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Tony Birch, the author of Ghost River, is fascinated by stories of society’s fringe dwellers. He grew up in the slums of Fitzroy in Victoria in a one-bedroom terrace house, the son of an Irish Catholic mother and a father whose ancestry includes a strong Aboriginal line that can be traced back to Tasmania. He describes childhood memories of his beloved Yarra river in Melbourne as central to his imaginative thinking and for me this was evident throughout his beautifully written novel Ghost River.  As I turned the pages of the book, I couldn’t help wondering about the two adolescent boys who became soul mates by chance and circumstance, and whether their story is in fact more memoir than fiction. The enduring pathos, grips the reader from the first page to the last, intertwined as it is with the love and respect that grows between the boys and the homeless, alcoholic men who live on the polluted banks of the river, behind the factories of Fitzroy.

The boys,  Ren and Sonny, each with his own separate life dramas and hardships, seem to have an acute understanding of life and the valuable lessons they can learn from each other. They help and comfort the homeless men as much as they are able, despite their youth and maybe because of their own loneliness.

Set in the slums of Collingwood, the boys cherish their escape route to freedom along a secret, tangled trail  to the Yarra in the summers of late 1960s and early 1970s. Birch’s nostalgia for his formative years in the slums and the housing estates of Richmond somehow shines through the bleakness of the environment and the circumstances in which Ren and Sonny live. Theirs is a world in which a disadvantaged boy lives by his wits, constantly on edge while on the run from neighbourhood thugs, a dangerous, crooked policeman, weird next door neighbours, and obligations no young lad should have to fret about.

The friendship between Ren and Sonny sustains them both, with a little help from Ren’s mother, especially when the violence at home becomes intolerable for Sonny.  But the overriding mood throughout the book is one of hope for a better future. The title alludes to the idea that beneath the Yarra lies a ghost river that takes good souls down to its peaceful depths, the ‘resting place’ that the homeless men yearn for at the end of their pitiful lives. However, the men caution the boys that the Yarra rejects the bad souls whose bodies it leaves to float around or wash up on its banks.

As fate would have it, all is eventually threatened by destructive excavations along the river which the boys learn is in preparation for the planned South Eastern Freeway.  The heartbroken boys try desperately to save their homeless friends but time is running out for the men and the Yarra as they know it, and one by one the homeless men succumb to what they believe is inevitable.  The question is, will Ren and Sonny survive the upheaval?

-Anne Frandi-Coory.  17 March 2020

  

Will our heroes find the object they need to find in order to complete the next step in their quest?

 

One relic found and another to locate, or so that’s what Evan thought, it’s what his “father” Zeus told him when he dumped him in world and time so far removed from the twenty-first century. What if he doesn’t find the sacred objects? Will he be trapped forever in this forsaken age? Join Evan and his companions as they continue their epic odyssey, traversing the ancient world in search of powerful icons that even the gods are frightened of.

 

In

The Labyrinthine Journey

 will reluctant modern day hero, Evan and his friends succeed in finding the relics to stop the advent of Christianity?

The odyssey continues. Will Evan succeed in his quest to find the relics and go home?

The quest to locate the sacred object adds pressure to the uneasy alliance between Evan and the Atlanteans. His inability to accept the world he’s in, and his constant battle with Zeus, both threaten to derail the expedition and his life.

Traversing the mountainous terrain of the Peloponnese and Corinthian Gulf to the centre of the spiritual world, Evan meets with Pythia, Oracle of Delphi. Her cryptic prophecy reveals much more than he expected; something that changes his concept of the ancient world and his former way of life.

You can buy book l and ll here on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Labyrinthine-Journey-Servant-Gods-Book-ebook/dp/B075QGZQP9

Read more here about Book l of The Odyssey:

‘The Search For The Golden Serpent’

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Historical fiction novelist and a secondary teacher, Luciana Cavallaro,

likes to meander between contemporary life to the realms of mythology and history.

Luciana has always been interested in Mythology and Ancient History but her passion wasn’t realised until seeing the Colosseum and the Roman Forum.

From then on, she was inspired to write Historical Fantasy.

She has spent many lessons promoting literature and the merits of ancient history. Today, you will still find Luciana in the classroom, teaching and promoting literature. To keep up-to-date with her ramblings, ahem, that is meanderings, subscribe to her mailing list at

http://www.luccav.com.

 

You can connect with her via:

Website www.luccav.com

Twitter https://twitter.com/ClucianaLuciana

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Luciana-Cavallaro-Writer/304218202959903?ref=hl

LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=242021145&trk=nav_responsive_tab_profile_pic

 

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