Out of Ireland explained

Out of Ireland
Author:Christopher Koch
Country:Australia
Language:English
Genre:Historical Fiction
Publisher:Doubleday
Release Date:1999
Media Type:Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages:720
Isbn:978-0099286974

Out of Ireland is a 1999 novel by Christopher Koch that tells the story of Irish 'gentleman-convict' Robert Devereux and his transportation to Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania). Koch observed that Out of Ireland was an exploration of his "interest in the idea that the past resonates off the future."[1] The novel is considered uniquely Tasmanian because of the way it deals with convict ancestry[2] and emphasizes the island's geographic isolation.[3]

Plot

The novel starts with Devereux, an Irish revolutionary, aboard a convict prison hulk in Bermuda. It then follows his transportation to Van Diemen's Land, his release and subsequent adventures on the island.

Reception

Out of Ireland was well received, winning the Colin Roderick Award in 1999 and the Victorian Premier's Prize for Fiction in 2000.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A life full of achievements . Sydney Morning Herald . October 13, 2012 . May 21, 2018 . Wyndham, Susan.
  2. Chad . Habel . Christopher Koch, Out of Ireland: no more 'Hiding the Stain'. Australian Literary Studies in the 21st Century . 2000 . 128-134 [p. 129] .
  3. Paul . Genoi . Girt by Sea: islands in the novels of Thea Astley and Christopher Koch . Australian Literary Studies in the 21st Century . 2000 . 121-127 [p. 125].