'I grew up on the world's largest island.' This apparently simple fact is the starting point for Tim Winton's beautiful, evocative and sometimes provocative memoir of how this unique landscape has shaped him and his writing. For over thirty years, Winton has written novels in which the natural world is as much a living presence as any character, and what is true of his work is also. Tim Winton, Island Home: A Landscape Memoir (Hamish Hamilton, 2015) Tim Winton spent his childhood in suburbia and on Australia’s west coast as described in his.
This book reveals two Tim Wintons. There is the wordsmith we feel we already know well through his renowned and evocative fiction, but this book also reveals a person who thinks very deeply about his, and our, relationship with the land. In a series of essays, most of them never published before, Winton muses on nature, on faith, on war and on identity.
The son of a copper, Winton grew up on the outskirts of Perth. At the end of his street was a swamp, ‘a great wild nether-land that drew everything down to it eventually: water, birds, frogs, snakes – and kids of course.’ When he was about 12 he moved to Albany and grew up exploring, surfing and experiencing the wildly beautiful coast and bush areas that have been immortalised in his books.
Although Winton was aware of being vaguely attached to this country, it wasn’t until he spent an extended period living overseas that he began to think deeply about that relationship: ‘My physical response to new places unsettled me.’ In that European landscape he felt a complete stranger, ‘but acknowledging my strangeness made those years abroad easier to digest and enjoy.’
There’s anger in this book, anger at the ill-considered use of the land. To Winton, business leaders ‘seem content to bulldoze beauty and replace it with crap.’ Although essentially a very private person, Winton has been drawn to campaigns to save our natural heritage, most famously becoming the public face for the campaign to save Ningaloo Reef from inappropriate development; to Winton’s surprise and pleasure, the Ningaloo campaign was successful.
Winton comes from a devout religious family and his chapter on the meaning of the scared, ‘Paying Respect’, should be compulsory reading for every Australian; it will change the way you think about a lot of things. In Island Home, we see a Winton passionate about this land and with many profound things to say about it – be ready to be challenged, fascinated and enthralled.
Mark Rubbo is the Managing Director of Readings.
Overview
Tim Winton Island Home
Author Tim Winton
From boyhood, Winton’s relationship with the world around him—rock pools, sea caves, scrub, and swamp—has been as vital as any other connection. Camping in hidden inlets, walking in high rocky desert, diving in reefs, bobbing in the sea between surfing sets, Winton has felt the place seep into him, and learned to see landscape as a living process. In Island Home, Winton brings this landscape—and its influence on the island nation’s identity and art—vividly to life through personal accounts and environmental history.
Wise, rhapsodic, exalted—in language as unexpected and wild as the landscape it describes—Island Home is a brilliant, moving portrait of Australia from one of its finest writers.