The Road From Coorain
By (Author) Jill Ker Conway
Vintage Publishing
Vintage
1st February 1993
3rd September 1992
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Travel writing
Memoirs
Cultural studies
994.05092
Paperback
256
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 16mm
181g
This account of an Australian childhood in the outback, and subsequently in Sydney, encompasses family tragedy, a devastating struggle with the desert environment, and an evocation of the Australian landscape. Jill Ker Conway grew up in the 1940s and '50s in Coorain, an isolated 32,000-acre ranch built by her parents on the vast western plains of New South Wales. When her brothers were sent away to boarding school, she became her father's station-hand, helping to herd sheep and check fences, until five years of severe drought laid waste the flourishing Coorain acres and destroyed her parents' dreams. Moving to Sydney, she was forced to comply with the rules and restrictions of city life and with her mother's increasing depression. The author describes her long and painful road to independence, her growing cultural and political awareness at university, and the friendships, travels and studies which brought her to a new understanding of herself and her place in the world.
A small masterpiece of scene, memory and very stylish English. I've been several times to Australia; this book was the most rewarding of all -- John Kenneth Galbraith
The Road from Coorain is the work of a writer who relentlessly tugs at the cultural fences around her until they collapse, leaving her solitary under an immense Australian sky, enlarged to herself at least * New York Times Book Review *
This book, an extraordinarily gripping and inspiring work, will take place as one of the few heroic stories of girlhood * Carolyn Heilbrun *
Immensely readable, elegant and well-crafted * Sydney Morning Herald *
Jill Ker Conway was born in Hillston, New South Wales, graduated from the University of Sydney in 1958, and received her PhD from Havard University in 1969. From 1964 to 1975 she taught at the University of Toronto and was Vice President there before serving in 1975 and fro the next ten years as President of Smith College. Since 1985 she has been Visiting Scholar and Professor in MIT's Programme in Science, Technology and Society, and now lives with her husband in Milton, Massachusetts.