Dark Places
by Kate Grenville
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Albion Gidley Singer creates his world as a vast collection of facts, facts he uses to support his own power and status. After an awkward childhood, aware that he is a disappointment to his father, he acquires, the trappings of respectability, success in business, a family. But beneath his comically grand exterior Albion's soul remains a dark place of fear and loathing, driving him to terrifying deeds. Kate Grenville, author of the award-winning The Secret River, takes us inside the mind of show more one of her most powerful creations: a man who can persuade himself that he has the right, perhaps even the duty, to conquer and subdue the mocking flesh of any woman. Even his daughter Lilian.the unforgettable character Grenville introduced in her brilliant debut Lilian's Story. show lessTags
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Set in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Dark Places is the story of Albion Gridley Singer, the father of Lillian, the eccentric woman in Grenville's Lillian's Story, her 1985 debut novel*. If you have read that novel (or seen the movie starring Toni Colette), you might wonder why one would want to read, much less write about such a man.
The book begins when Albion is a boy being shaped by his own family and the society and culture of the time. Albion is an insecure boy who seems clumsy in navigating the world around him. Within him is an empty, gnawing place that cannot be filled. He craves the love and approval of his father, but is unsatisfied. As he grows older he finds ways to cover his failings and we watch as he develops a show more deep resentment against women. When his father dies, Albion takes over the successful stationary business, marries, and becomes "a family man" but, despite appearances, we never forget the gaping emptiness in Albion and how it manifests itself with controlled and sadistic cruelty or outright abuse as the story races towards its denouement.
Kate Grenville has wonderfully recreated a Victorian world that moves and changes into the 20th century. And with it she creates the social mores and atmosphere, the privileges and powers, and the regimented gender roles that will help shape the dark soul of of this man, so richly imagined by Grenville. The evolution of Albion Gridley Singer is as mesmerizing as it is disturbing.
*despite the fact that chronologically, Lillian's Story is a sequel to this book, it was written years prior and, imo, should be read first.
First posted elsewhere on LT, 3/2010 show less
The book begins when Albion is a boy being shaped by his own family and the society and culture of the time. Albion is an insecure boy who seems clumsy in navigating the world around him. Within him is an empty, gnawing place that cannot be filled. He craves the love and approval of his father, but is unsatisfied. As he grows older he finds ways to cover his failings and we watch as he develops a show more deep resentment against women. When his father dies, Albion takes over the successful stationary business, marries, and becomes "a family man" but, despite appearances, we never forget the gaping emptiness in Albion and how it manifests itself with controlled and sadistic cruelty or outright abuse as the story races towards its denouement.
Kate Grenville has wonderfully recreated a Victorian world that moves and changes into the 20th century. And with it she creates the social mores and atmosphere, the privileges and powers, and the regimented gender roles that will help shape the dark soul of of this man, so richly imagined by Grenville. The evolution of Albion Gridley Singer is as mesmerizing as it is disturbing.
*despite the fact that chronologically, Lillian's Story is a sequel to this book, it was written years prior and, imo, should be read first.
First posted elsewhere on LT, 3/2010 show less
This is a wonderfully written book which weaves family, history, social structure and madness. The central character however is so totally unlikeable, so completely deluded and unaware, that ultimately it impacted my enjoyment of the book.
At only page 49 I already knew this would be one of the best books I’ve ever read. Her characterization of Albion Singer is so deep, so profound, one feels as if one IS Albion; the reader shares his skin, inhabits his mind with him. Wow…
At only page 49 I already knew this would be one of the best books I’ve ever read. Her characterization of Albion Singer is so deep, so profound, one feels as if one IS Albion; the reader shares his skin, inhabits his mind with him. Wow…
Dark psychological study of a Victorian man.
It's rare that I don't finish a book. This one is one of them.
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25+ Works 7,545 Members
Kate Grenville was born in Sydney on October 14, 1950. She is a graduate of the University of Sydney with a BA (Honours), the University of Colorado with a MA and a PhD in Creative Arts from the University of Technology, Sydney. She is one of Australia's best-known authors. She is the winner of the Orange Prize for Fiction, the Commonwealth show more Writers' Prize, and shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize. She will be at the Oz, New Zealand festival of literature and arts program in London in 2015. She also made the Indie Awards 2016 shortlists in the Nonfiction category with her title One Life. (Publisher Fact Sheets) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Original title
- Dark Places
- Alternate titles
- Albion's Story
- Original publication date
- 1994
- People/Characters
- Albion Gidley Singer
- Epigraph
- for Isobel
- Disambiguation notice
- Dark Places is also known as Albion's Story
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Statistics
- Members
- 282
- Popularity
- 113,944
- Reviews
- 6
- Rating
- (3.76)
- Languages
- English, French
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 20
- ASINs
- 9



























































