genre: historical fiction
Life on a station in western Australia is mostly a very solitary existence. At a time when sheep are your livelihood and school is conducted over the wave radio, Warren, Rosie and Matt have each other for company. As they grow, there is boarding school and of course there are the helping hands around the property but mostly there is home, Meredith Downs station. When tragedy strikes their family like lightening, everything that matters collapses into the most essential and even that feels broken. Inside this black hole, choices are both made and not made and the consequences could be the final breath to make everything fall down permanently.OH THIS BOOK. It was so hard to listen to sometimes I almost had to stop. It was that painful and uncomfortable. But I am so genuinely glad I stuck with it because there is also so much humanity. There is a reality here that I couldn’t look away from and the journey from beginning to end left me exhausted but also fulfilled. People are horrible and people are so beautiful. Humans commit horrible wrongs and humans survive horrible wrongs that they’ve done or had done to them and humans sometimes don’t know how to survive well and humans sometimes make things right in the best ways they can.
It will make you sick and make you cry and stitch you back up. This book is not for everyone. But I’m glad I pushed through my discomfort because although I’d wondered if the author could salvage any good from all the sadness, she absolutely did.

































