Perfect for Book Club: Reading Notes for Fanatic Heart by Thomas Keneally

Perfect for Book Club: Reading Notes for Fanatic Heart by Thomas Keneally

A retelling of the life and exploits of Irish patriot John Mitchel, with a particular focus on his time in exile on Van Diemen’s Land, Fanatic Heart will captivate readers and make for a lively book club discussion.

  • Why are you drawn to historical fiction, and what are the major qualities of successful historical fiction? Do these novels ever lead you to go to the source and read the pertinent non-fiction?
  • What responsibility to the original story does an author carry when they choose a real person as the lead actor in their fiction?
  • The fabled Irish patriot, John Mitchel, is an extraordinary character. He lived a very large, and complicated life. In his author’s note, Tom Keneally alludes to some of the difficulties of tackling a character whose opinions on subjects as large as enfranchisement and slavery differ greatly from that of the author. How well has he carried that off?
  • Jenny Mitchel followed her husband from Ireland to Van Diemen’s Land to North America and back to Ireland. Travelling with a growing family. It is almost impossible to imagine how challenging that must have been. Can you put yourself in her place?
  • What do you think of Mitchel’s theory that the farmers of Ireland, who had no access to land ownership or an independent income, were worse off than the slaves of North America?
  • It was the liberation of Ireland, an Irish outcome, that drove all of Mitchel’s activities, regardless of which country he was residing in. Is this a fervour you can sympathise with? Does it ameliorate some of his behaviours and beliefs?
  • Van Diemen’s Land, for deposited convicts, is described in an almost idyllic way in Fanatic Heart. Does this fit with your former ideas of life for convicts in Van Diemen’s Land?

Buy a copy of Fanatic Heart here.

Reviews

A Gripping Historical: Read an Extract from Fanatic Heart by Thomas Keneally

Review | Extract

1 November 2022

A Gripping Historical: Read an Extract from Fanatic Heart by Thomas Keneally

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      Publisher details

      Fanatic Heart
      Author
      Thomas Keneally
      Publisher
      Penguin
      Genre
      Fiction
      Released
      01 November, 2022
      ISBN
      9780143777816

      Synopsis

      A retelling of the life and exploits of Irish patriot John Mitchel, with a particular focus on his time in exile on Van Diemen’s Land.

      John Mitchel, Irishman, lawyer, journalist, activist and politician, is a complex character. Charged with treason in Ireland and tried by an English judge he was snuck off mainland Ireland on the day he was charged to avoid a breakout and rebellion. He was transported initially to Bermuda, then to South Africa and then to Van Diemen’s Land where as an Irishman he was supported by many and given a ticket of leave. He soon became a farmer and activist and was eventually secreted out of Australia to the USA, where it was felt he could be more active for the Irish cause.

      A powerful voice and force for Irish nationalism who also found himself, after landing in the US, supporting the ownership of slaves. This was partly driven by living through the Irish famine. He believed Irish workers were worse off than slaves, neither fed or paid in currency for their work. And partly seeing the absolute adherence to capitalism and the pursuit of wealth in New York. People were dying in horrific industrial and transport accidents in front of those getting wealthy and no heed was paid.

      To support her husband through all the charges against him, Jenny Mitchel, when she too could have been punished for airing her beliefs on Irish nationalism, publicly supported his campaigns. She also packed up her many children and followed her prisoner and convict husband to a number of different continents to continue to support her husband and their beliefs.

      Tom, a proud Irishman and descendant of convicts on his maternal and paternal sides, disagrees with many of Mitchel’s beliefs and behaviours and has to wrestle with these conflicts in the novel. As ever, Tom Keneally surprises readers and takes on new and challenging characters and ideas.

      Thomas Keneally
      About the author

      Thomas Keneally

      Thomas Keneally was born in 1935 in country New South Wales to Irish Catholic parents. As a child he dreamed of becoming a famous sportsman. In 1958 he entered the seminary but left in 1960 before being ordained. He had a number of different jobs and became for a time a schoolteacher.Keneally published his first book The Place at Whitton in 1964. He won the Miles Franklin Award in consecutive years for his novels Bring Larks and Heroes (1967) and Three Cheers for the Paraclete(1968). He was shortlisted for the Booker Prize three times before being the first Australian ever to win it, in 1982, for Schindler’s Ark. This book formed the basis of Steven Spielberg’s Oscar Award-winning film Schindler’s List. His novel The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith was made into a film by Fred Schepisi. The author played a cameo role.Thomas Keneally has written over thirty books, both fiction and non-fiction, as well as plays and essays. He is an ardent Republican and was the founding chairman of the Australian Republican Movement. In 1983, Keneally became a member of The Order of Australia and in 1997 was named as an Australian Living Treasure.

      Books by Thomas Keneally

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