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Jennifer Scoullar

Author of Fortune's Son

14 Works 163 Members 11 Reviews

Series

Works by Jennifer Scoullar

Fortune's Son (2017) — Author — 38 copies, 3 reviews
Currawong Creek (2013) 31 copies, 2 reviews
The Lost Valley (2018) 26 copies, 1 review
Brumby's Run (2012) 14 copies, 1 review
Billabong Bend (2014) 12 copies, 2 reviews
The Mallee Girl (2022) 7 copies, 1 review
The Rivertown Vet (2024) 6 copies
Wasp season (2008) 4 copies, 1 review
Journey's End (2016) 4 copies
Paradise Valley (2023) 3 copies
Wild Horses (2025) 3 copies

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Reviews

13 reviews
Moving from the wilderness of Tasmania, to the Mainland, to the diamond fields of South Africa, and back again, Fortune’s Son is the first book in Jennifer Scoullar’s sweeping historical saga, The Tasmanian Tales.

After defending his sisters honour from her lecherous and powerful employer, Sir Henry Abbott, Lucas Tyler is unjustly sentenced to 15 years hard labour in the remote highlands of Tasmania. Forced to leave his family, his mentor -Damian Campbell, and his dreams of a future with show more Belle Campbell behind, Lucas endures four years of deprivation before escaping, along with a Newfoundland he names Bear. With a bounty on his head, Lucas must reinvent himself, not once but twice, in his quest to have his revenge on the Abbott family, and seek redemption from the love of his life.

Luke is an appealing and well crafted character. It is his misfortunes, challenges, and successes, that drive the story. While he is generally an admirable man, resourceful, with a genuine love for animals, Luke also has his flaws, which serve to make him a more believable character.

The enduring romance between Damian and Belle perhaps lacks originality. It’s a fairly standard trope where the lovers are unequal in status, and therefore, in Victorian society, doomed from the start. That said, it is a love story on an epic scale which Scoullar portrays well. With the idealism of youth, Belle and Lucas ignore the realities, and are faced with a number of obstacles and decades apart before there is any chance of a reunion.

Jennifer Scoullar, herself an environmental advocate, wonderfully evokes the historic wilds of nineteenth century Tasmania. Damien Campbell’s role as a conservationist allows the author to inform us about the harm early pastoralists and miners caused to the land, and their role in the extinction of the Tasmanian Tiger. I found this fascinating and really enjoyed this aspect of the novel. Similarly I liked the author’s descriptions of South Africa, and Luke’s efforts to protect the native wildlife.

A compelling tale of love, betrayal, revenge and redemption The Fortune’s Son is a heartfelt, engaging novel of historical fiction, that reminds me of the epic scope of the Australian classic, The Man From Snowy River.

I’ll be sure to follow it up with The Lost Valley.
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½
I was first intrigued by the lovely cover of Currawong Creek (I know the old saying, but the winding road, low cloud and mysterious mountains got to me). This book is so much more than I expected – there’s broken families, environmental issues and a romance. The beautiful descriptions of the Queensland bush put my mind back there in an instant.

Despite the cover, Currawong Creek doesn’t start in the country. It starts in Brisbane, the capital city of Queensland, Australia. Clare is a show more lawyer working for Legal Aid – it’s another step on a carefully planned career path. She’s all about her career, but her main emphasis is helping people. When one of her clients runs off leaving her son in Clare’s office, Clare unexpectedly decides to take Jack on. The social worker and her colleagues warn her that she’s not prepared for Jack’s problems. Clare’s boyfriend can’t believe what she’s done. With her father’s puppy and Jack, Clare tries to continue her life as it was before – and fails. After a rude shock at a work function, Clare decides to contact her grandfather, who her father refused contact with. With Jack and the dog Samson, she’s off to a Queensland outback farm. There, Jack flourishes and Clare becomes close to the local vet, Tom. However, a mining company is forcing landowners to allow fracking – but there appears to be dangerous consequences. Can Clare save Currawong Creek, Jack and be happy in the process?

I loved this book. It was gentle, thought provoking and funny. Tom, as the vet, has plenty of humourous episodes involving animals (there’s some good ones with dogs). Scoullar has also won a fan in me from including birds in the narrative – one very sad part involving a cockatoo and some budgies. The animals also bring out Tom’s sensitive side and the reader can clearly see the contrast between Tom and Clare’s previous boyfriend Adam. Clare’s grandfather, Harry, is somewhat of an old Australian farmer type – but don’t start thinking about clichés and stereotypes. Harry is a lot more than that and his actions at time, while surprising, fit in perfectly with his character.

Clare herself starts as a bit of an enigma – she seems truly devoted to her work, but then takes on Jack which is out of character. It’s not that Clare is uncaring (far from it), but it’s an extension of her tendencies to solve everything into her personal life. One interesting point raised is that Clare had recently lost her father, but her bereavement doesn’t seem to have much of an impact on her life. We get the idea that Clare wasn’t very close to her father, so is she seeking a replacement family in Jack and Samson the dog? Is that why she clings to Jack so tightly? Whatever the reason, Clare fostering Jack as a single woman is something to be applauded.

I liked how Scoullar didn’t let the future custody of Jack overtake the book; otherwise I think it would have had a different tone. Although the book details social worker visits, restrictions and visits (pretty accurately to my rather limited knowledge), Clare never lets the fact that Jack is a boy with his own rights to be clouded over. While I wasn’t sure what to make of his mum Taylor and what her intentions were (if any), I believed that she did want the best for her son. Perhaps it was her immaturity that made her run hot and cold with Clare.

