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            This is a haunting and sometimes dark 
            story set in the outback of Australia during the Great Depression. 
            It chronicles the desperately hard life of the Flute family. Harper 
            Flute, the narrator of the story, gives a grippingly realistic 
            account of a family mired in poverty, mixed with a surreal account 
            of the strange life of her brother Tin. 
            The family consists of parents Court 
            and Thora, oldest daughter Audrey, oldest son Devon, middle daughter 
            Harper, younger brother Tin, and new baby brother Caffy. 
              
             
            The family lives on a farm that the 
            government gave them after Court fought in the Great War. He knows 
            nothing about farming, so he does nothing about the land. The only 
            income the family has is from trapping rabbits and selling their 
            pelts. Their diet consists of boiled rabbit most every day. 
            The story opens with 7-year-old Harper 
            introducing us to her brother Tin, who she says was "born on 
            Thursday and so fated to his wanderings" and is by far the strangest 
            member of the family. The day Caffy is born, Harper is told to take 
            4-year-old Tin and go play somewhere away from the house. They go to 
            the creek, where Tin gets temporarily buried in a collapsed creek 
            bank. 
            It is after this incident that Tin 
            begins his digging and tunneling, which his father considers a gift. 
            The family sees him only occasionally, and he gradually becomes 
            barely recognizable as a human. This part is very hard to take at 
            first and seems strange combined with the realism of the rest of the 
            story, but eventually it is more acceptable.  
              
             
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            Things look like they may be looking up 
            when Court is notified that he is the sole heir of his estranged 
            father’s will. Their hopes are soon dashed when he returns home with 
            almost nothing after paying his father’s debts. 
            Against Thora’s wishes and the advice 
            of Vandry Cable, a wealthy neighbor, Court buys three cows and a 
            horse for Devon. This causes a lot of trouble between Court and 
            Thora. 
            Then one day, without warning, their 
            house collapses and falls into a hole in the ground. They soon 
            realize that the reason it fell was because Tin had dug so many 
            tunnels under the house that the earth couldn’t hold it any longer. 
            The family is eventually reunited under one roof only because of the 
            help and kindness of neighbors. 
            Audrey becomes romantically interested 
            in a young man who has come from the city to the country to try to 
            get work. Things seem to be going better when tragedy strikes again 
            and Caffy dies in an accident. Devon eventually leaves home, and 
            Audrey goes to work for Vandry Cable. Things don’t seem quite right 
            with Audrey’s situation, and we soon find out why in a page-turning 
            climax.  
            This book is a strange story and is not 
            for everyone, but at the same time it is fascinating and definitely 
            worth reading. Sonya Hartnett has written several other novels and 
            has received many prestigious awards in her native Australia. This 
            book is recommended for eighth-graders and up. For more 
            information about this book and others, visit the library at 725 
            Pekin St. or call (217) 732-5732. [Linda Harmon, Lincoln 
            Public Library District] |