Picked by Barb - April 13th 2022 Meeting
Seduced by her employer’s son, Evangeline, a naïve young
governess in early nineteenth-century London, is discharged when her
pregnancy is discovered and sent to the notorious Newgate Prison. After
months in the fetid, overcrowded jail, she learns she is sentenced to
“the land beyond the seas,” Van Diemen’s Land, a penal colony in
Australia. Though uncertain of what awaits, Evangeline knows one thing:
the child she carries will be born on the months-long voyage to this
distant land.
During the journey on a repurposed slave ship, the Medea, Evangeline strikes up a friendship with Hazel, a girl little older than her former pupils who was sentenced to seven years transport for stealing a silver spoon. Canny where Evangeline is guileless, Hazel—a skilled midwife and herbalist—is soon offering home remedies to both prisoners and sailors in return for a variety of favors.
Though Australia has been home to Aboriginal people for more than 50,000 years, the British government in the 1840s considers its fledgling colony uninhabited and unsettled, and views the natives as an unpleasant nuisance. By the time the Medea arrives, many of them have been forcibly relocated, their land seized by white colonists. One of these relocated people is Mathinna, the orphaned daughter of the Chief of the Lowreenne tribe, who has been adopted by the new governor of Van Diemen’s Land.
In this gorgeous novel, Christina Baker Kline
brilliantly recreates the beginnings of a new society in a beautiful and
challenging land, telling the story of Australia from a fresh
perspective, through the experiences of Evangeline, Hazel, and Mathinna.
While life in Australia is punishing and often brutally unfair, it is
also, for some, an opportunity: for redemption, for a new way of life,
for unimagined freedom. Told in exquisite detail and incisive prose, The Exiles is a story of grace born from hardship, the unbreakable bonds of female friendships, and the unfettering of legacy.
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