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Alone on a Wide Wide Sea (2006)

por Michael Morpurgo

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4681752,876 (4.05)14
How far would you go to find yourself? The lyrical, life-affirming new novel from the bestselling author of Private Peaceful There were dozens of us on the ship, all ages, boys and girls, and we were all up on deck for the leaving of Liverpool, gulls wheeling and crying over our heads, calling good-bye, I thought they were waving good-bye. None of us spoke. It was a grey day with drizzle in the air, the great sad cranes bowing to the ship from the docks as we steamed past. That is all I remember of England... When orphaned Arthur Hobhouse is shipped to Australia after WWII he loses his sister, his country and everything he knows. The coming years will test him to his limits, as he endures mistreatment, neglect and forced labour in the Australian outback. But Arthur is also saved, again and again, by his love of the sea. And when he meets a nurse whose father owns a boat-building business, all the pieces of his broken life come together. Now, at the end of his life, Arthur has built a special boat for his daughter Allie, whose love of the sea is as strong and as vital as her father's. Now Allie has a boat that will take her to England solo, across the world's roughest seas, in search of her father's long-lost sister... Will the threads of Arthur's life finally come together?… (más)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 16 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Truly a binding tale, I have laughed and cried at this and I will never forget the journey I had reading it. It now brings tears to my eyes thinking of Henry the Wombat or Aunty Megs. I'm sure that I pray for Arthur up there every day now, though I know no such person exists. ( )
  trainsparrow | Apr 29, 2024 |
During and after the 2nd ww, children were evacuated from England to countries of the commonwealth namely Australia, Canada and New Zealand. This was done in order to safeguard the children and find a safe refuge for them in a loving family. Alone on a wide wide sea is a fictional story of the young life of one Arthur Hobhouse despatched on a boat to Australia and hopefully safety. Unfortunately it was not uncommon for these young people to be mistreated, beaten and used as a form of slave labour.
Arthurs story is aimed at a reading audience of 10+ and told with elegance and a certain aplong. In short it is beautifully written with many stand out moments. From the horror that was everyday life with " The Piggys"......" you're a slave they don't just take away your freedom, they take away everything else as well because they own you" The young man's journey has many unexpected moments and a beautifully orchestrated conclusion showcasing the author's love of the ocean and his utlimate belief in human nature....."Death, I discovered that day, is not frightening, because it is utterly still. And it is still because death, when it comes, is always over"....." Someties, though, the fog does clear, and you see the icebergs all around. You can hear them groaning, and grinding and you just want to sail through the field of iceberg and out the other side, or just long for the fog again".....
Highly recommended for young and old alike :) ( )
  runner56 | Feb 29, 2024 |
Heart Breaking ( )
  avathegecko | May 7, 2022 |
(2.5) In this novel for older children, Michael Morpurgo presents the story of orphan Arthur Hobhouse, thought to be born sometime around 1940 in Bermondsey, London. In 1946, when he’s only six years old, he and a large group of other child migrant boys are sent by ship to Australia. Marty (Arthur’s ten-year-old friend and protector) tells the younger boy that all of them have been “specially chosen from all the orphans in England” to go to the brand new country of Australia, a place unaffected by war where food is abundant and warm-hearted families are waiting to look after them.

The truth, of course, is a lot less lovely. As the author notes in the afterword, unwanted and orphaned children were troublesome to the British government. Getting the kids out of England’s slums and sending them off to the colonies was considered a good way to solve the problem. Morpurgo writes that from 1947 to 1967 somewhere between 7,000 to 11,000 British children were sent to Australia. Some of these kids got lucky: they were placed in loving homes and got a step up in life. A lot were not: they were abused and exploited. Some laboured on farms like slaves, enduring harsh, even cruel conditions. Morpurgo chose to create fiction around one of these unfortunates.

His central character, Arthur, along with nine other boys (including Marty), ends up at Cooper Station, a large farming outfit some 300 miles from Sydney. The place is run by a former fire-and-brimstone-style preacher, Mr. “Piggy” Bacon and his meek and subservient wife, Ida. The Dickensian Piggy drives the boys hard and relishes strapping them for the most minor of infractions. He regularly holds a sort of “punishment hour” every evening to deal with each day’s misdemeanours.

