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The Drover's Wife

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Tarantino meets Deadwood in this full-throttle drama of our colonial past, written by the indomitable Leah Purcell.Henry Lawson’s story of the Drover’s Wife pits the stoic silhouette of a woman against the unforgiving Australian landscape, staring down a serpent—it’s our frontier myth captured in a few pages. In Leah’s new play the old story gets a very fresh rewrite. Once again the Drover’s Wife is confronted by a threat in her yard in Australia’s high country, but now it’s a man. He’s bleeding, he’s got secrets, and he’s black. She knows there’s a fugitive wanted for killing whites, and the district is thick with troopers, but something’s holding the Drover’s Wife back from turning this fella in …A taut thriller of our pioneering past, The Drover’s Wife is full of fury, power and has a black sting to the tail, reaching from our nation’s infancy into our complicated present.

Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 2016

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About the author

Leah Purcell

7 books39 followers
Leah Purcell is a multi-award-winning and self-made author, playwright, actor, director, filmmaker, producer, screenwriter and showrunner. At the heart of her work are female and First Nation themes, characters and issues. The Drover's Wife was first a play written by and starring Purcell, which premiered at Belvoir St Theatre in late 2016 and swept the board during the 2017 awards season, winning the New South Wales Premier's Literary Award for Playwriting and Book of the Year; the Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Drama and the Victorian Prize for Literature; the Australian Writers' Guild Award for Best Stage Work, Major Work and the David Williamson Prize for Excellence in Writing for Australian Theatre; the Helpmann Award for Best Play and Best New Australian Work; and the Sydney-UNESCO City of Film Award. The feature film adaptation of The Drover's Wife, written, directed and starring Leah Purcell, is slated for a 2020 release. Leah Purcell is a proud Goa, Gunggari, Wakka Wakka Murri woman from Queensland.

(source: Amazon.au)

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5 stars
213 (32%)
4 stars
261 (39%)
3 stars
132 (20%)
2 stars
28 (4%)
1 star
20 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 84 reviews
Profile Image for Kiran Bhat.
Author 15 books216 followers
November 17, 2020
" I don’t think Purcell is interested in answering it either. She, like many other great writers of a moral tradition, is interested in trying to represent life rather than evaluate it, and to give an artistic representation of a sort of dynamic that defines Australian culture, and yet is seldom represented in Australian literature."

- If you want to read more of my thoughts about Leah Purcell's wondrous writing, please check them out over at the Heavy Feather Review, at this link here: https://heavyfeatherreview.org/2020/1...
Profile Image for Jennifer (JC-S).
3,559 reviews291 followers
February 11, 2020
‘I recently had a kill – ‘

I read this play purely by chance: I’d asked for a copy of Leah Purcell’s new novel of the same name and received a copy of her earlier play. Intrigued, I read it through, finished it, and then reread Henry Lawson’s short story.

Yes, Ms Purcell’s play departs from the original story. There are more active characters: the antagonist in the Henry Lawson version becomes the hero in this. There are other changes, too. In the play, Molly (the Drover’s Wife) is participating more in events, not passively waiting. And some of the reader’s assumptions about power and relative strength are challenged as well.
For myself, the play challenges the euro-centric view I have based on my reading of Henry Lawson’s short story. And that, surely, is a good thing.

I found the play easy to follow: actions as described and words working together to create powerful images. And now I wait, patiently, to read Ms Purcell’s novel.

Jennifer Cameron-Smith
Profile Image for David Searle.
33 reviews1 follower
December 8, 2023
In 2020 I mistakenly reviewed the novel in this space and it is only now that I have read the playscript and am able to rectify the situation.

The script is sharp, thoughtful and engrossing. I would jump to see it on stage.
4.5 stars

The original revirw has been moved to the novel
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4...
Profile Image for Kerri Green.
38 reviews1 follower
January 7, 2018
So much thought provoking detail in such a compact play. Inspirational and creatively motivating. I would love to see this on stage as a follow up. Brilliant! Absolutely Brilliant! All the reviews and recommendations that raved about this play and I am still blown away. Possibly one of the best Australian texts I've ever read.
Profile Image for cherryyemilyy.
272 reviews1 follower
February 27, 2024
4☆

