#Novella To the Islands

- Author: Randolph Stow
- Title: To the Islands (126 pg) 1958
- Genre: novella
- Australian TBR List
- #AusReadingMonth23 @ This Reading Life (Brona’s Books)
- #NovNov @746books (Cathy)
- PS: Love the cover!
Quickscan:
- Stephen Heriot, an elderly, careworn, and disillusioned Anglican missionary
- who abandons his mission when he mistakenly believes
- he has accidentally killed one of his Aboriginal charges
- in a not entirely unprovoked confrontation.
- Heriot seeks redemption….through sacrifice.
Good news:
- Randolph Stow’s book introduced me to a
- area of Australia that I knew very little about
- Kimberley, Western Australia
- ….just a beauttiful landscape.
- Randolph Stow’s strongest point is
- his descriptions of the land, fauna and flora.
- The author was able to link some elements
- of the landscape and Aboriginal art that
- eleveated his prose.
- I’ve included the quotes and images that impressed me the most.

Bad news:
- I can emphathize with readers who find the
- …book boring or completely give up and mark it DNF.
- The “hook” or action that should nudge the read
- to continue did not come in the first 3 chapters.
- My eyes glazed over while reading the names of
- 38 aboriginal characters
- during the first 3 chapters
- List included for anyone who wants to read the book
- …just take the names as they come because the book does get better!

The Rainbow Serpent (lumiri)
“Can the lumiri take you to the sky?” (ch 4)
Good news:
- Randolph Stow jolts the read in chapter 4 with the 1st plot point.
- The chapter was absolutely riviting!! (end of act 1 of 2 act plot)
- This chapter “saved” the book for me
- ….now I’m going to keep reading and follow Heriot’s journey
- 1st plot point: = Entering a new world …the bush of Kimberley.
- Heriot enters the main conflict – fighting his own demons
- He can’t turn around and re-enter his normal world.
- He can only move forward…to the ultimate end.
- Heriot crosses his personal Rubicon.

“That pool, waterhole, looks like a pool to bring a man back to life.” (ch 5)
Personal:
- I must admit that I do not consider this a masterpiece.
- Read Patrick White’s Voss… now that is the standard of a masterpiece.
- An author only improves with age and I did enjoy Stow’s writing style.
- I will try one of Stow’s other books: Tourmaline and hope to see an improvement.
- Still the character of Stephen Heriot lingers in my mind.
- The reknowned professor, and writer of biology and
- neurology at Stanford University Robert Sapolsky says:
- “We are machines...”
- …exceptional in our ability to perceive our own experiences and
- feel emotions about them.
- It is pointless to hate a machine for its failures.

Baobab trees grow in many parts of the Kimberley
Notes:
1. Explain the title To the Islands:
- The Anglican missionary Heriot has a death wish.
- In Australia’s northwest desert the old man
- searches for “the islands” of the Aboriginal dead.
- “I’m going to a place no one comes home from.” (ch 4)
2. What is the predominant element in the story?
- Missionary’s goal is to save souls of other men
- …but Heriot struggles to save his own.
3. Who is the single main character about?
- Stephen Heriot, missionary –
- Rocky dignity, crumbling cliff, a foundation
- Headstrong, self-righteous, authoritarian,
- unwilling to acknowledge his own flaws:
- “…a man who goes round spreading civilization with a stock-whip…” (ch 1)
4. How does the author handle characterization?
- The best description of Heriot was not by Randolph Stow.
- I found the words in the introduction by Bernadette Brennen so vivd:
- “The momumental, ‘rocklike’ Heriot is physcally and spiritually a
- …crumbling cliff.”
5. What were the sentences that impressed you the most?
- “…We drive people to it,’ he said. ‘
- The white men at the massacre thought they were protecting property,
- and Mr Heriot thought he was protecting the mission.
- Things we asked them to protect.
- We can pay reparations to people we hurt in our wars,
- but we don’t ever quite pay back the people we force to hurt them.” (ch 4)
Does Heriot act out of free will….or not?
Or is he just a machine?

Pandanus Palm
Members of the Mission:
- Mabel
- Djimbulangari
- Arthur
- Garang
- Djediben (middle-age, Rex’s mother)
- Rex
- Ruth
- Michael
- Justin
- Edgar
- Richard
- Dambena
- Nambal
- Stephen
- Harrie
- Maudie
- Midjel
- Wunda
- Ganmeri
- Grimadada
- Esther Margaret
- Ella
- Wandalo
- Galumba
- Galjumbu
- Michael
- Dambena
- Nambal
- Gregory
- Nalun
- Jenny
- Edward
- Normie
- Matthew
- Mummy Dido (ch 4)
- Nalida (ch 7)
- Alunggu (ch 7)
- Paul (ch 7)

Water lillies of Marglu Billabong East Kimberley
Book is partially based on Ernest Richard Bulmer Gribble (1868 – 1957) was an Australian missionary. Though considered to be temperamentally unsuited to his vocation, he became a strong advocate for better treatment of Australian Aboriginal people.


wow, yes, that’s A LOT of names!! And for a novella!
Less is more!
I didn’t realise this one was loosely based on a real person – good to know. I’ve only read a children’s book by Stow and a bio.
I’ll try his Tourmaline (1963) next year.
BTW I added my review of Thea Astley’s book
to the comments on your master list blogpost.