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  • Published: 1 March 2007
  • ISBN: 9781741665369
  • Imprint: Random House Australia
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 384
  • RRP: $29.99

Provenance





An evocative and engaging novel of love, loss and the collision of cultures.

An evocative and engaging novel of love, loss and the collision of cultures.

Growing up in an Italian family in 1950s Queensland, Rafaela longs to move to Melbourne and start her own life. When she finally seizes her chance, floodwaters halt her train's progress south, and a beautiful young Sikh scientist named Chanchal captures her heart. While both their families search for their wayward children, Rafi and Chanchal forge ahead with their life together, living briefly in isolation and bliss on a farm, unaware that their story is travelling . . .

Set against the stifling heat of the Queensland canefields, the lush farmland of northern New South Wales and the bustle of Melbourne in the early 1960s, Chanchal's and Rafi's stories unfold and intersect over the following years, as their chance encounter becomes a story of two countries on the cusp of modernity.

Provenance is an accomplished and original novel that explores colour and cultural difference at a moment in India and Australia's post-Independence and post-war history when the West was keen, as one character puts it, to get on with the sexy part of the twentieth century.

  • Published: 1 March 2007
  • ISBN: 9781741665369
  • Imprint: Random House Australia
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 384
  • RRP: $29.99

About the author

Jane Messer

Jane Messer convenes the postgraduate creative writing program at Macquarie University's Department of English. She lives in Sydney.

Praise for Provenance

Messer shows her mastery of eroticism's two now almost-forgotten secrets: first prolong the courtship; and second, do the sex discreetly, leaving the rest to the reader's imagination. ... the lovers come across as warm and true . . . Provenance is romantic in the best sense of the word.

Barry Oakley, The Sydney Morning Herald

When does a book become a portrait containing colour, beauty and substance? The answer is when it is written eloquently and contains depth, meaning and description.

John Morrow, The Armidale Express

In a word: Engrossing

Townsville Bulletin

Messer's prose is deceptively simple. With great economy, she paints a detailed picture of the complexities of duty, opportunities and family life in the fifties. A warm tale of cross-cultural love.

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