Another thoroughly researched and detailed novel from one of my favourite authors.
A family saga with many interesting characters from multiple generations living in Sydney from 1788 until 2000. Most are well meaning and considerate of others, but there are also those who are greedy and power hungry, and cause the family name to be blackened. There are so many characters over the 200 plus years, that there is a need to concentrate or reread to check how they might link to the family.
As is common with present day writers, there is a growing awareness and sympathy for the terrible manner in which Aborigines were treated.
As well as the story of the Kendall family , this could also be viewed as the story of the development of Sydney, with many important milestones incorporated, right up to the Olympic Games in 2000. There are ample references to the social and political issues of the times.
Highly recommended for lovers of Australian history and Historical fiction .
A riveting novel that tells the story of Sydney and the people who shaped its character, its skyline and its heart.
In 1788, Thomas Kendall, a naïve nineteen-year-old sentenced to transportation for burglary, finds himself bound for Sydney Town and a new life in the wild and lawless land beneath the Southern Cross.
Thomas fathers a dynasty that will last more than two hundred years. His descendants play their part in the forging of a nation, but greed and prejudice see an irreparable rift in the family which will echo through the generations.
It is only at the dawn of the new Millennium - as an old journal lays bear a terrible secret - that the family can finally reclaim its honour.
Beneath the Southern Cross is as much a story of a city as it is a family chronicle. Bringing history to life, Judy Nunn traces the fortunes of Kendall's descendants through good times and bad, wars and social revolutions to the present day, vividly drawing the events, characters and issues that have made the city of Sydney and the nation of Australia what they are today.