Combining the family drama with the controversial issue of fracking and potential health hazards was really interesting. Again, the environmental issue didn’t overpower the warmth of the narrative, but it was educational without being boring (a tough task). It made me wonder what the legal situation is in my own state and to be cautious if the situation ever arose!

A beautiful balance of story combined with real-life issues, I enjoyed the warmth of Currawong Creek. The beautiful descriptions of the Queensland bush put my mind back there.

Thank you to Penguin Australia and Net Galley for the eARC.

http://samstillreading.wordpress.com
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Set amongst farming land in the Murray Darling Basin region of northern New South Wales, Billabong Bend is an wonderful novel of romance both on, and with, the land.

Fiercely protective of the river and wetlands that borders her property, Nina Moore’s is determined to extend her sustainable agricultural and environmental rehabilitation practices on Red Gums to the neighbouring property, Billabong Bend, if only she can convince Eva, the elderly owner, to sell it to her. Nina is worried that show more if a cotton farmer, like Max Bonnelli, gets his hands on Billabong Bend, the entire marshlands ecosystem will suffer irreparable harm.
Nina’s concerns are partly alleviated when, after a fifteen year absence, Max’s son Ric returns to Donnalee. With the rekindling of their teenage romance, Nina is convinced Ric will be able to temper his father’s greed but when tragedy strikes, Nina’s dreams of rescuing Billabong Bend, and building a future with Ric, threaten to be swept away.

Conservation and environmental protection is a major theme of this novel. Scoullar’s descriptions of the setting for Billabong Bend are evocative and vivid, from land scared by drought,
“The earth’s living skin had peeled and cracked”,
that nevertheless teems with life,
“Beneath her wheeled squadrons of pelicans and flocks of ibis. She flew lower. A startled white-bellied eagle took cover in a rare patch of weeping myall woodland. Lower again. Long-legged emus raced at breakneck speed through the swampy sedgeland. She could taste the vast, dry continent beneath her, hear the music of its river red gums, feel its clear, summer skies in her veins. Something prickled the back of her neck and a profound sense of excitement and joy coursed through her….Now this, she reminded herself. This was living.”

From the opening scene, I liked and respected Nina for her passion about the land on which she lives and the unique habitat of the river, not dissimilar to the one that flows through the town I live in. I was interested by the information I learned about the wildlife, water use, and sustainable farming practices Nina engages in, and the threats to the health of the land over and above the devastation wrought by drought.

The romantic aspect of Billabong Bend is perhaps not as strong as I expected. I personally don’t mind that the relationship between Nina and Ric is more a background element of the novel but those readers who prefer it as a focus, may be somewhat disappointed.

Reminiscent of the Australian classic Storm Boy by Colin Thiele, a truly delightful element of the story involves Ric’s precocious daughter, Sophie, who hatches and raises a flock of a geese orphaned by Max, and teaches them to fly. The scene where the geese soar over Sophie racing on the quad bike is one of the many that will stay with me.

With appealing characters, a thought provoking storyline combining romance with a touch of mystery, and rich and resplendent setting, Billabong Bend is a captivating read, and one which I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend.
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½
Currawong Creek is Jennifer Scoullar's second successful foray into the rural fiction market. Set primarily in Queensland's Darling Downs, and its beautiful Bunya Mountains, this lovely novel sees Brisbane lawyer, Clare Mitchell, seeking refuge at her grandparent's property when she unexpectedly becomes a temporary foster parent to a troubled, young boy, Jack. While Jack thrives in the company of Clare's grandfather and the animals at Merriang, Clare begins to envision a new future - a life show more on the land, with Jack and the handsome local vet, Tom. But her dream is threatened when Jack's mother decides she wants her son back and The Pyramid Mining Company aims to destroy the land Clare loves.

In Currawong Creek, Scoullar highlights two important issues.
The first is the state of the foster care system. As a foster carer herself, Scoullar is familiar with the system and in Currawong Creek she draws attention to the lack of placement options for 'challenging' children in need. If Clare had not volunteered to care for Jake he would have been sent to an inappropriate facility and his issues would have been compounded by his stay.
The second relates to coal seam gas exploration and the threat it poses in rural areas to pastoral and farming land. Just recently there has been a huge campaign in my local area regarding the issue (my town is surrounded by dairy farms) though I admit I didn't pay a lot of attention. I was quite horrified to learn of the dangers of frakking and having read this novel I have a clearer understanding of my community's objections to the mining company.

I really liked the characters of Currawong Creek. I admired Clare's instinct to protect Jack and her willingness to persevere with him. It would not have been easy and yet Clare makes him a clear priority.
Jack, despite all his challenging behavioural issues, is sweet and engenders sympathy and it is a delight to watch him blossom at Merriong. I particularly liked the way in which the author explored the benefits of equine therapy for Jack, I have a friend who also found it a successful technique for her challenging foster child.
I was impressed at the way in which Scoullar portrayed Jack's mother's, Taylor, balancing her faults (which are many) with her love for her child. I strongly believe in the idea of meeting the needs of the child in issues of custody and I was satisfied with the way in which Jack and Taylor's relationship was resolved.
Tom is a vet, leasing Merriang as a site for his practice and becomes the love interest for Clare. I liked him, especially our introduction to him as he wrestles with a python, but I thought he was a little bland and could have been fleshed out a little more, especially with regards to his background and how it relates to Clare, Taylor's and Jack's relationship.
Harry, Clare's grandfather, will surprise you. I really didn't see his actions coming though they make a kind of sad sense.

Currawong Creek is a delightful, thoughtful and heartwarming story. I really enjoyed this well written novel and I am already looking forward to the next from Jennifer Scoullar.
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½

Statistics

Works
14
Members
163
Popularity
#129,734
Rating
3.9
Reviews
11
ISBNs
101

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