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The Battlers by Kylie Tennant
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The Battlers (1941)

by Kylie Tennant

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601434,908 (4)3
The award-winning tale of the motley crowd of travelling 'battlers'. the flowers flared up from the ground unconquerable. the unrepentant gaiety of the weed, the burning blues and crimsons, set the hills glowing. 'It's a plant that's struck it lucky,' the Stray said thoughtfully. 'It hasn't got no right, but it's there.' the Battlers is the story of Snow, a drifter and wanderer, the waiflike Dancy the Stray, from the slums of Sydney, and the other outcasts who accompany them as they travel the country roads looking for work. Like the weed Patterson's Curse, they 'haven't got no right', but they are there. Based on her own experiences of life on the roads in the 1930s, tennant tells the story of the motley crowd of travellers with compassion and humour. First published in 1941, the Battlers was awarded the Gold Medal of the Australian Literature Society and shared the S. H. Prior Memorial Prize. More than seventy years later, the book's message of survival against the odds is as relevant today as it was then.… (more)
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The Battlers by Kylie Tennant (1941)

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So often I am startled by what we forget. Australian literature is a goldmine of works once deeply prized, still important for what they tell us, but lost to public knowledge for a variety of reasons. Time, of course (not everything relevant can be lasting); rapid changes in society (portrayals of the marginalised which seemed hard-hitting or controversial - or even sympathetic - can now often seem backward or unsettling); the move from literature to popular fiction that has left some styles behind; an education and cultural system which prioritises the new and a limited canon of old; and at least a little dab of that famed cultural cringe. It's fading, but it still lingers.

All of which is to say that The Battlers, while not a perfect novel, is compelling Australian fiction that must have been truly powerful in its day. Contrasting the lives of down-on-their-luck, itinerant Australian folk, Tennant weaves a tale of mateship, possible romance, hope, and humility. I remember this from a considerably romanticised adaptation by the ABC in the '90s with Gary Sweet and Jacqueline McKenzie. The book is rougher - aside from a few specks of mud on occasion, neither Gary nor Jacqueline ever look worn down by the road!

On literary merit, I'd give this 3 stars. But the weight of history, and its oft-neglected place in the canon, bump this up to a 4 for me. ( )
  therebelprince | Oct 24, 2023 |
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To the 'Battlers'

I wonder where they are now?
They will never read this, never know it is written.
Somewhere a dirty crew of vagabonds, 
Blasphemous, generous, cunning and friendly,
Travels the track; and wherever it takes them,
Part of me follows.
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If Snow had taken the road through Belburra, instead of the track through Currawong, his whole life would have run a different course.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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The award-winning tale of the motley crowd of travelling 'battlers'. the flowers flared up from the ground unconquerable. the unrepentant gaiety of the weed, the burning blues and crimsons, set the hills glowing. 'It's a plant that's struck it lucky,' the Stray said thoughtfully. 'It hasn't got no right, but it's there.' the Battlers is the story of Snow, a drifter and wanderer, the waiflike Dancy the Stray, from the slums of Sydney, and the other outcasts who accompany them as they travel the country roads looking for work. Like the weed Patterson's Curse, they 'haven't got no right', but they are there. Based on her own experiences of life on the roads in the 1930s, tennant tells the story of the motley crowd of travellers with compassion and humour. First published in 1941, the Battlers was awarded the Gold Medal of the Australian Literature Society and shared the S. H. Prior Memorial Prize. More than seventy years later, the book's message of survival against the odds is as relevant today as it was then.

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