Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Eleanor Limprecht”
Review: The Coast
The Coast is a powerful historical novel that spans many turbulent years in Australia’s history, including the First World War and the Spanish Flu epidemic. But the common thread that binds the lives of the characters is leprosy, and the associated isolation, discrimination and fear.
Coast Hospital lazaret at Little Bay in Sydney was a real place, and the novel is based on Limprecht’s thorough research. The locale may have been idyllic, but the conditions were not, particularly for those suffering from leprosy. The Bible has not done the disease any favours, as Dr. Will Stenger reflects. Although less contagious than many of the other diseases treated at the main hospital, those suffering from leprosy were forcibly removed from their homes and communities and sent to live in lazarets such as Coast Hospital and Peel Island in Moreton Bay which were veritable prisons.
Using a number of narrators speaking in both first and third-person immerses the reader, making you relate personally to each of their stories. The story of Jack, a stolen generation Yuwaalaraay man who survives losing a leg during World War I, only to discover he has leprosy, is particularly moving. I found the chapters describing his time as a member of the Light Horse Brigade and the battle of Beersheba particularly harrowing. The treatment of returned Indigenous soldiers is not a proud moment in Australian history.
There are many poignant moments in the book, and many times when I felt angry and frustrated by the injustices experienced by the characters. Alice, who is only nine years old in 1910 when she is sent to the lazaret, grows up in the confines of the Hospital grounds and is feeling the constraints of her small world when Jack arrives in 1924. As their friendship blossoms into something deeper, Alice thinks ‘I had grown so used to pain, I did not know what to make of pleasure.’
The Coast explores many forms of isolation and discrimination, not only for those suffering from leprosy, but for Indigenous Australians and homosexuals. Anyone who feels nostalgia for the ‘good old days’ needs to read this novel to have some sense knocked into them! There was nothing particularly ‘good’ about the ‘old days’ unless you were white and wealthy! Harsh judgements were made of anyone who didn’t meet the constrained conformity of the times.
Meg Keneally says it all on the front cover: The Coast is ‘a compelling story of loss and liberty and the capacity of the human mind to transcend boundaries’.
For more information about the history of Coast Hospital, visit https://princehenryhospitalmuseum.org/
Review: The Passengers
Hannah is accompanying her grandmother Sarah on a cruise from America to Australia. Sarah was Hannah’s age when she fell in love with an American Serviceman during WW2 as he was stationed in Sydney. Together with so many other war brides, she left Australia in 1945 to join her husband and start a new life in America.
In alternating chapters, we follow these two women’s stories. Sarah is such an appealing character, who lived during turbulent times and faced difficult choices with courage and integrity.
I cannot say the same for Hannah, who I found annoying and self indulgent. When you compare the life that Sarah had and how she coped to Hannah and her whinging and “it’s all about me,me,me” - well, there really is no comparison.
I also felt that the novel missed a crucial generation: Sarah’s daughter, and Hannah’s mother, Caroline. She is barely mentioned, and I think if we heard her story, we may appreciate Hannah more
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This novel illustrates how much women’s lived have changed in such a short time. I just wish Hannah had used her opportunities more wisely.