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Deucalion

Deucalion

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From award - winning author Brian Caswell comes the re - release of Deucalion, the first book in this gripping trilogy which was published in 1995 to much acclaim. Across light years of space millions of settlers have come to the planet Deucalion to escape their past and build their future. Deucalion is a source of great wealth, and offers a chance of a new beginning. But what does this mean for the Elokoi, who lived there first, or for the children of Icarus, who made the journey for a different reason? And why are people dying mysteriously? Brian Caswell effortlessly takes you on an excursion into future - history, merging fact with fantasy that will leave you wanting to start the book all over again!

216 pages, Paperback

First published December 1, 1995

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About the author

Brian Caswell

39 books15 followers
Brian Caswell was born in Wales and moved to Australia at the age of twelve. He began his working life as a teacher, resigning in 1990 to become a full-time writer.
His first novel, Merryll of the Stones, was Honour Book (Older Readers) in the 1990 Children's Book Council Book of the Year Awards. He has since published three more books, A Dream of Stars (1991), A Cage of Butterflies (1992), which was short-listed in the 1993 Children's Book Council Awards, and Mike (1993) his first novel for younger readers. Two further novels, Dreamslip and Lisdalia, are scheduled for publication in 1994.

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5 stars
17 (25%)
4 stars
23 (34%)
3 stars
22 (33%)
2 stars
4 (6%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
73 reviews2 followers
January 12, 2021
Oh em gee. Where do I start with this book? It’s very short, and so the story isn’t particularly in depth and the characters aren’t overly well developed. But it is still a story we can learn a lot from.

Caswell is an Australian author and I can see, in this story, parallels between Deucalion’s colonisation, and Australia’s colonisation. Ok, let’s be real, in both cases, they were invasions. Anyway, Deucalion and Australia had peoples native to the land and other humans came along and took their land from them, murdered them for no reason other than being in their way and being different. Casting them to the side and telling them what they can and can’t do, that they don’t even have a say in what happens on their own land. Stole their historical drawings and paintings and sold them off overseas.

To drive this point home there is even an Australian Aboriginal man in the story who shares a special connection with one Elokoi in particular.

The story appears to very much be trying to help people understand that what white people did in ‘settling’ in foreign lands, murdering native peoples is wrong. When I say it like that, obviously it sounds terrible! But the victors write the history books, and for too long history has brushed all of that under the rug. It’s time to change all that and people need to understand that being different isn’t bad, and isn’t wrong. Books like this can help spread that message.

My only wish for this book is that it had been a little more developed, long enough so the complexities of colonisation / invasion, and racism can be truly appreciated, and how it takes a lot more than just a couple of riots to start making things right.

Rating: 4 out of 5.
Profile Image for SBC.
1,472 reviews
May 16, 2015
I read this book for the first time some years ago. As an adult reader, I didn't find it as interesting, I think because the science fiction, the postcolonial messages and the story outcome seemed a bit simplistic (i.e. the idea that everyone of a second generation on the planet was no longer racist). However, it is a good solid read and has some interesting elements and techniques which should still appeal to teen readers.
Profile Image for Bex.
592 reviews13 followers
dnf
May 30, 2021
Slow and boring, I’ve read what is done here in many different books and it just didn’t do it very well. This was especially present in the changing characters all sounding like they are the Sam person when you read it.
DNF April 2021.
Profile Image for Sky.
40 reviews
November 8, 2020
I found this book slow and a bit confusing, the constant switching between character didn't help and it left me wondering what just happened. I liked the idea behind the book and it wasn't a bad book to read.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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