
You appreciate after reading the books, how well put together the miniseries is in balancing historical accuracy, the novel's storyline, and fitting it to the television format.ĮndNote has very particular rules about how to format authors' names so that they appear correctly in your in-text citations and reference lists. She also portrays aspects of Aboriginal society as accurately as could be done via the restrictions of the storyline focusing from the English convict-settlers' viewpoints. Grenville traveled to places in London that are in the story like the apprentice hall for Thames River boatman. Once you read the background about the research, you learn that Kate Grenville based this on her ancestors and the story becomes more alive. This allows more sympathy for the family to develop from the description of the social and physical world they existed in due to their social class. The book's strength is it starts earlier in the life of the Thornhills by opening in England. The novel has been awarded many prizes, and in 2012 the First Tuesday Bookclub on the ABC nominated it as one of the top ten Australian books to read before you die. Comparing the TV series to reading both books -and reading both enhances the novel- is unfair. The miniseries part one is good in this writer's opinion it is a realistic and balanced portrayal of humans in the era of the penal colony and the Rum Corp (read a review on the Guardian website).

The writer of this entry has read both the novel The Secret River and the non-fiction book about the research and writing of the novel Searching for the Secret River, both held in the JCU Library.
