It is now thirty years since Robert Hughes published his brilliant history of Australia's convict period, The Fatal Shore . The fact that it is still in print shows just how compelling it is. Years ago I bought a battered copy at a Lifeline book sale. I put it on my shelf, and there it stayed until a couple of months ago when I took it with me on a holiday to Tasmania. Hughes tells the story of the Australian convict system from the first planning to the end of transportation nearly a century later. He alternates between official records and the individual experiences recorded in letters, memoirs and case notes. The result is a vivid portrayal of colonial life. If you haven't read it, please do! Let me just give you a little taste of its riches. Although Hughes doesn't ignore the tragedy of Aboriginal Australia during these years, this is very much a British story. Britain in the late 18th and early 19th century was a troubled society....
"We are tiny specks of life wandering around the edge of this vast expanse of blue, and imagining ourselves on our blue planet can bring us both humility and comfort." Helen Czerski