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The Colour | 
| Author: Rose Tremain Publisher: Vintage Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy Used: £0.01 You Save: £7.98 (100%)
New (30) Used (77) Collectible (1) from £0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 7914
Media: Paperback Edition: New Ed Pages: 384 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 1.1
ISBN: 0099425157 EAN: 9780099425151 ASIN: 0099425157
Publication Date: July 3, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Good Solid Condition Paperback. May contain some creasing/scuffing to cover and some tanning to pages. But otherwise will be of very good quality. FAST DISPATCH.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review Rose Tremain has long been one of the most vigorous and imaginative of novelists; her sweeping narratives (set against the most vividly realised of canvases) have made her books as dramatic and assured as anything being written today. The Colour represents a further burnishing of her considerable talents; it is a powerful drama of greed and aspiration set in the New Zealand Gold Rush of the mid-19th Century. Tremain's protagonists are Harriet and Joseph Baxter, who (along with Joseph's mother) leave England for the promise of the new world that New Zealand represents. Needless to say, their relocation comes with many attendant (and nigh-insoluble) problems. But their struggle against the land continues apace until Joseph discovers gold in a nearby creek and ill-advisedly conceals the find from his mother and his wife. Gold fever takes an all-consuming grip upon him, and he leaves the family-owned farm to traverse the gold fields of the Southern Alps. There he will find a strange fate: one that affects those he has left behind as well as him. As a study of human nature in extremis, this could well be Tremain's most impressive book. Lacking the elegant stylishness of Restoration, The Colour grants us a fastidiously rendered picture of life lived at the sharp edge. And while her characters are confronted with terrifying decisions that few of us are ever likely to encounter, Tremain's narrative gifts make it easy to identify with the decisions (both wise and catastrophic) that her characters take. The sense of period is forcefully conveyed, and while this is not as ingratiating a read as such earlier Tremain books as The Swimming Pool Season, her new level of ambition makes it perhaps the author's most important book yet. --Barry Forshaw
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| Customer Reviews: Read 9 more reviews...
a beautiful work.......... August 2, 2008
I read this book on holiday, so was able to relax and fully appreciate Tremains subtle yet dramatic writing. Having never read her books before, I am now a convert and so glad I picked up this book which held me from paged first to last with ease. A beautifully written and compelling story.
excellent read November 22, 2007 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I loved this engrossing historical novel - highly reccomended. If you can do please read 'Music and Silence' by the same author - absolutely outstanding.
Panning for gold and being disappointed. March 4, 2007 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
I have previously read and loved "Restoration" by Rose Tremain. The main character was incredible; flawed and yet I cared so much what happened in his life. This book was SO different. Like other reviewers, I did not know there had been a gold rush in New Zealand, so that part of the story was interesting, as was the insight into the world and imagination of the Maori nanny. However, I did not like any of the characters. There was nothing much to admire about them and their motives for reacting in certain ways were at times unconvincing. All in all I found this book cold and sadly lacking. At the book's most depressing moments, and there were quite a few of those, I found myself like the characters, cold and miserable, searching for a glimmer of gold which would make it all worthwhile. Sadly I found none. Maybe Rose should be given credit for her ability to make us feel as her characters feel, but I would rather be warmed and entertained by a book.
Descriptive writing November 24, 2006 9 out of 10 found this review helpful
Set in the New Zealand Gold Rush of the mid-19th century Harriet and Joseph Baxter, along with Joseph's mother, leave England for the promise of the new world that New Zealand represents. Their new home comes with incredible problems and hardships. Their struggle against the land continues until one day Joseph discovers gold in their nearby creek and hides the find from his mother and his wife. Gold fever takes grip of him, and he leaves the family-owned farm and journeys to the gold fields of the Southern Alps. Left alone with his mother Harriet discovers that Joseph had found a little gold on their land. When Joseph's mother dies Harriet bravely decides to cross the mountains in an attempt to find her husband. But she isn't prepared for at the squalor and confusion at the gold-diggings. Tremain has written a novel that is full of beautifully written prose and engaging characters. It's a tale of greed and hope amongst people who have everything to gain and nothing to lose.
Tedious characters and insufficient plot. May 28, 2006 8 out of 11 found this review helpful
What a disappointment. When you strip away some of the eloquent prose you are left with characters that do not engage you on any level.The main male character was so dull and such a loser you felt he deserved everything that happened to him. The only time I felt any sympathy for him was when he embarked on an abusive and homosexual relationship with a young, manipulative man rather than endure any more loneliness. The plot is sparse and in the main predictable, though coupled with one or two inexplicable courses of action by the central characters.Why would you put yourself through great hardship to track a husband you despise to tell him his elderly mother had died! This novel needed humour, pace and action! Instead you were left with characters you did not care about and pages of beautifully written prose which ultimately became tedious.
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