I have read the original Drover’s Wife by Henry Lawson for another uni English class that I dropped after the census date. But I did find this play edition to be more accurate depiction of colonial Australia.
Profile Image for Des.
149 reviews6 followers
August 17, 2022
The Drover's Wife is a multi-layered novel that will have you captivated from the beginning. The story paints the setting of a hard life for Molly in the rugged, yet beautiful Snowy Mountains of colonial Australia.
I was drawn to the book based on Leah Purcell’s own engagement with Henry Lawson’s short story, ‘The Drover’s Wife”.
In telling the story we learn so much about Purcell’s lived experience of what it is to be a black woman traversing white Australia. It’s not autobiographical, yet there are strong themes that are significant in Purcell’s life.
On the surface, the story is simple with a mystery that unfolds. At a deeper more profound level
Leah Purcell uncovers the racism and social divides that underpin Australia’s land grab and dispossession of Indigenous people. She also portrays colonial Australia’s embedded poverty, itinerant work, violence, rural isolation and social snobbery.
Overall it is the exposure in her narrative of misogyny, sexual violence and women’s courage that also become a significant part of the story.
The conclusion kept me engaged right to the end.
This is an excellent book well worth reading.
56 reviews
February 2, 2020
Leah Purcell has talent, no doubt, and has so been recognised. This reimagining of the Henry Lawson work can be commended in terms of plot, and the themes from long ago that continue to resonate today. Unfortunately, that is where it ends.
The writing does not evoke the time and place it seeks to take the reader, and hence the characters are not fleshed out.
Indeed, the prose seems disjointed. For example, it is not possible, in the 1890s, that a bush woman would think of her “hormones”, and it is unlikely that an Aboriginal man of that era would say to a white woman... “sorry for your loss...”
Credit here for the idea and much surrounding it but, as a novel, it doesn’t quite work.


Profile Image for Kim.
1,125 reviews100 followers
August 9, 2020
I read this directly after reading the novel also by Leah Purcell.
Wish I'd seen the original production, would have been excellent with these actors.
It's an interesting to compare the different mediums. In some ways I think the play is more of brutal story and is certainly more in the moment without the rich internal dialogues and backstory in the novel. I found the novel far more hopeful and more of a complete story.
I hope this play has many opportunities to be performed and will be looking forward to seeing the film.
Profile Image for Nancy.
1,285 reviews54 followers
May 3, 2018
Winner Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Drama 2017
Leah Purcell has adapted an Australian classic....
...and add a few new plot twists!

Review

Profile Image for Alex.
25 reviews
March 19, 2020
Borrowed from my mother, it was a good story line and interesting how it unfolded but I got a bit confused with the timing of this. Some of the sentence structure towards the end, especially the way the POV chopped and changed was strange.
Profile Image for Stephie.
422 reviews19 followers
October 22, 2022
A solid and tight re-imagining of the Henry Lawson short story. I really enjoyed Purcell's take on this and would love to see the play performed one day. I like the way she turned the wife from a passive to an active character and breathed life into Yadaka, who is merely a peripheral character in the original.
Profile Image for Karolina.
72 reviews1 follower
Read
November 3, 2021
Brutal, haunting, just spectacular. Blew me away.
Profile Image for Marion Brownlee.
313 reviews
November 23, 2021
Totally confused until halfway through the book I realised that The Drover's wife was a white woman. She had black heritage . The fact that Leah portrayed The Drover's wife in this book just seems wrong. The major story is that this white woman unknowingly has a black history. So having Leah on the cover and in the movie is misleading. The only Saving Grace this book has is the fact that Leah failed English in school. So not a bad effort
Profile Image for Rachel Fegan.
41 reviews
December 27, 2024
“I will not fall, I will not drop. I am a woman, a Ngarigo woman, so much more than a Drover’s wife.”
Profile Image for Pete.
134 reviews1 follower
July 25, 2024
I'm lost for words. This book should become a milestone of truth-telling of the brutality of the Australian frontier and the official but unacknowledged war against and dispossession of the Aborigines. A 'deadly' tale of richly developed characters and sub-plots. Books like this will progress Reconciliation, by helping us to understand the wrongs and making amends by being better.
https://australianstogether.org.au/di...
Profile Image for Butcher's Wife Books.
45 reviews
May 16, 2020
I have been meaning to read Leah Purcell’s ‘The Drover’s Wife’ for a little while now. This reinterpretation of Henry Lawson’s classic has won a swag of awards. It was a quick read- it only took me about half an hour- and it was unusual for me to read the play format. I know that Purcell explicitly tried to represent an indigenous perspective, and I agree with her that these aspects probably would have been present in the bush setting in which Lawson originally wrote. I found it easy to visualize the narrative through her skillful use of voice and stage directions etc. Personally though, I was disturbed by the harsh sexual violence described. I appreciate the new breath with which Purcell revived this iconic classic, but really would have preferred her to create a totally new work. Many of the aspects I love about Henry Lawson’s ‘The Drover’s Wife’ have been sacrificed for this new interpretation.
Profile Image for Pip Snort.
1,489 reviews7 followers
July 27, 2023
I haven't seen the movie, but I now understand why it is rated MA. Telling this story without the ugly language and sexual detail would not have spoiled it or affected its powerful impact. While the modern feminist interlocutor was understandable, it was still anachronistically jarring. Still it was an engaging and moving account of frontier colonial life and another reminder of the deplorable and disappointing conduct of our forebears.
40 reviews
February 12, 2025
Brutal and ugly, but some sweetness in the relationships between Yadaka, Molly and Danny. Depicts a cold, ugly world in fairly unflinching terms, but I felt detached from its world, at a remove that made connection to the events of the play and its themes of frontiers, racism, women, masculinity, and story telling difficult.
Profile Image for Georgia Brunt.
90 reviews1 follower
March 25, 2024
Hmm... 2nd read for Uni. This one was good but I feel very sad now. I was going to watch the movie but now I'm very unsure if I want to put myself through that. It was a good script but I don't think I'd want to read it again and so for that it gets the middle star rating of 2.5.
Profile Image for Abbey McDonald.
66 reviews
January 21, 2020
Overall really shocking, however the reason why I gave it 3 stars was because I was confused as to who were some of the characters mentioned and their correlation
Profile Image for Lea.
116 reviews15 followers
April 13, 2021
ENGL120

