A Room Made of Leaves

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Pub Date 3 Jun 2021 | Archive Date 3 Jun 2021

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Description

SHORTLISTED FOR THE WALTER SCOTT PRIZE FOR HISTORICAL FICTION

It is 1788. When twenty-one-year-old Elizabeth marries the arrogant and hot-headed soldier John Macarthur, she soon realises she has made a terrible mistake. Forced to travel with him to New South Wales, she arrives to find Sydney Town a brutal, dusty, hungry place of makeshift shelters, failing crops, scheming and rumours. All her life she has learned to fold herself up small. Now, in the vast landscapes of an unknown continent, Elizabeth has to discover a strength she never imagined, and passions she could never express.

Inspired by the real life of a remarkable woman, this is an extraordinarily rich, beautifully wrought novel of resilience, courage and the mystery of human desire.

SHORTLISTED FOR THE WALTER SCOTT PRIZE FOR HISTORICAL FICTION

It is 1788. When twenty-one-year-old Elizabeth marries the arrogant and hot-headed soldier John Macarthur, she soon realises she has made...


Advance Praise

‘Beautifully written, insistently eloquent and expressive of connection . . . [a] stunning literary achievement’
Guardian        

‘Kate Grenville spins a delicately teasing novel about the inherent untrustworthiness of the official record . . . beautiful and subtle’
Financial Times        

‘Grenville cleverly uses Elizabeth’s bland and pleasant missives home, showing that they were a carefully constructed fiction. The real Elizabeth — passionate, clever and endlessly resilient — is brilliantly conjured’
The Times        

‘Kate Grenville gives voice to this reticent woman, allowing her smart, sparky, shrewd heroine a chance "at last to speak" . . . eloquent [and] evocative’
Daily Mail 

‘The absorbing story of a woman discovering herself in the vast expanse of a new world, told in rich, insightful prose’
Sunday Times        

‘Vivid, lyrical and engrossing. Both authentic and imaginative, the voice of the female narrator quietly challenges not only conventional historical narratives but our whole idea of what history is about’
ALICE JOLLY        

‘Evocative . . . [A] gorgeous, generous novel’
Sunday Express        

‘Historical fiction at its best . . . breathtaking . . . [Elizabeth is a] plucky, sharp-minded young woman’
Good Housekeeping        

‘Elizabeth Macarthur manages her complicated life with spirit and passion, cunning and sly wit . . . Kate Grenville’s return to the territory of The Secret River is historical fiction turned inside out, a stunning sleight of hand by one of our most original writers’
Australian Arts Review        

‘An imaginative depiction of a relationship forged in the earliest days of the Australian colony . . . an engaging book’
ERICA WAGNER, Guardian        

‘Explosive’
Woman & Home        

‘Glorious! A novel of such startling sincerity, clarity and eloquence it feels as though the narrator herself is stamped onto every page . . . full of suppressed emotion, candour, and [as] compelling as can be . . . Unique and spirited, A Room Made of Leaves truly is a beautiful novel’
LoveReading

‘Beautifully written, insistently eloquent and expressive of connection . . . [a] stunning literary achievement’
Guardian        

‘Kate Grenville spins a delicately teasing novel about the inherent...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781838851248
PRICE £8.99 (GBP)

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NetGalley Shelf App (EPUB)
Send to Kindle (EPUB)

Average rating from 29 members


Featured Reviews

“A Room Made of Leaves” begins with a note from Kate Grenville in the guise of a transcriber and editor who found these pages which are supposedly the secret memoirs of Elizabeth Macarthur, a real Anglo-Australian merchant from the late 18th/early 19th century and wife to one of the most famous and wealthy entrepreneurs in New South Wales at that time. However, at the end of the book Grenville acknowledges “This book isn't history. At the same time it's not pure invention.” This playful ruse makes the novel an immersive fictional experience but it also adds to the sense of what went unsaid both in the historic documents Elizabeth left behind and concerning the circumstances that led this couple who came from humble origins to build a lucrative Australian wool industry. Grenville fictionally reimagines Elizabeth's journey from growing up among provincial Cornish farmers to her challenging marriage to her indomitable husband John to settling in the relative wildness of the New South Wales colony. It's a tale of self-invention, hidden passion and the canny resolve needed to outwit a patriarchal society in order to achieve real independence. Grenville creates a portrait of a woman with hidden veins of emotion while also atmospherically depicting the gritty reality of pioneer life in a foreign land.

The chapters which make up this novel are quite short in length which gives the text the punchy immediacy of diary entries. I enjoyed how this kept the novel skipping along at a good pace. It's terrifying how Elizabeth becomes entangled in such a nightmarish situation marrying a brutish husband and being forced to move across the world. Yet she's intelligent enough to know the real danger of stepping out of her role and falling into an even more perilous position. At one point during the long sea voyage to their new home John becomes very ill and she realises that if he dies she'll be even more vulnerable. I found it moving and relatable how she discovers the key is to time things right to allow for opportunities for certain freedoms within this restrictive society as well as chances to discover what she really wants in life. Crucially, Grenville frames this story within the context of colonization and that the land where Elizabeth and John found rich opportunity is also a place which was stolen from the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. A mystery about what really happened during a crucial battle between the English and the native people gives a haunting quality to this intimate tale about how one shrewd woman might have triumphed over considerable obstacles to realise her full potential.

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A wonderful story of a woman’s triumphs. A book I could read over and over again. Totally loved this book! I fell in love with the story. It was well written. Kept me up reading throughout the night. I highly recommend this book! Thanks for letting me review the book Netgalley and the publisher

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My thanks to Kate Grenville, Canongate, and Net Galley for the ARC of A ROOM MADE OF LEAVES.
I have read this before, and was just as taken with it this time. It is the memories of Elizabeth, wife of John Macarthur, a soldier who went to Australia in the beginning of that country. She has already discovered her mistake in becoming pregnant by him which led to a marriage she did not want, however she perseveres and discovers a love for the country she has been forced to live in, and finds a strength in the new woman she becomes in the light of living with a difficult, sometimes brutal, and certainly manic depressive husband. Beautifully written.

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This is historical fiction at its best. This is a really emotional and beautiful read about one women’s journey to Australia. It’s a very honest and brutal story in many ways but it is told at the same time with humour and understanding. It shines a light on what life would have been like for a woman in the early days of the settlement in Australia and the relationship between the early settlers and the Aboriginal people. It is a really evocative piece of fiction that is inspired by the real letters of Elizabeth Macarthur and by the things that she they didn’t say.

Elizabeth like many young girls finds herself excited by the possibilities of a new life with a young soldier when she meets John Macarthur but she soon realises that the reality is not what she expected. Her new husband Is a difficult man always following a new dream and devising a new scheme which sees her eventually in New South Wales as John takes up a position as Lieutenant at a penal colony. She arrives to find Sydney a very brutal and forlorn place. As Elizabeth learns to adjust to her new surroundings and life with her husband she discovers new strengths and desires she never imagined.

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