What Members of Reading with Style Are Saying About…
Find A Copy At
Group Discussions About This Book
No group discussions for this book yet.
What Members Thought

This was a wonderful character- and voice-driven fictionalization of the Australian outlaw legend (and historical crush of many) Ned Kelly. I had watched a little web documentary about him last year, and some of the details of the story--like the bulletproof armor the gang smithed out of plow moldboards--struck me as so outrageous, I knew I had to get around to reading this book. I liked how the author imagined Ned Kelly's nature and motivations, drawing from the little that is known about him,
...more

This book traces Ned Kelly's life in his own words (imagined). Kelly is a member of an under-class in Australia--his parents were transported from Ireland as criminals. His parents struggle to make ends meet--not always legally and Ned's father, uncles, grandfather end up in jail at various times. His mother seems to be running an illegal still much of his childhood. They are under constant suspicion by the police. After Ned's father dies when Ned is 12, he tries to help his mother prove up thei
...more

Ned Kelly was a famous Australian outlaw who became a folk hero. This is his story, purportedly in his own words, written for an unborn child who is not known to have existed.
It's a fun and rollicking story, implying that Kelly's Irish convict ancestry and the loss of his father when he was 12 both contributed to his 'freedom fighter' style. His attitude is that he's defending himself and his family, and if he hadn't been demonized by the state because of his family's past history, and impoveri ...more
It's a fun and rollicking story, implying that Kelly's Irish convict ancestry and the loss of his father when he was 12 both contributed to his 'freedom fighter' style. His attitude is that he's defending himself and his family, and if he hadn't been demonized by the state because of his family's past history, and impoveri ...more

Nov 12, 2008
Tien
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
historical-fiction,
australian-author
It's hard to read when you first picked it up as there is practically no punctuation being used. However, it reflects on the 'uneducated' state of Ned Kelly. I had to read a sentence a few times over & actually apply the punctuation in my head to understand but you get used to it after a while. As it is written in the first person view, it is completely acceptable.
The story itself is very interesting and a lot of the themes there feels very real. The main ones being the harshness of life in Aust ...more
The story itself is very interesting and a lot of the themes there feels very real. The main ones being the harshness of life in Aust ...more

I found the story of Ned Kelly's life to be interesting. The writing style, the book is written as if Kelly actually wrote it, was annoying and distracted from the story at times. The writing is full of run on sentences, no quotation marks, abbreviations and lots of adjectivials in place of swear words.
...more


Jan 20, 2011
Rachel
marked it as to-read

Jan 24, 2011
Debbie Hoffman
marked it as to-read

Mar 10, 2011
Jennifer N.
marked it as to-read

Jun 10, 2011
Krista
added it

Jan 03, 2012
Linda
added it

Aug 22, 2012
Susan
marked it as to-read

Dec 15, 2014
Jane
marked it as to-read

Feb 26, 2015
Kme_17
marked it as to-read

Apr 09, 2015
Lindsay
marked it as to-read

Jun 17, 2016
Dana Arbelaez
marked it as to-read

Dec 28, 2016
Kawther
marked it as to-read

Dec 26, 2019
Teddie
marked it as to-read

Jul 19, 2024
Penny (Literary Hoarders)
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
own-it