Nine Days (Hardback)
Short Description for Nine Days Multi-generational story about two families and the love affair that brings them together, told in the voices of nine people and the day that changes their life forever.
Full description- Publisher: Sceptre
- Published: 31 January 2013
- Format: Hardback 256 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Contemporary Fiction
- ISBN 13: 9781444763553 ISBN 10: 1444763555
- Sales rank: 24,070
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Reviews for Nine Days
- Top review
more Jordan magic
Nine Days is the third novel by Australian author Toni Jordan and was inspired by a photograph from the State Library of Victoria's Argus newspaper collection of war photographs. Starting in pre-war suburban Melbourne, it tells the story of the working-class Westaway family over the following seventy years. Each of nine characters has a devoted chapter in which they narrate the details of their particular life-changing day: thus Nine Days. As each chapter unfolds, significant details are added to the picture until the reader finally grasps the enormity of events in this family's wartime experience. Jordan gives the reader a cast of characters with real depth, characters to love and despise, characters that exasperate, characters to laugh and sympathise with, as each chapter shows events from their perspective. Jordan's descriptions are strongly evocative of wartime Melbourne and each narrative is invested with an authenticity of language appropriate to that character, giving the story a truly genuine feel. Each narrative is connected not only by the characters but also by other important elements: a lucky shilling, an amethyst pendant, an Arnott's biscuit tin, twins, art and photography. The story incorporates various topics, among them poverty and hunger, abortion and contraception, responsibility, gossip and respectability, bravery and patriotism. A wartime story is bound to include death, so of course there is heartache, grief and sorrow, but there is also love and joy and plenty of humour. I particularly loved the irony of Mrs Hustings stating "it's a shame the world is so full of gossips". I would have loved more of Kip, whose dry humour and smart quips had me from page one. Toni Jordan has lost none of the magic of her previous novels, "Addition" and "Fall Girl", and has, in fact, has surpassed these. What will she do next? I can hardly wait! by Marianne Vincent
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