True History of the Kelly Gang: A Novel

by Peter Carey
True History of the Kelly Gang: A Novel
published
December 4th 2001 (first published 2000) by Vintage
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binding
Paperback, 384 pages

literary awards
2001 Booker Prize Winner; 2002 IMPAC Dublin Award Nominee

isbn
0375724672   (isbn13: 9780375724671)

description
"What is it about we Australians, eh?" demands a schoolteacher near the end of Peter Carey's True History of the Kelly Gang. "Do...more





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Sarah
06/10/07

Read in June, 2007
If, like me, you don't know anything about Ned Kelly when you start this book, don't be scared off by the first two pages with the killer robot. That will all become clear later. Really, between the cover design, the killer robot, and the difficult style, I thought I was going to hate this book. Halfway through it, I realized I was totally in love with it. It was this paragraph that really did it for me:

We thought you doomed and rooned the minute you walked out past the chook house and W...more
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Nick
Nick rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
04/28/08

bookshelves: fiction, history
Read in April, 2003
I love a good Peter Carey book: original and fascinating stories, lusciously descriptive prose and characters bursting with wit, drive and vitality. This, I felt, was not one. Okay, by most people's standards it is excellent. My copy tells me that it won the 2001 Booker Prize, so they all thought it was great. Perhaps my expectations are too high. Oscar and Lucinda was fantastic, but not as good as Illywacker. Similarly, 'Kelly Gang' is good, but not as good as 'My Life as a Fake' - to my mind ...more
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Debbie
Debbie rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
01/30/08

bookshelves: 2005, historical-fiction, outlaws
Read in January, 2005
I wasn't sure I was going to like this book; in fact, I was pretty sure I was going to hate it. I flipped through it before sitting down to read it and noticed the lack of punctuation and the weak grammar. Then, I actually started reading it and could barely put the book down. While the "True History" is anything but, Carey does a magnificent job capturing the voice of Ned Kelly, the Australian bushranger who later one became a national hero despite his criminal leanings. Kelly is depi...more
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Christy
Christy rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
08/13/08

Read in August, 2008
Written in the words of the infamous bushranger and outlaw Ned Kelly – Australia’s Jesse James/ Robin Hood – the True History of the Kelly Gang is a novel which accounts Kelly’s life from impoverished childhood to inevitable capture and execution. Kelly’s story centers on the unfairness and corruption of the nineteenth century Australian legal system, and the discriminations against the poor and the Irish (of which Kelly was both). Through it all, Ned Kelly’s motivations are for jus...more
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Leif Erik
bookshelves: aussie-lit, booker
Read in February, 2008
This is written as an memoir (difference between an autobiography & a memoir; memoirs don't have indexes) Ned Kelly is setting down for an infant daughter he will never see. Kind of poignant actually. Carey wrote this in a nineteenth century Australian vernacular. Kind of like Trainspotting. Not for everyone. Normally I'd find it annoying and pretentious, but Carey makes it work. That alone probably merits his Booker. The story by itself is amazing. Even in his own words Kelly clear...more
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Christie
Christie rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
01/03/08

bookshelves: non-fiction-pleasure-reading
recommends it for: People who enjoy dialects and history buffs
This book struck me as hillarious at first. It reads like a novel but it is clearly based in historical fact. The fact that it also reads like a low language proficient diary makes in intriguing to watch the character's language and literacy skills expand over his lifetime. What a challenge to read! And yet, who couldn't love a book that uses the word "adjectival" every other word. Seriously, I think it would have only been a novella if we hadn't had that one word. Three words describe...more
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Gavin
07/04/08

Once you get used to the style (it's all written as per a letter of Ned Kelly) this is a tremendous read. It concerns an interesting period in Australian history too and realy does give a good idea of what life was like back when Australia was a real frontier.
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Rachel
Rachel rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
10/23/08

Read in October, 2008
I actually clapped my hands with delight when I picked up this one -- a truly strange narrative, which is always a huge plus in the Book-of-Rachel. It's been a while since I picked up anything quite this satisfyingly weird.

I didn't know anything about the historic Ned Kelly going into this, but it turned out to be in many ways just a good old fashioned outlaw story, where the outlaw is a hero -- stealing from the rich to feed the poor. Peter Carey is a genius, rendering Ned Kelly's voice a...more
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Quill
Quill rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
08/13/07

Read in June, 2007
recommends it for: People who love language.
The story of Ned Kelly and his gang is the stuff of legend, and this book is particularly great at getting to the soul of the legend. I love the language of the book, it's got some downright poetic descriptions. Read it just for the language.

But, I found the story to be kind of personally indulgent and full of excuses. I'm upset to think that way, because I feel a bit of middle-class guilt about being unwilling to forgive the Ned Kelly of this novel for blaming his actions on his extreme pov...more
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Amy
05/02/08

bookshelves: historical-fiction, read-in-2007
Read in June, 2007
I wanted to read this book because it won the Booker Prize, not necessarily that I thought I would be that interested in the subject. Written from the point of view of the 19th century Australian outlaw Ned Kelly, it's basically a fictionalized version of his life, based on true facts. It felt like I was reading about the American Old West, but every once in awhile you're reminded that it is actually Australian history you're reading about.

