Not the Same Sky
By 1848 famine has ravaged Ireland, and London remains undecided about what to do. A shortage of female labour in Australia offers a kind of solution and so, over the following two years, more than 4000 Irish girls are shipped across vast oceans to an unimaginable world in the new colony. On Sunday 28 October 1849, one of these ships, the Thomas Arbuthnot, sets sail from Plymouth with a cargo of girls under the care of Surgeon-superintendent Charles Strutt.
Not the Same Sky tells the story of Honora, Julia, Bridget and Anne. It observes them on the voyage, examining their relationship of trust with Charles Strutt, and follows them from Sydney as they become women of Australia, negotiating their new lives as best they can. A stark, poetic intensity gives these young women historical importance and human presence in an elegant and subtle novel suffused with humour.
Published in 2013 by Wakefield Press, Adelaide, Australia
Published in Ireland by Wakefield Press in June, 2015
- Read an extract from Not the Same Sky
- Sydney launch address by Jeff Kildea at Parliament Buildings, Sydney, 2013 (text and video)
- Readings, Melbourne launch by Mike Richards, 2013
Reviews
- Review in Dublin Review of Books
- Review in The Irish Times, June 2015
- Newtown Review of Books, Sydney
- ANZ LitLovers
- Australiasian Journal of Irish Studies No. 13, 2013
- MC Reviews (Media/Culture – Culture and the Media)
- Selected for ‘Pick of The Week’ book review (September 14, 2013) in The Age, (Melbourne), The Sydney Morning Herald, Canberra Times, WA Today and Brisbane Times.