
Peter Watt (1) (1949–)
Author of Cry of the Curlew
For other authors named Peter Watt, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Peter Watt is an Australia author, born in 1949. He has a Bachelor of Arts Degree from the University of Tasmania, Post Graduate Diploma of Training and Development from the University of New England, and an Associate Diploma of Justice Administration from Sturt University. Beyond writing, he has show more experienced a wide variety of jobs that include soldier, articled clerk to a solicitor, prawn trawler deckhand, builder's labourer, pipe layer, real estate salesman, private investigator, police sergeant and adviser to the Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary. He also spent time living and working with Aborigines, Islanders, Vietnamese, and Papua New Guineans. Currently he is a volunteer bush fire fighter with the NSW Rural Fire Service, six months a year. He is the author of over sixteen books including Cry of the Curlew, Shadow of the Osprey, Flight of the Eagle, To Chase the Storm, all from his Frontier series. The latest in the series is the best seller, While the Moon Burns (Book 11). (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by Peter Watt
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1949
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- Australia
- Places of residence
- Northern NSW
Members
Reviews
I have been wanting to start this series for ages and am so pleased that I finally did. It is the start a saga about the Duffy family of Irish catholics and the Scottish McIntosh clan living in Australia. The book starts in 1862 with a terrible dispersal of the Aboriginals camped on the property of Donald McIntosh where the son and heir to the McIntosh riches is killed by an Aboriginal warrior. Patrick Duffy, his son Tom, and Old Billy, just happen to passing through with their bullocky team show more at the wrong time. They try to protect an escaping Aboriginal warrior and end up on the wrong side of the McIntosh team and the traps (mounted police). This is the beginning of the ongoing quest for revenge between the families.
The Duffy daughter, Kate, lives in Sydney with her aunt and uncle and her brother Michael. Michael meets Fiona McIntosh and there are romantic sparks. But Michael is not good enough for the McIntosh family and he is a Duffy, so there is no way this relationship can be permitted to develop.
Peter Watt has done a great job of portraying the life of the people in 19th century Australia. He includes shocking descriptions of the dispersals of Aboriginals and collection of indentured workers from the islands. The life of the privileged, and life on the frontier. Also, he doesn't shy away from the sexual depravity of some of the characters.
A really good read. I'm rooting for the Duffys. show less
The Duffy daughter, Kate, lives in Sydney with her aunt and uncle and her brother Michael. Michael meets Fiona McIntosh and there are romantic sparks. But Michael is not good enough for the McIntosh family and he is a Duffy, so there is no way this relationship can be permitted to develop.
Peter Watt has done a great job of portraying the life of the people in 19th century Australia. He includes shocking descriptions of the dispersals of Aboriginals and collection of indentured workers from the islands. The life of the privileged, and life on the frontier. Also, he doesn't shy away from the sexual depravity of some of the characters.
A really good read. I'm rooting for the Duffys. show less
This book picks up a few years after the first book Cry of the Curlew and is every bit as good, maybe even a bit better. We follow the lives of the Duffy and the MacIntosh families.
The Duffy family are Irish, they are working class people running a pub in Sydney. The MacIntosh family are a quite rich land owning family that have come over from England. The two families are constantly crossing paths and are bitter enemies, both of them affected by a terrible Aboriginal curse.
We also follow show more the story Wallerie. An aboriginal who has been present in the lives of these two families and is notorious for his involvement with bushranger Tom Duffy.
I really enjoyed this book and will definitely read more. There are some decidedly evil characters that I would never want to come across. There are some other interesting characters that at times can be very good and at other times very wicked. show less
The Duffy family are Irish, they are working class people running a pub in Sydney. The MacIntosh family are a quite rich land owning family that have come over from England. The two families are constantly crossing paths and are bitter enemies, both of them affected by a terrible Aboriginal curse.
We also follow show more the story Wallerie. An aboriginal who has been present in the lives of these two families and is notorious for his involvement with bushranger Tom Duffy.
I really enjoyed this book and will definitely read more. There are some decidedly evil characters that I would never want to come across. There are some other interesting characters that at times can be very good and at other times very wicked. show less
an incredible debut about the terrible things people do to each other in the name of love and honour
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 23
- Members
- 543
- Popularity
- #45,915
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 9
- ISBNs
- 204
- Languages
- 4













