Set in 19th-century Western Australia at the height of the pearl trade, this book paints a nuanced portrait of the era as the backdrop for a feminist epic.
In her debut novel, Pook introduces us to Eliza Brightwell, a pearler’s daughter living in the fictional Bannin Bay of Western Australia. Eliza stands out from the other women of Bannin Bay because of both her plain looks and her independent personality. She’s the sort to walk around town in battered boots rather than ride in a carriage like other ladies of her class, much to the disapprobation of the townsfolk. Eliza’s early days in Bannin Bay were marked by tragedy with the deaths of her mother and younger brother, and 10 years later, when her father’s pearl-diving boat returns from months at sea without him, Eliza refuses to accept his loss as well. She will stop at nothing to find her father, dead or alive. Her quest draws the reader into the tense social climate between colonizers and Aboriginals, the spectacular flora and fauna of Western Australia and Pacifica, as well as the perils of sea voyages at the time. While the setting for this novel is particularly well developed, the characters often feel a bit flat, and there are many missed opportunities. Eliza’s single-minded drive to save her family because of tragedy in her past feels familiar, and it doesn’t allow Eliza’s character to develop over the course of the book; her romantic relationship with a pearler named Axel barely registers. Pook sets up some intriguing female sidekicks—Eliza’s childhood friend Min, who becomes a prostitute, and deckhand Knife, who disguises herself as a boy—but their stories are not fully explored. For all of Eliza’s resourcefulness, gumption, and guilt, what’s missing is a little vulnerability.
A work of historical fiction whose setting somewhat outweighs its plot.