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Eleanor Dark

    Les contributions littéraires d'Eleanor Dark explorent principalement des thèmes contemporains et des récits historiques, plongeant dans la complexité des relations humaines et des enjeux sociétaux de son époque. Son écriture se caractérise par une profonde perspicacité psychologique et un œil observateur attentif sur le monde qui l'entoure. À travers ses œuvres, Dark cherchait à capturer les subtilités de la nature humaine et les défis auxquels la société était confrontée. Elle fut également une mère dévouée, dont la vie personnelle s'entremêlait souvent à sa production créative.

    The little company
    Prelude to Christopher
    The Timeless Land
    Lantana Lane
    • Lantana Lane

      • 254pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      4,0(2)Évaluer

      Set against the backdrop of Australia's lush yet challenging landscape, the narrative explores the lives of a small farming community battling the invasive lantana weed. Despite their grumblings about the hardships of farming, the residents of Lantana Lane are deeply connected to the land and each other. The story features a diverse cast, including Aunt Isabelle, a unique blend of pioneer and Parisian spirit, and Nelson, a one-eyed kookaburra, highlighting the humor and resilience of community life amidst adversity.

      Lantana Lane
    • It is 1941 and the storm clouds of war gather over Australia. In the mountains outside Sydney the Massey family are reunited by their father's death. Gilbert is a successful novelist, struggling with a writer's block in middle age. A socialist and intellectual, he shares his political understanding - and fears - with his sister Mary and Marxist brother Nick. But he is locked in an unhappy marriage with a woman of little imagination and obsessive respectability, and their daughters, Prue and Virginia, are as incompatible as their parents. With the bombing of Pearl Harbour was becomes a reality, As gilbert and his family are overtaken by the forces of history they must come to terms with their personal and public failures, and watch as the new generation inevitably mirrors the contradictions and turmoil of the old.

      The little company