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 A Town Like Alice  

A Town Like Alice
Nevil Shute

House of Stratus, 2002 - 359 pages

average customer review:based on 65 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended




Absolutly the best!

The book I have read once, the movie, I have watched more times than I can count. It is riveting, inspiring and touching. If I could only watch one more movie in my life, this would be it. I won't recount the story, others have done that. What strikes me about this story is the age old triumph over tradedy, and not turning into a sour person when bad things happen. It is inspiring in that aspect even though it is only fiction. Nevil Shute based the story on true people, however they were Dutch instead of Australian. Make your life richer by watching the movie and reading the book.


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A Town Like Alice

An unlikely title---until you read on. A wonderful story. The journey of Jean Paget and Joe Harmann through WWII and then to their meeting again six years later. Jean proves to be a character of strength, courage and compassion as she marches through Malaya with other women and children. This story encompasses life at it's worst and people at their best. This is an adventure of the soul and a journey of the heart. A happy and poignant ending to a lovely book.


Wonderful book which works on many levels

Too few of Nevil Shute's books are in print in this country--fortunately, this is one of the better one.

When an old Scottish man dies, London solicitor Noel Strachan learns that his sole heir is a young woman named Jean Paget. Strachan acts as her trustee, dispensing money as needed under the will, but the old lawyer soon finds himself falling for the young lady. Before Strachan has done more than shown her London's culture, Paget is off to Malaya to repay the village where she stayed during WWII by digging a well. She convinces Strachan to release the money by telling the story (based on real life) of how she and other women were held prisoner by the Japanese, but eventually found refuge in a small village. Before they go there, they encounter a young Australian, Joe Harmon, who is crucified for stealing food for them. When Paget returns to Malaya, she learns that Harmon survived and returned to Australia. Meanwhile, Harmon has gone to England to seek her, having thought she was married when they met in Malaya. They eventually meet up in Australia (Strachan, out of his own love for Jean, has gently attempted to frustrate the meeting). Jean, determined to make her home in Harmon's home area, sets out to make the godforsaken town into "A Town Like Alice"--a modern town like Alice Springs.

It is a fascinating story. But overlooked in every review I read is the role of the old solicitor, Noel Strachan, who finds himself in love with Jean some decades too late, and is unable to serve as a rival to Joe Harmon. He soon surrenders his unexpressed (even to himself) love out of regard for Jean's interest. His unrequited love, lends a poignant note to the book.

There are no villains. Even the dark characters, like the Japanese who crucified Harmon, are seen as human beings doing the best they can. The fact that the acts they do can be terrible do not alter the fact that they are human beings, and they are painted as such.

Harmon and the other Australian characters are not painted as well as the other characters; perhaps Shute, who had only recently emigrated to Australia, was afraid of erring in characterizations.

Still, a fine book that made a great miniseries.


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Wartime Romance and True Heroism - But Flawed by Racism

I sought out this book after watching the Australian television production of the novel, starring Helen Morse and Bryan Brown, on video. The book is not nearly as good. Yes, it's the same riveting plot, and yes, the main female character is a true hero, as well as a heroine. But the main male character is merely a cardboard cutout, and the thoughtless racism in the author's and the characters' attitudes toward the Australian aborigines is horrible. This is one instance where the movie is much better than the book. Watch the five hour video production, instead. It's great.


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reviews: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, page 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13



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