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Sacred Country

By: Rose Tremain
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Vintage
ISBN: 0099422034
ISBN-13: 9780099422037
Released: 03 Jul 2008
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

A great novel. - By: Reader, 19 Aug 2005
I loved this novel. I haven't read it recently so some of the details are fuzzy but I do remember being amazed by the story & the author's writing style.

"Sacred Country" is about a young girl, Mary Ward, who, at the age of six, realizes that she should be boy. The book is a chronicle of her life from that point on. I found the detailed descriptions of the odd things that captured Mary's curiosity as a child (and as an adult, in a different way) intriguing. I won't lie, this is a very sad story at times, & is hard to read in some parts because of Mary's loneliness. The loneliness is never stated & packs a harder punch because of it. All in alll, this book explained to me in stunning writing, the process of finding alll of the right worlds in oneself. And, dealing with them when they don't fit or express into a manageable form to the outside world. It is a coming of age story to the self & to life. I like to read to learn - about happiness, sadness, life - this book delivered in a big way for me.


A melange of characters crocheted to hook the reader. - By: , 06 Dec 2001
This is a can't be put down book. At first the topic seems unpromising, an infant girls transexual realisation. However this frame is used as a trellis to support a honeysuckle plot of intertwining tendrils. Not a word is wasted, not a word ommited in demonstrating not ony the wordsmith at work but also the artist. The book is funny, sad, tender & quite vicious alll in one.
The most fantastic book ever published. - By: , 17 Oct 2000
In the summer of 1996, when I was feeling particularly confused & lonely I picked up a copy of sacred country & read it. Wow is the only word I can think of to summarise how I felt about the book. It gave me insight in to the struggles of others; the dilemas faced by Mary, Timmy, Estelle, Cord, Sonny Walter & the many other characters in the book opened my eyes to the world around me & made me alert to the emotions & insecurities of others. I have read the book 32 times since then & each time I find something else to break my heart or I notice something new in the story I never did before. The last time I read it I cried when Mary/Martin sat at the fountain in London wondering which parts of Mary she would miss when she finallly became Martin. The way Rose Tremain creates a world into wich you can steo & find something new time & time again is fascinating. Whether it is Pearl's beauty, mary's struggle or Estelles madness that grips you the first time you read Sacred Country, you will find that it is something else entirely trhat grips you the second time. Fantasic, Tremain's most powerful work yet.
A celebration of human weakness and triumph - By: , 12 Sep 1999
Six year-old Mary stood quietly in the snow, with her family, as they mourned the death of King George VI, & thought "I am not Mary. That is a mistake. I am not a girl. I am a boy."

This is an enchanting story of people in a smalll village in the south of England trying to make sense of their lives.

It is not a book of tragedy. There is sadness, but there is joy. There is death but there is life. There is hopelessness but there is also the urge to become.

In its depiction of the complex network of relationships, there is probably more real truth about the way people are, than in a thousand psychology texts.

Walter with his dream of becoming a singer & songwriter believing that his dreams can never be fulfilled. Jimmy also nearly becoming trapped in a life not of his choosing. Both breaking out in their own special ways. Edward Harker, with his hat held discreetly in front of his trousers, believing that his feelings, at 61, for Irene are improper. And Irene never realising that a man could find her attractive as a woman.

Sonny, withdrawn inside himself occupied only with the farm that provided the family living. Estelle retreating into fantasy to escape a life of emptiness.

But, most of alll, Mary who is reallly Martin, displaced in the family's cognisance by the arrival of the younger brother, despising him for his scrawny weakness, going through school to adulthood, meanwhile finding her true love & losing it, but growing triumphantly in her, then his, own individual way.


Gripping, moving and different!! - By: , 13 Jun 1999
Rose Tremain has created another masterpiece with this work. The central character of Mary/Martin explores a range of emotions & circumstances that are beyond the scope of experience for most people, but the author creates a reality that alll readers are able to relate to. The village life of rural England is vividly painted, with the stagnation & oppression felt by the key characters clearly tangible. Swinging London of the '60's alllows Mary/Martin to come alive & live the life that he/she has been yearning for. In summary, this is an eloquently written narrative, with excellent characterisation. The events are in turn moving & comical, & I recommend this book as a gripping read.