The Death of John Lacey

The Death of John Lacey

$12.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Melbourne warehouse.

Condition: SECONDHAND

NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only. A description of our secondhand books is not always available. Please contact us if you have a question about this title.
Author: Ben Hobson

Format: Paperback

Number of Pages: 352


'A ripping, unflinching reckoning with Australia's past. Hobson turns the popularnational mythos on its head and,with guns blazing, creates one of his own.'Bram Presser, author of The Book of Dirt He felt the lump of gold still in his pocket. He would find his way out of this place and leave his brother happy and he would etch his name into the red earth or be damned. John Lacey's lust for power and gold brings him riches and influence beyond his wildest dreams. Only he knows the terrible crime he committed to attain that wealth. Years later, as Lacey ruthlessly presides over the town he has built and named after himself, no one has the courage to question his power or how he wields it. Brothers Ernst and Joe Montague are on the run from the law. They land in Lacey's town and commit desperate crimes to avoid capture. Lacey vows retribution and galvanises those in the town to hunt them down. But not everyone is blind to Lacey's evil, and a reckoning is approaching. A visceral, powerful dissection of dispossession, colonisation and the crimes committed in their name, The Death of John Lacey is also a moving and tender account of the love between brothers and a meditation on the true meaning of mercy and justice. 'A powerful morality tale that evokes the hopes and brutalities of Australia's frontier with clarity, depth and empathy. Ben Hobson is a great writer. This is a great book.' Chris Hammer, author of The Tilt 'Where the Ballarat diggings meet Deadwood. Elegantly written and deeply unsettling, The Death of John Lacey is a gripping, evocative moral exploration of colonial violence, greed and dispossession on the Victorian goldfields.' Paul Daley, author of Jesustown 'Hobson shows us the frontier as it really was-a place full of human complexity. A brutal story, lyrically told.' Rohan Wilson, author of The Roving Party 'Exceptional. I couldn't put it down.' Kyle Perry, author of The Deep 'There is such weight to the narrative, such a sense of impending doom, that you don't dare take your eyes off the page.'Australian Crime Fiction on Snake Island '[Hobson's] spare, muscular writing is captivating; and in the end, the scales are evenly weighted: corruption, rage and revenge are counterbalanced by loyalty, faith and redemption.'The Saturday Paper on Snake Island



Reviews

Customer Reviews

Based on 1 review
100%
(1)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
P
Peter Sharrock
great Book Grocer service, disappointing book to read

I found it difficult to suspend my disbelief with the story line at times. No quotation marks used with any dialogue. I thought the language used throughout the book was not really in depth either. the storyline in the final third did pick up though.
I try to read Australian based novels but this was a let down

Description
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only. A description of our secondhand books is not always available. Please contact us if you have a question about this title.
Author: Ben Hobson

Format: Paperback

Number of Pages: 352


'A ripping, unflinching reckoning with Australia's past. Hobson turns the popularnational mythos on its head and,with guns blazing, creates one of his own.'Bram Presser, author of The Book of Dirt He felt the lump of gold still in his pocket. He would find his way out of this place and leave his brother happy and he would etch his name into the red earth or be damned. John Lacey's lust for power and gold brings him riches and influence beyond his wildest dreams. Only he knows the terrible crime he committed to attain that wealth. Years later, as Lacey ruthlessly presides over the town he has built and named after himself, no one has the courage to question his power or how he wields it. Brothers Ernst and Joe Montague are on the run from the law. They land in Lacey's town and commit desperate crimes to avoid capture. Lacey vows retribution and galvanises those in the town to hunt them down. But not everyone is blind to Lacey's evil, and a reckoning is approaching. A visceral, powerful dissection of dispossession, colonisation and the crimes committed in their name, The Death of John Lacey is also a moving and tender account of the love between brothers and a meditation on the true meaning of mercy and justice. 'A powerful morality tale that evokes the hopes and brutalities of Australia's frontier with clarity, depth and empathy. Ben Hobson is a great writer. This is a great book.' Chris Hammer, author of The Tilt 'Where the Ballarat diggings meet Deadwood. Elegantly written and deeply unsettling, The Death of John Lacey is a gripping, evocative moral exploration of colonial violence, greed and dispossession on the Victorian goldfields.' Paul Daley, author of Jesustown 'Hobson shows us the frontier as it really was-a place full of human complexity. A brutal story, lyrically told.' Rohan Wilson, author of The Roving Party 'Exceptional. I couldn't put it down.' Kyle Perry, author of The Deep 'There is such weight to the narrative, such a sense of impending doom, that you don't dare take your eyes off the page.'Australian Crime Fiction on Snake Island '[Hobson's] spare, muscular writing is captivating; and in the end, the scales are evenly weighted: corruption, rage and revenge are counterbalanced by loyalty, faith and redemption.'The Saturday Paper on Snake Island