Death of a Whaler explained

Death of a Whaler
Author:Nerida Newton
Country:Australia
Language:English
Genre:Novel
Publisher:Allen & Unwin
Release Date:July 2006
Media Type:Print (Paperback)
Pages:312 pp (first edition, paperback)
Isbn:1-74114-791-3
Isbn Note:(first edition, paperback)
Dewey:823/.92 22
Congress:PR9619.4.N49 D43 2006
Oclc:74890341
Preceded By:The Lambing Flat

Death of a Whaler is a novel written by Australian author Nerida Newton and was first published in 2006. It is Newton's second novel.[1]

Plot summary

Byron Bay, 1962. On the second last day before the whaling station is closed down for good, Flinch, the young spotter, is involved in a terrible accident.

Over a decade later, Flinch has become a recluse, unable to move on from that fatal moment. The Bay, too, seems stalled in its bloody past, the land and the ocean on which it was founded now barren and unyielding.

It is only after crossing paths with Karma, a girl living in one of the hinterland's first hippie communes, that Flinch gradually and reluctantly embarks upon a path towards healing, coming to terms with his past, present and future.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Griffin . Michelle . 2006-07-08 . Death of a Whaler . 2023-08-03 . The Sydney Morning Herald . en.