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Dirrayawadha

Rise Up

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
'Dirrayawadha is full of heart and hope, truth-telling and history – and shimmers with language too' Guardian
'A story from the past given vivid life for new understanding'​ Kate Grenville
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Bathurst, 1820s
Miinaa was a young girl when the white ghosts first arrived. She remembers the day they raised a piece of cloth and renamed her homeland 'Bathurst'. Now she lives at Cloverdale and works for a white family who have settled there.
The Nugents are kind, but Miinaa misses her miyagan. His brother, Windradyne, is a Wiradyuri leader, and visits when he can, bringing news of unrest across their ngurambang. Miinaa hopes the violence will not come to Cloverdale.
When Irish convict Daniel O'Dwyer arrives at the settlement, Miinaa's life is transformed again. The pair are magnetically drawn to each other and begin meeting at the bila in secret. Dan understands how it feels to be displaced, but they still have a lot to learn about each other. Can their love survive their differences and the turmoil that threatens to destroy everything around them?
From the bestselling author of Bila Yarrudhanggalangdhuray (River of Dreams) comes another groundbreaking historical novel about resistance, resilience and love during the frontier wars.
Praise for Dirrayawadha (Rise Up):

'Dirrayawadha is a story of the courage of the Wiradyuri nation and the love of their Country. Anita Heiss is a remarkable writer.' Tony Birch
'To read the book is to enter a lost time, a retrieved war, and to learn much, not least Wiradyuri. With dhuluny (truth) and marrumbang (love) of story, Heiss makes something good. And that is something for which modern Australia can be grateful.' The Age
'Historical in tone, yet absolutely contemporary in scope, Dirrayawadha is a beautiful triumph.' Mirandi Riwoe
'
Dirrayawadha is a beautifully written and masterful telling of a pivotal point in our history.' Nicole Alexander
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    • Books+Publishing

      June 18, 2024
      Dirrayawadha is a work of searing historical fiction set during the Wiradyuri wars in 1820s Bathurst and centring on a love story between a young Wiradyuri woman and an Irish convict. Miinaa and Dan’s relationship may seem an unlikely locus for a story about the violent power struggle between First Nations peoples and white settlers (‘white ghosts’), but this is a clever conceit on Heiss’s part because it works. Through her clear and unadorned prose, the past speaks directly to the present. Miinaa and Dan work for the Nugents, Irish settlers who have fled persecution in Ireland only to witness the English here persecuting First Nations peoples. The Nugents’ natural sympathies are challenged by the escalating tensions between the local Wiradyuri people and the colonial project of growing Bathurst, tensions that culminate in a war led by resistance warrior Windradyne, Miinaa’s brother and the book's third point of view. Heiss, herself a Wiradyuri woman, states in the foreword that she sees this novel as part of truth-telling in Australia as per the Uluru Statement. Dirrayawadha successfully imparts historical truths within an accessible mass-market format while retaining many words in the Wiradyuri language. This novel will appeal to fans of conventional historical fiction about politically marginalised people along the lines of works by Shankari Chandran and Kate Grenville. It starts gently, yet by the end, you will feel the full force of the truths of Australia’s colonial history.

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  • English

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