One boy runs away from the farm. His dead body is returned a day later by local Aboriginal people. Arthur and Marty are luckier. Help comes from an unexpected source when Marty decides it’s time for them to try escaping. One evening, the boys’ dormitory door is actually unlocked for them. The two flee the cattle station on a beloved old horse. Out on the scrubland, the boys receive further surprising assistance and are brought to a place of safety. For a number of years, Arthur and Marty experience the feeling of family. In their teens, they leave for Sydney where they learn the boat-building trade.

In this first part of the novel, Arthur and Marty often attribute any positive thing that comes their way to a good luck charm that Arthur wears on a string around his neck. It’s a tiny key that Arthur believes was given to him by his sister, Kitty. His memories of her are so fragmentary, however, that he isn’t even sure she exists. Marty has a dream of the two one day sailing to England in one of their own hand-built boats to find her.

The second part of the novel turns from Arthur’s story to his daughter Allie’s. Her quest is to sail to England from Tasmania in order to fulfill her father’s dream of finding Kitty, should she exist. Allie has been around boats all her life. She learned to sail early and is a highly competent sailor. Her stormy adventures on the sea (described in the upbeat, lightly punctuated, and abbreviated prose of the logbook and email) make up the second half of the book. I have to admit that I sometimes wondered why she didn’t just take a plane. I also tired of her email reports documenting her memorization of her father’s favourite poem, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.

Although there is certainly sadness and hardship in Morpurgo’s narrative (both father and daughter experience dark nights of the soul), its contents are largely of the “heartwarming” variety. Characters are not particularly complex. It’s easy to separate the good guys from the bad. The conclusion is happy—predictably so. While there is a feeling of authenticity to the narration—two quite real-sounding voices (Arthur’s and Allie’s) are heard telling what happened to them in everyday language—the prose suffers a little for this authorial decision. At times, it is repetitive, wordy, bland, and cliché-ridden. In spite of this, I can imagine some of the young people I know enjoying this essentially positive, somewhat sentimental, and fairly undemanding story of familial love. ( )
  fountainoverflows | Aug 12, 2019 |
Two books in one. The first half is Arthur's story which is very similar to "Becoming Billy Dare" and also has shades of "A Fortunate Life" in it. A 7 year old orphan after World War 2, Arthur is sent to Australia for a chance at a "better" life. The reality is anything but. He and a group of other orphans are sent to a remote farm in NSW where they are used as virtual slave labour in the fields, and beaten and starved if they refuse to work....all in the name of Jesus and salvation. Eventually Arthur escapes with his best mate and they live with a "possum lady" widow who looks after orphaned wild animals and also builds boats. Arthur learns to build boats and also wonders about the key around his neck and the fading memory of a girl called Kitty who put it there. Is she his sister or has he imagined her?
Book 2 is not as good as the first book. Allie is Arthur's daughter who sets sail in a yacht built by her father to travel from Australia to England ( much like the famed Jessica Watson) to see if she can solve the mystery of the key. There is a lot of waffle in her diary about albatrosses etc. and I couldn't help thinking "Wouldn't it have been quicker to fly on a plane there!?" ( )
  nicsreads | Mar 12, 2018 |
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How far would you go to find yourself? The lyrical, life-affirming new novel from the bestselling author of Private Peaceful There were dozens of us on the ship, all ages, boys and girls, and we were all up on deck for the leaving of Liverpool, gulls wheeling and crying over our heads, calling good-bye, I thought they were waving good-bye. None of us spoke. It was a grey day with drizzle in the air, the great sad cranes bowing to the ship from the docks as we steamed past. That is all I remember of England... When orphaned Arthur Hobhouse is shipped to Australia after WWII he loses his sister, his country and everything he knows. The coming years will test him to his limits, as he endures mistreatment, neglect and forced labour in the Australian outback. But Arthur is also saved, again and again, by his love of the sea. And when he meets a nurse whose father owns a boat-building business, all the pieces of his broken life come together. Now, at the end of his life, Arthur has built a special boat for his daughter Allie, whose love of the sea is as strong and as vital as her father's. Now Allie has a boat that will take her to England solo, across the world's roughest seas, in search of her father's long-lost sister... Will the threads of Arthur's life finally come together?

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