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≡ Download Free The Party Line edition by Sue Orr Literature Fiction eBooks

The Party Line edition by Sue Orr Literature Fiction eBooks



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Download PDF The Party Line  edition by Sue Orr Literature  Fiction eBooks

An enthralling novel of individual bravery versus silent, collective complicity, set in a vividly drawn farming community in 1970s New Zealand.The Baxters do not know their place.On the first of June every year, sharemilkers load their trucks with their families, pets and possessions and crawl along the highways towards new farms, new lives. They're inching towards that ultimate dream - buying their own land. Fenward's always been lucky with its sharemilkers grateful, grafting folk who understand what's expected of them. Until now, when grief-stricken Ian Baxter and his precocious daughter, Gabrielle, arrive.Nickie Walker is enchanted by the glamour and worldliness of Gabrielle. Nickie's mother finds herself in the crossfire of a moral battle she dreads to confront. Each has a story to share.This is a coming-of-age story for two young girls who hold a mirror up to the place and people they love. It's a coming-of-age story, too, for a community forced to stare back at the image of a damaged soul.The question is who will blink first?

The Party Line edition by Sue Orr Literature Fiction eBooks

Overall disappointed. The title does not feature in the content to warrant the title.I have had experience with the "party line" as such and find the reference to it was vague.Aside from this I found the book disjointed and quite perplexing at times The final left me "up in the air" so to speak
Is I thought

Product details

  • File Size 1091 KB
  • Print Length 635 pages
  • Publisher RHNZ Adult ebooks (August 26, 2015)
  • Publication Date August 26, 2015
  • Sold by Random House NZ
  • Language English
  • ASIN B0156SSDJK

Read The Party Line  edition by Sue Orr Literature  Fiction eBooks

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The Party Line edition by Sue Orr Literature Fiction eBooks Reviews


Loved this book and was hooked from beginning to end. Compares the home-baked welcome of a farming community with the difficulty in accepting strangers into their circle and of facing up to what the strangers clearly see. Highly recommend.
NZ Book Council recently announced results of a survey taken on readership of NZ fiction. Disappointing and alarming probably sum up the results in as few words as possible. Which is a shame because there is amazing NZ fiction being written and published. Such as this one, the first novel by well known short story writer Sue Orr, a fiction finalist for the Ockham NZ Book Award 2016. It is an outstanding book, a very, very good story and hopefully at least one person reads it from this review and then tells others. As well as a great plot and interesting diverse characters, it is easy to read, bit of a page turner even, and is so quintessentially NZ in its setting, the mores of the time, and how we lived in the 1970s. This ability to so accurately and beautifully capture the essence of a small town/farming community is largely due to the author having grown up on a farm. Her ability to communicate that childhood and what she remembers of it is wonderful. Even if you didn't grow up on a farm, you will no doubt have visited and spent time with relatives and friends on a farm, and this writing will instantly take you back there.

Every year in June, the share milkers move around the country, moving to new jobs, farms, houses, schools, taking their wives, their children, their pets, belongings, vehicles. The farming community of Fenward, somewhere between Paeroa and Thames, always has a number of share milkers good workers, good neighbours, everyone mucking in together, children and adults alike. Nickie Walker is a 12 year old girl who lives with her farm owning parents Eugene and Joy. Next door is Jack Gilbert and his wife Audrey. Jack, it would seem, is not a particularly good farmer, and for the first time, this year he has employed a share milker - Ian Baxter, recently widowed, who arrives with his 12 year old daughter Gabrielle. For Nickie, and the other girls at school, and the boys, Gabrielle is a wonder to behold. Beautiful, dazzling in fact, very smart, almost precocious, she has the school in her palm from the day she walks in the place. For the adults, however, especially the mothers, Gabrielle is going to be trouble, mark my words, far too big for her boots, the type of girl they are not used to dealing with, and who needs to be brought down a peg or two. She wears lipstick!

Naturally Nickie can't resist being in the Gabrielle orbit, and the two rapidly become best friends. In their efforts to rescue some bobby calves from being sent off to the works, they unwittingly observe an act of brutality and violence that immediately shoves them into the adult world, a world of complexity that at 12 years old, they are not equipped to deal with. With Ian still grieving for his dead wife, he is unable to deal with his wayward daughter, and with Nickie, who is desperately trying to break away from the confines of her tightly controlled life, she and Gabrielle set about trying to put right what is so obviously very wrong. And the layers slowly peel away from the rigid conventions that keep small communities ticking over, forcing people to rethink long held ways of doing things, their views and the collective complicity that results. The party line is what links everyone - the telephone system that has a number of phone numbers on the one line, making it very easy and very common for users to eavesdrop on others' phone conversations - a perfect source of gossip, news, intrigue and danger. Our need for privacy is compromised by something like the party line, which just encourages further the belief that what goes on behind closed doors stays behind those closed doors.

'The Party Line' is a coming of age story, not only of the two girls, but also of the community of Fenward. People change, some for better, some for worse, and Nickie's return to the town some 40 years later for a funeral shows some of these changes, helping her acceptance of what happened all those years ago. Many issues are touched on in this book, greatly helped by the never-below-the-surface violence and death so much a part of daily farm life. So we have callous care of animals, domestic violence, misogyny, depression, grief, community conformity and clearly defined roles for the sexes, a strong drinking culture, tough men, strong women, school calf day. It is a such a good book, giving the reader such a strong sense of the 1970s, the farming landscape, and the people living on and working the land.
We are in a rural farming community in New Zealand. It's 1972. It's a small community where everyone knows everyone's business, thanks in part to the "party line", the shared telephone system which enables people to eavesdrop on one another's conversations if they feel so inclined. And yet, there are unspoken rules about turning a blind eye to other people's business, even when perhaps the right thing would be to step in and help.

Ian Baxter has come to work on one of the farms, bringing his precocious pre-teen daughter Gabrielle. Ian's wife Bridie recently died of cancer, leaving Ian engulfed in grief and struggling to parent his daughter. Gabrielle and her new best friend Nickie are left to their own devices. When they make a discovery about a local family, a situation that the community has been feigning ignorance of, their subsequent actions will send a shockwave rippling through the area.

This is a beautifully written book and I savored every page of it. The characters are real and rounded and the community is vividly brought to life. The story focuses on three main characters the grieving Ian Baxter, impressionable Nickie and her mother Joy. Interestingly, although Gabrielle is a main character and the catalyst for much of the plot, her character remains somewhat inscrutable and I thought this was a shame.

This is a debut novel (the author has previously published two books of short stories) and it is a fine one.
Very good read, couldn't stop once I started
Not my type of book, but somehow got addicted to it. I am intrigued to find out what happen to the Baxters.
I love to read about places I know. I was very familiar with the essence of the story having been in a rural NZ farming community with party line telephones only. I could relate to a lot of the incidents in the tale. Very well written, I found the ending a bit abrupt though.
This is a beautifully written story set in rural New Zealand in the 1970's. It is about what we see now, almost half a century on, as the narrow mindedness of the people in a small farming community, with their ignorance, fears and discriminatory attitudes. I think it's is a story beautifully woven between the past and present day. If you the reader were brought up in NZ around this era, it's a must read. If you weren't then it's an enlightening read.
Overall disappointed. The title does not feature in the content to warrant the title.I have had experience with the "party line" as such and find the reference to it was vague.Aside from this I found the book disjointed and quite perplexing at times The final left me "up in the air" so to speak
Is I thought
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