The Children

by Charlotte Wood

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Description

A short, sharp shock of a novel that takes you into the heart of a family that's as normal, and broken, as any other. From the author of The Submerged Cathedral, shortlisted for the Miles Franklin Literary Award.

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10 reviews
I found this book a very compelling read. It centres on a family whose father has been hospitalised - the three children return home. One of them is a war correspondent, and it is her story that becomes the central source of narrative tension. Her unhappy marriage and her increasing alienation from her family were fascinating. What drives her to 'bear witness' to the ugliest aspects of life was explored both sympathetically (she hates social pretence) but also very darkly (it's become an adrenalin addiction for her and it makes her a kind of monster or outcast from others). Another point of view character is Tony, a man with poor social skills who has developed an obsession with her and thinks they are 'the same'. This is a disturbing show more relationship and it comes to a very dramatic conclusion. I found this very cleanly written without self-indulgence - there was a freshness and honesty to it that made me race through the work. show less
I really liked reading the core elements of this book: the relationships between the children and with their parents, their feelings and thoughts about the small country town in which they grew up. I reckon Wood has done an excellent job of capturing an image of small town Australia in the late 20th and early 21st century. She knows about the subtle interactions between siblings. She paints a picture of an entirely believable context in which a father's head injury brings people together physically, but where they are psychologically a long distance apart.

It's probably just me, but I think the plot elements that Wood introduces which are external to the family don't actually contribute to the quality of the story. I found the subplot show more involving a hospital wardsman to be particularly unrewarding. His character and role was rather unbelievable to me. I thought maybe Wood had been advised to add this sub-plot to increase the reader's interest and the tension of the novel and make it a more marketable product. Clearly Wood has tried very hard to link this to the main plot, but this reader found that it detracted from the whole. To me there's plenty of 'meat' already there....but I am the type of person who thinks Marilynne Robinson's writing is 5-star! show less
I loved this book, but then again I love everything Charlotte Wood writes. I find her writing so vivid - her descriptions of this Australian family and the environment just take me home every time, although I hope not to have any sort of experience similar to that which appears in the book! It is just so wonderful to be able to read novels set in this decade, in my own country. Woods prose and her ability to place you in the story are outstanding. Nothing else matters for the hours/days it will take you to read her books. The characters have stayed with me months later, especially Mandy; the vivid portrayal of life as a war correspondent and the way the author captured the family dynamic of her characters, the undercurrents within the show more family, without actually spelling them out is a talent few writers possess. I believe Charlotte will become one of our country's great authors. 2016 update: still love it :) Although, to be clear, my family is more in the lower range of dysfunctional. So far. show less
Interesting novel examining the relationships in a family when they are brought together by tragedy. How the baggage of previous years surfaces is examined in a recognisable way.
Children gather at father's side as he lays dying after an accident. Their old childhood tensions resurface... bickering almost a habit. Mandy who has been an overseas journalist believes the rest of Australia doesn't understand and is ignorant of the work and experiences of journalsits amd doesn't really understand the dangers etc that are faced by journalists working in war torn countires.
Lovely conscious Australian novel with an international flavour and a familiar setting
This is a story about siblings as adults during a crisis when their father is injured brining them together. I loved this book.

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Author Information

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17+ Works 2,568 Members
Charlotte Wood was born in 1965 in Wales. She received a BA from Charles Sturt University and a Master of Creative Arts from UTS. She is the author several books including Pieces of a Girl, The Submerged Cathedral, The Children, Animal People, and The Natural Way of Things, which was named Indie Book of the Year for 2016, won the 2016 Stella Prize show more for women's writing and she became a joint winner of the 2016 Prime Ministers Award for fiction. She has also written a collection of short personal reflections on cooking entitled Love and Hunger. She was also editor of the anthology of writing about siblings entitled Brothers and Sisters. She won the 2013 People's Choice Award, NSW Premier's Literary Award for Animal People. In 2016, she was awarded the University of Sydney's $100,000 Charles Perkins Centre Writer in Residence fellowship. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Epigraph
Who said Happiness is the light shining on the water.
The water is cold and dark and deep . . .

William Maxwell, 'Over by the River', All the Days and Nights
Dedication
For sisters and little brothers, especially mine
and
always,
for Sean
First words
Geoff shoves the ladder - thunk - against the house, and kicks hard at the bottom rung to dig its heels more solidly into the soil of the garden bed.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)And then it's gone, the aerial quivering, and the bird shoots up in a sharp swoop over all the roofs and yards, up and up, its white kite-tail streaming behind it, up into the wide blue sky.

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
823.3Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1558-1625
LCC
PR9619.3 .W625 .C45Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureEnglish literature: Provincial, local, etc.
BISAC

Statistics

Members
115
Popularity
282,079
Reviews
10
Rating
½ (3.61)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
7