Ned Kelly Myth Shattered: Read an extract from Black Snake by Leo Kennedy with Mic Looby

Ned Kelly Myth Shattered: Read an extract from Black Snake by Leo Kennedy with Mic Looby

Start Reading Now

Leo Kennedy’s grandfather, Jimmy, had the saddest eyes Leo had ever seen. Jimmy was barely a year old when his father, Sergeant Michael Kennedy, was killed by Ned Kelly in 1878 during a thwarted police mission to capture and arrest Kelly, and over the course of his lifetime, Jimmy had been forced to watch despairingly as his father’s mission and murder were twisted by history, and as Ned Kelly moved in the public’s imagination from villain to victim, from career criminal to loveable larrikin.

Growing up, Leo too felt the long-reverberating effects of his great-grandfather Michael’s murder. In his small country hometown, his family’s connection to Ned Kelly was well known, and at school Leo was teased for having an ancestor who was by then portrayed in the history books as just another authoritarian enemy of the heroic, Robin Hood-like Kelly.

But after 140 years of the Kelly myth dominating the Australian psyche, Leo Kennedy believes it’s time that the truth is known. Rather than a roguish man of the people who defended his family and local farmers from the wicked authorities, Kelly was in reality the head of a sizeable stock-thieving operation, and the unofficial leader of an unruly band of outlaws who terrorised locals and derided those more downtrodden than themselves.

The true history of that fateful day in 1878, obfuscated through the power of the Kelly myth, also deserves to be known. The Stringybark Creek shoot-out that killed Michael Kennedy and two other policeman is often thought of as taking place after a brutal police manhunt, but eyewitness accounts and autopsy reports show that Kennedy and his companions were caught unawares by the Kelly gang, and were mostly unarmed when they were killed. One slain policeman even had his hands raised in an act of surrender.

So how did the events of that day become so twisted by history? Why were the sacrifices made by Michael Kennedy and Ned Kelly’s other police victims so distorted and diminished? And how did the Kelly myth flourish for over a century, when there is so much historical evidence indicating the exact opposite of what it claims?

Written with Mic Looby, Leo Kennedy’s Black Snake investigates and powerfully challenges the legend of Ned Kelly, and gives voice to those killed by the outlaw. Through chapters that alternate in focus between Michael Kennedy and Kelly himself, Kennedy and Looby masterfully tell the stories of both young men, chronicling their upbringings and tracing the life trajectories that finally brought the policeman and the bushranger into contact in the late 1870s.

Thoroughly researched, Black Snake draws on a wide range of historical sources that serve to present an extremely credible case, and although they are compelling in themselves, this book is much more than just a collection of facts. With its clever use of dialogue and its evocative, scene-setting descriptions (‘It was a Saturday morning in early 1873 in the dusty little town of Doon, a hundred miles north-east of Melbourne. Summer was peaking and the place was baked brown as a biscuit.’), Black Snake reads like a novel, and a truly captivating one at that.

Author Leo Kennedy’s personal connection to the events recounted in Black Snake lends emotion and heart to the book. As Kennedy says, ‘This all began because I cared about the effect the myth had on my grandfather and his family, as well as on my own children,’ and the book ultimately serves as a powerful reminder of the real human consequences that stem from blurring the lines between historical fact and fiction.

An engrossing, important and well-written read, we wholeheartedly recommend Black Snake.

About the authors: 

Leo Kennedy  

Leo Kennedy is the great grandson of Sergeant Michael Kennedy and was raised in the shadow of his great grandfather’s murder. Leo is a member of the Blue Ribbon Foundation, which supports police families and honours the memory of police killed in the line of duty. He lives with his family in Melbourne, where he works as a lawyer. In his spare time he enjoys working on other history, conservation and permaculture projects.

Mic Looby

Mic Looby is a writer, editor and illustrator. He is the author of the novel Paradise Updated, a co-creator of six children’s books, and a scriptwriter for television including the ABC’s award-winning natural history documentary The Great Australian Fly. A former columnist for The Big Issue magazine, Mic was also a senior digital wordsmith at The Age for many years, and a Lonely Planet guidebook writer at large. A father of two, Mic lives in Melbourne with his family and other wildlife.

