September 2014- Eugenia by Mark Tedeschi



Written by Mark Tedeschi QC is the story of the Eugenia Falleni and the criminal trail for the charge of murdering her wife, in Sydney 1920.

Eugenia lived her life as a man under the name of Harry Crawford, gave birth to a daughter, and married twice as a man. The story begins with the Italian migrant family in New Zealand and follows Eugenia to Australia now known as Harry, and the marriage to his first wife Annie. Harry remarries after her disappearance but the remains of her body are found two years later in bushland in Chatswood. Harry is arrested under suspicion of murder and his true sex is revealed. The trial at the time caused a sensation, with much interest as to how her true sexual identity was kept from both wives and ‘the article’ that was used to maintain the marriages. 

Mark Tedeschi traces the Falleni family, Eugenia’s contemporaries, the witnesses, the Crown prosecutors and defendants, the newspaper accounts and dissects the court proceedings with a critical view to the justice and prejudices of the time. This was a fascinating read, written for the uneducated in legal speak to understand.


Anna             8
Annette         6.5
Cheryl           8     
Genevieve    7       
Megan          7
Phil               7

Average 7.25

August 2014- Burial Rites by Hannah Kent


This is a sad book as the fate of Agnes is well known to most from the start. The real Agnes Magnúsdóttir was the last woman to be executed in Iceland, in 1830, the novel describes the possible circumstances surrounding her life and last days.
Agnes, a servant in northern Iceland was charged with the murder of her employer in 1829. She is sent to live with a farming family in a region she was familiar with in her youth, while waiting for her execution, and to receive spiritual guidance from a young priest.
Hannah Kent’s debut novel.
  
Anna            4
Annette        6
Cheryl          8
Deb              5
Genevieve    8
Kristy            8  
Megan          8
Phil               8

Average 6.8


July 2014- The Dinner by Herman Koch

Two sets of related parents meet in a swish restaurant to discuss what to do about their sons, and the crime they have committed. The story slowly unfolds over dinner, painfully through each course, back and forth, up to the point of the dinner they are now sharing. The characters at first thought to be the sanest gradually become the most deranged, the ones you identify with you now want to distance from. Gen found the book disturbing; Cheryl said it was interesting but not enjoyable. We all agreed that it was ideal for book club as it generated much discussion.

Anna 8
Annette 6
Cheryl 6
Deb 8
Gen 7.5
Megan 6

Average  6.9



June

Shakespeare: The World as Stage by Bill Bryson

Annette 8
Kristy 7
Phil 8

Average 7.6











May 

The Narrow Road To The Deep North 

by Richard Flanagan

A grim story about the Thai Burma railway and the unfortunate lives of the prisoners and captors. The blurb on the back of the book didn't relate this as the bulk of the story, instead referring more the love story of Dorrigo Evans, the protagonist and a Weary Dunlop type character.

Annette 7
Anna 7
Cheryl 9
Gen 8
Kristy 8

Average 7.8


April 

The Silver Linings Playbook by Matthew Quick 

Annette      5
Cheryl        5
Deb            8
Genevieve  7
Kristy          6
Megan        6
Phil             7 

Average 6.28





March 

Daisy Bates - biography


Daisy Bates : "the great white queen of the never never" Elizabeth Salter

The passing of the Aborigines : a lifetime spent among the natives of Australia
Daisy Bates

Desert queen: the many lives and loves of Daisy Bates / by Susanna De Vries and Daisy Bates

Maralinga : the Anangu story / by Yalata and Oak Valley Communities, with Christobel Mattingley

Kabbarli: A personal memoir of Daisy Bates by Ernestine Hill





Anna 7
Annette 7
Cheryl 7
Genevieve 6.5
Kristy 5
Megan 8

Average 6.75