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Ache
Ache | Eliza Henry-Jones
4 posts | 3 read | 7 to read
The much anticipated new novel - about how a family, and a rural community, recover from a terrible bushfire - from a stunning young Australian writer, Eliza Henry Jones. A year ago, a devastating bushfire ripped Annie's world apart - killing her grandmother, traumatising her young daughter and leaving her mother's home in the mountains half destroyed. Annie fled back to the city, but the mountain continues to haunt her. Now, drawn by a call for help from her uncle, she's going back to the place she loves most in the world, to try to heal herself, her marriage, her daughter and her mother. A heart-wrenching, tender and lovely novel about loss, grief and regeneration, Ache is not only a story of how we can be broken, but how we can put ourselves back together. Eliza Henry Jones' remarkable debut novel, In the Quiet, was shortlisted for the 2015 Readings Prize for New Australian Fiction, shortlisted for the NSW Premier's Award and longlisted for the ABIA and Indie Awards. PRAISE FOR ACHE 'Eliza Henry Jones' second novel demands that you slow down, take a breath and settle in ... This beautifully written novel ... is recommended for those who loved Stephanie Bishops' The Other Side of the World or Alice Munro's short stories. Ache is the perfect account of a woman on the edge, moving towards peace. It is an extraordinary creation from a young novelist.' Bookseller+Publisher PRAISE FOR IN THE QUIET 'Eliza Henry-Jones is a young author (only twenty five) and she writes with remarkable maturity... I fell in love with it slowly, over the course of many chapters. It's a quiet book (appropriately named) and an utterly lovely one' Readings 'Henry-Jones, in her debut novel, has structured a glorious book that will make you cry, guaranteed. But it's also uplifting and tender. A surprise find' Sydney Morning Herald 'You will weep, and marvel, and pass this book on, and on, to your friends' Nikki Gemmell
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Victoria_Clyne
Ache | Eliza Henry-Jones
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This is the story of Annie and her daughter trying to overcome the grief and trauma of surviving a bushfire. I found this quite evocative and it had me thinking of Black Saturday. I'm not sure if it was the way it was written or the narrator but I found the voice of the daughter annoying, which detracted from my enjoyment.

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AntoinetteBuchanan
Ache | Eliza Henry-Jones
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A tender and emotionally resonant book about guilt, grief and reconciliation.

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AntoinetteBuchanan
Ache | Eliza Henry-Jones
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Today‘s company on chores.

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Marchpane
Ache | Eliza Henry-Jones
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An understated and moving novel, exploring grief, trauma and healing after devastating bushfires hit a small rural community. It's set one year after the tragedy, when the town is still coming to terms with loss.

I've decided that I quite enjoy 'rural Australian literary fiction', provided it is written in a no-bullshit style as this one is. It's comforting yet still rough around the edges, like visiting rellies who live in the bush.

RanaElizabeth I normally hate literary fiction but Australian literary is just so so good. There is a lot less pretension, and maybe obviously, a lot less stories set in Brooklyn. 8y
batsy @RanaElizabeth I agree. There is something about most contemporary American litfic... Maybe a certain tone/style that I can quite get into. 8y
MyNamesParadise @Marchpane what other Australian literature would you recommend? 8y
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