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Wrack by James Bradley
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Wrack (original 1997; edition 1997)

by James Bradley

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1493182,078 (2.56)3
While searching for the wreck of a Portuguese ship which could rewrite the history of Australia, archaeologist David Norfolk stumbles upon a corpse buried fifty years before. Determined to understand its connection to the ship, David uncovers a story of obsession, secrets and sexual passion.
Member:whirled
Title:Wrack
Authors:James Bradley
Info:Vintage (1997), Paperback, 341 pages
Collections:Your library, To read
Rating:
Tags:Australian, fiction

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Wrack by James Bradley (1997)

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I had a good attitude about this book early on when I read “Only white men, European men, discover. The darker peoples dispossessed, not just of their land but of their history, just waiting to be “discovered”. Or worse.” p. 42 So right, poor sentence construction aside.

Then it got really bogged down things like the science of map making, geometry, opera and every other damn thing that tangentially connected to the ship, the search and the documents hinting that the Portugese “discovered” Australia. I think the author didn’t have a story so much as a bunch of cool stuff he read about and tried to string it together with weak cement to cobble together a novel. The fact of Clair living in that disgusting shack is laughable. No woman, no matter how mighty the call of her healing nature or libido would stay in such a mildew-encrusted dump. She was an obvious wish-fulfillment vehicle anyway. Then Kurt’s ramblings took on the most extreme case of the maudlin it was hard to keep going. Enough with the torrid affair, what about this mysterious lost ship that was supposed to consume you and ruin careers? Nah, let me wax on about my prehistoric sex life.

Bah. ( )
  Bookmarque | Sep 8, 2018 |
David, an Australian archeologist, is searching for evidence of a Portuguese ship that was rumored to have been lost centuries earlier on a quest to discover Australia. What he finds is the remains of a body over 50 years old. He later meets Kurt, an old man, suffering in the final stages of cancer. Believing that this man holds the secret to the body and knows about the ship as well, he convinces a friend, Claire, to help him care for the dying man. While probing for information, he learns that Kurt as a young man was involved in an affair with Veronica, the wife of his best friend Frazier. The two friends were in WWII together and in an escape from a war torn city where they were stationed, Veronica goes missing. Frazier discovers the secret of his friend’s betrayal when he reads a letter left in his wife things. He goes to kill Kurt in a drunken state and ends up being the one fatally shot. Kurt buries the body and it is this corpse that David discovered. Before Kurt breathes his last breath, he admits that he did know about the ship, but it will never be found. For some reason he burned it.

While Claire and David were caring for Kurt, they start their own affair. Though both are not technically unfaithful to others; both live with memories. David not able to forget the memory of his former girlfriend who died from an asthma attack and Claire still obsessed with a former boyfriend with whom she had parted ways. Kurt’s story of his love for Veronica and the tragic end of their romance, leave David and Claire unsure about whether they should allow their hearts to love again.

Bradley begins each part of his novel with references to Magellan, Marco Polo, Columbus, and other legendary explorers. The scenery and emotions of the characters were poetically described throughout. ( )
  SFM13 | Aug 24, 2009 |
Tedious story involving miserable and unlikeable characters. ( )
  pamplemousse | May 10, 2006 |
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While searching for the wreck of a Portuguese ship which could rewrite the history of Australia, archaeologist David Norfolk stumbles upon a corpse buried fifty years before. Determined to understand its connection to the ship, David uncovers a story of obsession, secrets and sexual passion.

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