australia, towards Fremantle.
Based on real events and beautifully detailed research, Kelly casts her story like a spell, drawing the reader headlong into other worlds with her vividly drawn characters and extraordinary writing. Drawn in immediately by the book’s wonderful heroine, Irene, I was tempted to read this book faster and faster, gulping it down. But then certain turns of phrase and descriptions brought me back to reread them, and continue more savouringly.
Although it reads effortlessly, Kelly skillfully portrays the realities of race war and class conflict at that time, as well as painting a moving portrayal of difference - racial, sexual, gender - in all its nuanced, yet sometimes stark and brutal, shades. By the end of Jewel Sea I felt I had, on the one hand, read an affecting story of love, ambition and survival, and then on the other I had been delivered a stunning panorama of a lost time, with its complex networks of relationships and consequences, hitting me with the tragedy at the centre of this story afresh, and unforgettably.