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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A fantastic book with inspiring characters, July 5 2005
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This review is from: Four Fires (Mass Market Paperback)
This has become one of my favourite books. It is more than just the story of a poor family. It shows us the prejudices that live inside even the most honourable of people. It shows that strength of character and doing what is right can be the biggest challenge of all. These characters face incredible obstacles and get help from where they least expect it and turned away by people who should help them. It allows you a glimpse of the complex inner workings of a society as experienced by the characters. Ranks right up there with Bryce Courtneay's "Power of One". Excellent read! I couldn't put it down and I was sad when it was over.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars What can I say? Another brilliant book., April 4 2004
By 
yh tac (Melbourne, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Four Fires (Audio Cassette)
I can't quite work out why I like this book so much. All it does is follow the life of one poor Catholic Australian family. Sounds boring, right?

That's what I thought, even after I read it. But the truth is, this book is really amazing. One of the great things about it is the way it covers so many issues from the time.

It follows the lives of Sarah, Mike, Bozo and Mole Maloney. Even thoough each of them was born to the same mother from different fathers, they are a very tight-knit family. They start off as the lowest of the low, the town's garbage collectors. Each of them go on to have unusual lives which has the effect of getting the Maloney name out of the dust.

Sarah becomes the first person to be admitted to university while pregnant, Mike becomes a fashion designer (a great achievement for Australia, it being the backwards hole that it was in those days), Bozo becomes an Olympic boxer (Bryce Courtenay does seem to love boxing, doesn't he?) and he also enlarges the garbage business to become one of the largest transport companies in Australia.

The story is told through the eyes of the second-to-last child, Mole. Alone of the siblings, Mole doesn't seem to have any unusual talent, until Tommy (the husband of his mother but not his father) comes out of jail and starts teaching him about the bush. I think Mole is a very confusing character, because he doesn't seem to have the same drive and ambition of his brothers and sisters, and because of this everything he does seems directionless. To me, anyway. He is Tommy's sole confident, and Tommy tells him all about the terrible time he had when he was fighting in the war. He was the sole survivor from a POW camp, called Sandakan, in Borneo.

For some strange, unknown reason, this causes Mole to join the army, and to tell any more would spoil the ending, so I won't. I just don't see why, that's all.

Anyway, this book is great, everyone should read it, etc. etc. It's a really great book.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Four Fires, Sep 21 2009
By 
Mary Ann Camp - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Four Fires (Hardcover)
Bryce Curtenay has a way to take you away and live with the people he is writing about, I have reread The Potato Factory and Tomma and Hawk and much to my delight I have ordered Tandia, it's coming in the mail and can't get here fast enough.
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Four Fires
Four Fires by Bryce Courtenay (Hardcover - Dec 2 2001)
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