Grenville masterfully creates three distinct and entirely
believable worlds [and] cranks up the tension to breathtaking levels.
Sparkles with wit, wonderful language and absolutely gorgeous
scenic descriptions. . . . Funny, devastating, tragic and beautiful, from a
writer of enormous talent.
Edmonton Journal on The Secret River
An outstanding study of cultures in collision. . . . A
chilling, meticulous account of the sorrows and evils of colonialism.
The Guardian on The Secret River
[The Lieutenant] glows with life: imaginative in its recreations,
respectful of what cannot be imagined, and thoughtful in its interrogation of
the past.
The Lieutenant is also Grenvilles most intellectually
sophisticated novel to date
Age
Another dazzling and disturbing achievement.
Grenvilles descriptions of the
encounters between Rooke and the Gadigal, especially a young girl called Tagaran,
are wonderfully shimmering and authentic.
The Lieutenant is a gripping,
fastidiously written tale and I couldnt put it down.
Weekend Herald
Dry, exact and lush all at once, this book is Grenville at her best.
West Australian
Grenvilles craft is, as always, astounding, deftly melding subject and
metaphor, story and image
The Lieutenant succeeds beautifully.
Canberra Times (Pick of the crop for 2008)