I was really drawn in by the story of Kelly's li...more
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Kelly
Kelly is currently reading it
11/21/08

bookshelves: currently-reading
Found this book in a pile on the sidewalk roaming Montreal today! Hungry for a good read and will gobble this one up.
From the same pile I aslo got Reading Lolita In Terhran and
A northern Light in what apprears to be bran spankin new condition. I love Montreal!
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Matt
Matt rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
07/16/08

bookshelves: 2008
Read in July, 2008
The kind of book that has you flipping to the map reproduced on the back inlay to track the narative. Ned Kelly is an Australian national icon, like a combination of Robin Hood and Jesse James, and the book reads like a Western--but you follow the action ostensibly through Ned's own words. I didn't even care that the real 'gang' billed in the title doesn't even kick in until about page 230.

Parts of the first section of the book has a whiff of Angela's Ashes meets The Searchers,...more
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Felicity
Felicity rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
04/30/07

bookshelves: australia, booker-winners, fiction, novel
Read in January, 2006
A historical novel in the form of the rough and rustic memoir of real 19th century Australian outlaw Ned Kelly. Sometimes bleak, sometimes funny; the story of the first and second generation of poor Irish settlers in Australia.

Quote: "They arrived in broken cart & drays they was of that type THE BENALLA ENSIGN named the most frightful class of people they couldnt afford to leave their cows & pigs but they done so because we was them and they was us and we had showed the world wh...more
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Don
Don rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
05/25/08

Read in March, 2008
Ned Kelly, a generation removed from his petty criminal forebears transported to Australia by the grotesque British justice system of the 18th century, turns himself into a legendary outlaw destined to be played by Mick Jagger in a movie. This book is an excellent fictionalization of the hardships created by economic irrationality and the crass class discrimination practiced by the petty functionaries who ruled Australia during Kelly's life. Gritty, poignant and ultimately tragic, it gives ins...more
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Alan
Alan rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
05/30/08

Read in May, 2008
I've reviewed his work before, but that was long ago. This more recent novel shows that Peter Carey has only grown in his craft.

This is as close as we're ever going to come to a true history of Ned Kelly, the misunderstood Robin Hood of Australian legend. I was very impressed with Carey's command of the language - I couldn't say whether it was 100% accurate, but the dialect he used to evoke Kelly's voice was vi...more
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Abigail
Abigail rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
06/17/08

recommended to Abigail by: DMO
Peter Carey narrates and enriches the Ned Kelly legend in this moving, lyric novel of the Australian frontier. The story is told as a letter from Kelly to his unborn daughter, and the power of the narrative voice is impressive yet unassuming. Despite Carey’s rigorous approach to style (no commas!) the book does not read as merely the strutting of an agile wordsmith but instead the creation of an actual and honest voice. I’m sometimes wary of historical fiction but this book is the bloody ...more
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Ditto
Ditto rated it: 2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars
04/15/08

cerita dikisahkan sebagai kumpulan surat tokoh utama pada anak perempuannya.

sayang pada terbitan Indonesia terlu banyak kesalahan pengetikan. diluar itu, yang saya rasakan, kisah Ned Kelly and gang kurang menggigit, apalagi menegangkan. karena dari satu adegan ke adegan berikutnya tidak dijabarkan situasi yang mencekam alam pikiran pembaca (saya).

padahal saya merasa ceritanya cukup menarik. mungkin karena kisah ini ditulis oleh tokoh utama, yang pastinya bukan penulis, jadi tidak memili...more
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Deborah
Deborah rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
03/25/08

Read in January, 1996
recommends it for: Aussies and Aussie wannabes
It took me a while to decide I was going to like this book. The dialect and language was vivid and brought to life this epic Australian anti-hero. Read this not long after an extended stay in Australia and after having visited the prison/museum in Melbourne where Ned Kelly was eventually hanged. Prison doctors saved the skulls of executed criminals to measure parts of their brains to see if they were different from non-criminals. What were Ned Kelley's last words at the gallows? "Such is li
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Claire
Claire rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
09/02/07

A great book. It wasn't a full five stars because it took me a while to get in to it, but after the first 40 pages or so I would read so furiously I'd completely lose track of time, then be surprised to find that a few hours had passed. I didn't want it to end, especially since I knew the ending. Carey is brilliant for creating this compelling, believable character. An absolute one-off, as long as you don't get bogged down in the beginning. The Booker committee picked another knockout.
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Eric
Eric rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
04/22/08

Read in March, 2008
It took fifty pages before this novel caught me in its grip (perhaps because I was reading so intermittently), but eventually I realized just how singularly memorable and ingenious the narrative voice of Ned Kelly is in Carey's novel. The sympathy you develop for Kelly sits on top of your reacquaintance with the sordid history of penal transportation (from Ireland, etc.). A memorable, fiercely original novel (with a visual, evocative rendering of Australian cartography and landscapes) ...
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.84 (825 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.85 (744 ratings)
number of reviews: 105







other editions

True History of the Kelly Gang (Paperback)
True History of the Kelly Gang (Hardcover)
True History of the Kelly Gang (Paperback)