Purchase a copy of Black Snake here 

Related Articles

Hilarious Huggabie Falls Finale: Read an extract from The Utterly Indescribable Thing that Happened in Huggabie Falls by Adam Cece

Kids & Ya

1 May 2019

Hilarious Huggabie Falls Finale: Read an extract from The Utterly Indescribable Thing that Happened in Huggabie Falls by Adam Cece

Compelling True Crime: Read an extract from Murder on Easey Street by Helen Thomas

News

15 March 2019

Compelling True Crime: Read an extract from Murder on Easey Street by Helen Thomas

    Hilarious, Honest, and Inspiring: Read an extract from Thirty Thousand Bottles of Wine and a Pig Called Helga by Todd Alexander

    News

    15 March 2019

    Hilarious, Honest, and Inspiring: Read an extract from Thirty Thousand Bottles of Wine and a Pig Called Helga by Todd Alexander

      Deeply Moving and Life-Affirming: Read an extract from The Things We cannot Say by Kelly Rimmer

      News

      8 March 2019

      Deeply Moving and Life-Affirming: Read an extract from The Things We cannot Say by Kelly Rimmer

        Captivating, Sparkling Gem: Read a sample chapter from Star-Crossed by Minnie Darke

        News

        6 March 2019

        Captivating, Sparkling Gem: Read a sample chapter from Star-Crossed by Minnie Darke

          Engrossing Tale of Light VS Dark: Read an extract from Crucible by James Rollins

          News

          15 February 2019

          Engrossing Tale of Light VS Dark: Read an extract from Crucible by James Rollins

            Captivating and Breathtaking: Read an extract from Driving into the Sun by Marcella Polain

            News

            15 February 2019

            Captivating and Breathtaking: Read an extract from Driving into the Sun by Marcella Polain

              Magical Experience: Read an extract from The House of Second Chances by Esther Campion

              News

              15 February 2019

              Magical Experience: Read an extract from The House of Second Chances by Esther Campion

                Turning Back Time: Read an extract from The Lost Girls by Jennifer Spence

                News

                13 February 2019

                Turning Back Time: Read an extract from The Lost Girls by Jennifer Spence

                  Battle of Emotions: Read an extract from We Must Be Brave by Frances Liardet

                  News

                  8 February 2019

                  Battle of Emotions: Read an extract from We Must Be Brave by Frances Liardet

                    Publisher details

                    Black Snake
                    Authors
                    Leo Kennedy, Mic Looby
                    Publisher
                    Affirm Press
                    Genre
                    Non Fiction
                    Released
                    09 October, 2018
                    ISBN
                    9781925584950

                    Synopsis

                    The story of Ned Kelly is also the untold story of Michael Kennedy, the police sergeant slain and robbed by the outlaw 140 years ago. Both Kennedy and Kelly were Irish immigrants struggling to make their way in the new colonies of Australia - Kennedy was committed to defending the law, while Kelly was hell-bent on breaking it. When their paths crossed one fateful day at Stringybark Creek, it triggered the end for one and the beginning of an incredible myth about the other.Author Leo Kennedy is the great grandson of Sergeant Michael Kennedy. He was raised in the shadow of his great grandfather's murder. He witnessed the deep psychological wounds inflicted on successive generations of his family - and the families of other victims - as the Ned Kelly myth grew around them and the sacrifice of their loved ones was forgotten. Leo himself was nicknamed 'Red Ned' at school and taunted for being on the wrong side of Australian history.Now, for the first time and in brilliant prose that brings these historical episodes to life, Black Snake challenges the legend of Ned Kelly. Instead of celebrating an heroic man of the people, it gives voice to the victims of a merciless gang of outlaws. This is a captivating true story, gleaned from meticulous research and family history, of two men from similar backgrounds whose legacies were distorted by history.
                    Leo Kennedy
                    About the author

                    Leo Kennedy

                    Leo Kennedy is the great grandson of Sergeant Michael Kennedy and was raised in the shadow of his great grandfather's murder. Leo is a member of the Blue Ribbon Foundation, which supports police families and honours the memory of police killed in the line of duty. He lives with his family in Melbourne, where he works as a lawyer. In his spare time he enjoys working on other history, conservation and permaculture projects.

                    Books by Leo Kennedy

                    COMMENTS

                    Leave a Reply

                    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

                    1. Stuart Dawson says:

                      This is a compelling and well-written book that for the first time reveals the impact of the Kelly gang’s police murders on the police families and their descendants. Sent to arrest what was then thought to be just the two Kelly brothers Ned and Dan, three of the four police party were killed by ambush. For over 100 years the police have been vilified by a long line of Kelly enthusiasts. Those murdered were in fact greatly admired by the communities they served at great personal risk. At long last their side of the story is being told. The book has just been re-released in paperback with minor revisions (July 2019). It is a terrific read that shatters many illusions which have been propped up by a longstanding naïve acceptance of Ned Kelly’s Jerilderie Letter claims, most of which are demonstrably false. (For the demolition of many of Kelly’s claims, see the appendix in Doug Morrissey’s “Ned Kelly: A Lawless Life”). I commend “Black Snake” to all with an interest in correcting a major myth that has wrongly been fostered and perpetuated in Australian history. Kelly was never idolised in his day. This book shows why.