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Fiction

Secrets of the Sea by Nicholas Shakespeare

by Peter Pierce
September 2007, no. 294

Secrets of the Sea by Nicholas Shakespeare

Harvill Secker, $32.95pb, 402pp

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Not long after he began to spend extended periods on the island, English novelist Nicolas Shakespeare wrote In Tasmania (2004), a spirited account of some of the things that he had seen and been told there. This was a rambling book, whose intention seemed unresolved. With his fifth novel, Secrets of the Sea, Shakespeare has made Tasmania his setting again. Manifold details are refined for the story, with more assurance than in the earlier book. Impressively, Shakespeare has created an unfamiliar place, alert to caricatures of itself, but much stranger. At the same time, his Tasmania seems to belong more to England than ever used to be said, and to the fictional realms of Thomas Hardy and D.H. Lawrence.

 


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Secrets of the Sea by Nicholas Shakespeare

Harvill Secker, $32.95pb, 402pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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