Compelling and dramatic historical adventure based on a true story

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Meg Keneally’s debut solo novel is described as ‘an epic historical adventure based on the extraordinary life of convict Mary Bryant’. In her historical note, the author explains where the story departs from known facts – relatively few occasions, as it happens – and where fictional characters replace their real life counterparts.

The prologue, set in 1791, provides a taste of the remarkable events that will unfold but first of all the reader is transported back in time to Cornwall in 1783. When Jenny Trelawney’s fisherman father is killed at sea, she chances upon highway robbery as a way to keep her family from poverty. This is despite her fear of ending up as one of the grisly corpses displayed at the crossroads, Four Turnings. (Perhaps a little nod there to the opening lines of Daphne du Maurier’s novel My Cousin Rachel: ‘They used to hang men at Four Turnings in the old days’.) Her encounter with the mysterious highwayman, Mr. Black, draws Jenny further into a life of crime that ultimately sees her convicted of robbery and sentenced to death.

The commutation of her sentence to transportation seems like a lucky escape until the horrors of the voyage to Australia are revealed. Once there, and now with the protection of a husband, Dan Gwyn, things are little better. The newly established convict colony struggle to support themselves. Starvation and disease are always close at hand. Contrary to the actions of the Governor and his staff, Jenny welcomes contact from the indigenous people who provide valuable information that enables the colonists to survive, but only barely. Jenny also benefits from help from a rather unexpected source. (I initially thought it was a bit too convenient and rather unlikely but learned from the author’s historical note that it is based on fact.)

Jenny realises there is no future for her and those she loves in Australia and sets out to convince Dan and others that escape is the only option, notwithstanding the perils that await them at sea. As she says, their most valuable asset is that they possess “The skill to leave, and the courage to do it’. Those perils are thrillingly brought to life in the part of the book I found most compelling. After what can only be described as an epic adventure on the high seas, Jenny and her companions seem to have reached safety but will it prove short-lived or is there a possibility of a more hopeful future?

Jenny (or rather her real life counterpart, Mary Bryant) is a remarkable character brought convincingly to life by the author. Jenny’s determination to take control of her own destiny is admirable and not easily resisted by those around her. When she remarks to husband, Dan, “You are a brave man” he replies, “Not brave enough to defy you.” Fled is a compelling and skilfully told story of courage, resolve and fortitude that I thoroughly enjoyed.