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Paperback The Sooterkin Book

ISBN: 0141002018

ISBN13: 9780141002019

The Sooterkin

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

The action in Tom Gilling's wickedly funny, magical novel, The Sooterkin, revolves around the bizarre birth of a child who appears to be more seal than human. As the extraordinary news spreads through... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

AN ABSORBING FABLE

Tom Gilling's novel THE SOOTERKIN is simply a wonderful book. Told in the form of a fable, the tale has much to teach us about love and kindness, greed and exploitation. Set in Australia in the early 19th century, Gilling's use of language is absolutely perfect in depicting his marvelous characters, making the era and location come alive, and generally setting the tone for this story. His characters are at the same time larger than life (in their sometimes absurd eccentricities) and wholly believable, given the amazing variations of the human animal. The book reads fairly quickly, but I would advise the reader to savor it and take it a little slower than temptation might dictate -- there's a lot here to enjoy.

whata surreal book

this book was recommended by a friend and it is the best book i have read for a long tim. its tragic and funny and just wicked. happy reading

Absurdly wonderful

We are in Van Diemen's Land, British penal colony off the Australian coast. It is July 14, 1821, and Sarah Dyer gives birth to a boy to be named "Arthur". A boy? He looks like a seal pup. But the local midwife, Mrs. Jakes, who is the housekeeper of the rev. Mr. Kidney and who also does abortions, swears to the true birth of Arthur. 9-year old Ned Dyer takes on Arthur and cares for him like a brother. Father goes to get drunk. Mr. Bent publishes the story and the follow-ups in his local gazette. The rev. Kidney tries to make himself invisible to avoid having to baptize Arthur. Mother Sarah Dyer quickly grabs the opportunity and charges admission for the Viewing of Arthur. We also meet Mr. Scully, the batty pseudo scientist, a band of brigands, Mrs. Fitzgerald the school mistress, and many, many more of these whacky characters, interspersed with the beautifully described lowlife of the penal colony. Do get this book!

Great fun!

If you are looking for a well written book that is startling and just plain fun to read, this may be it! After all, how many authors are there who dare to begin with the opening sentence, "Pardon the stench," then go on to describe in graphic horror the slaughter of the whales in Hobart Town, while chastising you for not arriving sooner, "when you would have smelt eucalyptus blossom and lavender." Obviously playing with the reader from the opening page, Gilling is so entertaining with his story that the reader plays along, too, delightedly participating in this wild, carnival experience.When a strange, seal-like offspring is "born" to a former convict woman in Van Dieman's Land, now Tasmania, everyone gets in on the action. Thought by some residents to be a sooterkin, a kind of goblin, we see that the creature, "Arthur," is a brother to Ned, a meal ticket for his larcenous mother, who sells peeks at him, and a source of much curiosity to the townspeople. Poking fun at everyone's views of reality, Gilling here satirizes all levels of Tasmanian society, from the local pamphleteer, who declares that if it looks like a seal and acts like a seal that it is a seal, to the Reverend Kidney, who tries to find a place for it in the theological chain of being. And since we readers do not know, for sure, exactly what the creature is, we become willing and amused participants in the author's greatest joke of all--on us.In prose that is perfectly suited to his broad but light-hearted satire, Gilling keeps the reader constantly entertained with his terse descriptions and ironic detachment. To the question of what it is like to be kissed by a seal pup, for example, he answers tersely, "It's like nuzzling tripe. Or blowing your nose on a stinging nettle." A short novel with bold and offbeat humor, startling imagery, and unforgettable action scenes, Sooterkin will amuse anyone looking for a literary change of pace.

An Australian Fairy Tale

A true Fairy Tale gives a glimpse of the psyche that no other literary form can reveal. Modern Fairy tale exponents are rare but wonderfully talented beings: Mark Helprin, author of Soldier of the Great War and the Winter's Tale; Alice Hoffman author of Practical Magic and Second Nature. Add to this elite list the name of Tom Gilling, author of The Sooterkin, an amazing tale of early convict times in Van Dieman's Land, Australia. As in all the best fairy tales Mr. Gilling gives us a magical, mysterious land beneath the grit and filth of a convict colony. His characters are truly endearing, especially Ned and his baby seal brother Arthur. When the seal baby, the Sooterkin, Arthur, is borne to convict Sarah Dyer, it seems every slimey, sleazy boozer in Hobart Town is out to take advantage of these innocents: The erst while Father, drunkard Walter Dyer, is ready to sell his monsterous child to the highest bidder; the church, in the person of the dissipated Reverend Kidney would prefer to bury the baby seal as an abortion or an infancide rather acknowledge an embarrassment by or to God, and the Naturalist Society swings from scientific curiousity to, by the end of the book, a minimalist form of caring. With a clear eye Mr. Gilling looks at a day to day environment that should crush all human kindness from the stained surviors souls - but instead leads to a triumph of the human spirit. Ned's love for his brother doesn't conquer all adversity and despair but it gives us a lasting glimmer of hope, and helps us to see how such a self-reliant, humorous nation arose from 'The Stain' of its grim convict beginnings. Or, as Mr. Gilling has one of his more Dickensinian characters remark, "Suffice it to say that such remarkable Fertility, wrenched from the Barrenness of Sorrow, must instil great Hopes for the Survival and Prosperity of this beleaguered Colony." My hope is that Mr. Gilling's talent will thrive and prosper down under, and that he will again give the world another candle of hope like the endearing Sooterkin. Good on ya, mate.
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