Golden Soak
by Hammond Innes
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An unscrupulous miner lies, cheats, and steals to survive in this rollicking adventure set in Western Australia. Alec Falls is a mining man, and on his honeymoon, he made the strike of his dreams: a long, beautiful seam of tin, just waiting to be ripped out of the ground. For two years, Falls and his wife lived high on the find, spending every penny they made, certain there would always be more. But one day the tin ran out, and so did Falls's wife. Broke, alone, and ruined, he starts a fire show more and burns his house to the ground. As far as the world is concerned, Alec Falls is dead. He travels to the forbidding desert of Western Australia in search of the legendary abandoned gold mine known as Golden Soak. But the mine is empty, the land is dry, and the people of the desert feed on men like Falls. To make a second fortune, he must pull water from the sand-and gold from thin air. Inspired by Hammond Innes's own extensive travels in Western Australia, Golden Soak is a classic story of adventure, daring, and greed at civilization's edge. show lessTags
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As strong of a storyteller as Hammond Innes was, he nevertheless had his weaknesses. They're on display in this novel. One of the particular strengths of past Innes' stories has been their flawed protagonists, who may or may not come out the better for their engagement with the elements of nature and humanity. Alec Falls certainly qualifies as a flawed protagonist. Alas, he is more than that. He undertakes one stupid act after another. It's like watching a horror movie. You know there is something evil at the dark at the top of the stairs. But that doesn't stop the hero or heroine from willfully blundering into terror. And they wouldn't listen to you, even if you could tell them. So, too, with Alec, who fails to see he is being made a show more patsy; who incredibly, at the end, allows himself to be followed into the desert towards the great copper strike; who constantly sleeps as life and death decisions pass him by; who doesn't have the sense to understand the intense rivalries for money that surround him; and who is always letting opportunities get away from him, because he is more interested in swilling beer, gulping tea, and filling his gut with food rather than do without and carry through on a plan. Instead, Alec is someone who trusts to luck. Several times, he is saved from his own death simply by luck, as Innes describes it. A morally flawed hero is interesting. An idiot is not.
Finally, the setting for this book is not as appealing as in other Innes novels, where the exotic seems always at hand. Other books of his have explored the Moroccan desert and given it a sense of magic. Australia is not magical. It is dreary and monotonous, despite the fact that Alec keeps trying to convince us of its desolate beauty. It all comes across as a poor man's version of the American Old West but without the epic scale and grandeur that diverse geography gives the American frontier. For that is what Innes has tried to do, here, write an epic adventure tale. He failed. He was always better at intimate stories among a small group of people, and he simply can't get past that formula in the Golden Soak. About the time he was writing, of course, Michener and Clavell were succeeding in that genre. Perhaps Innes saw an opportunity there. But it was not to be. He was always an adventure writer rooted in the Fifties and Sixties, when he did his best work. show less
Finally, the setting for this book is not as appealing as in other Innes novels, where the exotic seems always at hand. Other books of his have explored the Moroccan desert and given it a sense of magic. Australia is not magical. It is dreary and monotonous, despite the fact that Alec keeps trying to convince us of its desolate beauty. It all comes across as a poor man's version of the American Old West but without the epic scale and grandeur that diverse geography gives the American frontier. For that is what Innes has tried to do, here, write an epic adventure tale. He failed. He was always better at intimate stories among a small group of people, and he simply can't get past that formula in the Golden Soak. About the time he was writing, of course, Michener and Clavell were succeeding in that genre. Perhaps Innes saw an opportunity there. But it was not to be. He was always an adventure writer rooted in the Fifties and Sixties, when he did his best work. show less
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Stories set on Australian Continent
67 works; 5 members
Author Information

74+ Works 6,355 Members
Author Ralph Hammond Innes was born in Horsham, England on July 15, 1914. He attended Cranbrook School in Kent, but left in 1931 to work as a journalist. He published his first novel, The Doppelganger, in 1937. During World War II, he served in the Royal Artillery and published a number of books. In 1946, he became a full-time writer and wrote show more over thirty novels, children's books, and travel books throughout his career. He published children's books under the pseudonym Ralph Hammond until 1953. Four of his novels were made into films. He was awarded a C.B.E. (Commander, Order of the British Empire) in 1978 and received the Bouchercon Lifetime Achievement award in 1993. He died on June 10, 1998 and left a bulk of his estate to the Assoication of Sea Training Organisations. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Original title
- Golden soak
- Original publication date
- 1973
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- Members
- 210
- Popularity
- 155,997
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (3.40)
- Languages
- 8 — Czech, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Norwegian (Bokmål), Swedish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 26
- ASINs
- 9




























