I was filled with tension and anxiety the whole read through. Beautifully written and a harrowing representation of life for women and Indigenous Australians.
Profile Image for Kylie.
282 reviews4 followers
December 29, 2021
Read this to see if I’d teach it … not sure I would …
Profile Image for Belinda.
42 reviews1 follower
April 19, 2022
I very much wanted this to be more, to weave a tale and take us into history, but it fell short. Not enough depth or character development or something. Just not quite there.
Profile Image for Belle.
267 reviews
May 25, 2022
Had to read this for a class and it was really very brutal but interesting.
Profile Image for Jo.
34 reviews
March 25, 2023
I think I would prefer to read this book as opposed to listening to it, I really got into it in the second half
Profile Image for Heather.
2,393 reviews11 followers
May 6, 2022
Once a week in our school library we hold aBooks I Love book talk where one student and one staff member talks about a book they loved reading. An English teacher talked about The Drover's Wife last term and after her passionate recommendation, I knew I had to read it, and what a fabulous read it turned out to be!

Loosely based on Henry Lawson's short story, The Drover's Wife, this novel highlighted the hardship women faced in colonial Australia, especially in the High Country. Having visited the area recently, it was easy to image the beauty of this harsh land and the challenges Molly and her children faced on a daily basis. The descriptions of the snow gums were especially beautiful.

Molly Johnson was definitely a strong, no-nonsense, courageous woman who loved her children with the fierceness of a lioness. The relationship between her and her four living children was a highlight of the novel, although I felt sorry for twelve-year-old Danny who was the 'man' of the family while his father was away droving. His young shoulders had to carry too many burdens for his tender age.

The Drover's Wife was not a pleasant read. There was violence, rape, poverty, prejudice and injustices, and the ending was heartbreaking. However, it was a quick read as the plot moved at a cracking pace and once I started the first chapter, I found it difficult to put down until I had reached the last page. A compelling read.

Profile Image for Mike.
1,388 reviews94 followers
February 9, 2023
Written as a play, then a novella and now a major film, The Drover's Wife by Leah Purcell is an epic portrayal of a reimagined Henry Lawson poem. Published in 2019, the book begins in 1913 with Danny, Molly’s eldest child reminiscing on his childhood scrapbook. Moving back to 1893, the lyrical narrative tells the tale of Molly Johnson, the wife of an absent husband, away droving sheep. She has four children and the fifth is due any day now, yet she has to face various hardships while caring for her children alone in the bush. A formidable woman with indigenous heritage, Molly faces the challenges of her life with a steely determination and a calm demeanour. The hardships of late 19th-century rural pioneering existence are brilliantly illustrated, as are the issues of the treatment of First Nation peoples, women and the harsh reality of Australian bush survival. A masterpiece of Australian storytelling, from the talented Goa–Gunggari–Wakka Wakka Murri woman, that makes for a five stars must-read rating. The film shorts look spectacular and a brilliant delight awaits its viewing. As always, the opinions herein are totally my own and freely given.
Profile Image for Peter Langston.
Author 16 books6 followers
January 12, 2023
Superb story telling. The descriptions of place provide a vivid backdrop in which to image these rich and abundantly real characters. Story retelling of the early days of white depravity and disregard mostly lack the humanity of the characters reimagined. Purcell instead provides us with deeply flawed, exceptionally real characters who play out their mixture of courageous emotions on the landscape of the narrative in a way most Australian authors won’t allow. There is no high handed morality here because it would mar the telling and yet, her imperative to provide the broader, noble brush strokes, is still met. Bravo for a bolder, new level of Australian stories which can talk of horrors and cast deserved aspersions without condemnation for all and without losing site of making the the story rich in broader humanities.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 84 reviews

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