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The yield tara june winch review
The yield tara june winch review









the yield tara june winch review

I found Too Much Lip to be utterly mesmerising, but was not moved in the same way by The Yield. I also recently read Melissa Lucashenko’s Too Much Lip, which explored similar themes of generational trauma, racism and a return home to a place tainted with pain. And while it is an uncomfortable reminder, it is also an essential one. It is a history of which I am aware, but the reminder never fails to sting.

the yield tara june winch review

However, it is impossible not to be impacted by the brutality committed by white people against Australia’s indigenous population, and I was ashamed to hear of the pain inflicted on August’s forebears. As a visual person, I find it easier to see words than to hear them, and so I struggled with the new language, as beautiful as it is to hear. I found it quite hard to follow the story, and I think this might have been a result of the audiobook delivery. In this way, the language of the Wiradjuri people is threaded through the story, describing the lessons that ‘s grandfather learnt as a young man and helping him regain a culture and history of which he had been deprived.

the yield tara june winch review the yield tara june winch review

The stories of August and her grandfather, Albert, are told through life and language, linking the present day with the past.ĭispossession is familiar to both, as August fights a mine that will see her grandmother lose her house, and as Albert learns a language that he had lost due to a childhood spent at an Aboriginal Boys Home. Tara June Winch’s acclaimed novel follows the story of August as she returns to her home after the death of her grandfather. The Yield is a book that requires concentration, and so I feel like I didn’t do justice to it by listening to it on audiobook, rather than reading the print version.











The yield tara june winch review