Kate Grenville's return to the territory of The Secret River is
historical fiction turned inside out, a stunning sleight of hand by one
of Australia's most celebrated writers.
What if Elizabeth Macarthur--wife of the notorious John Macarthur, wool
baron in the earliest days of Sydney--had written a candid secret
memoir? And what if novelist Kate Grenville had miraculously found and
published it? That's the starting point for A Room Made of Leaves, a
dance of possibilities between worlds real and invented.
Marriage to a ruthless bully, the impulses of her heart, the search for
power in a society that gave women none: Grenville's Elizabeth Macarthur
manages her complicated life with spirit and passion, cunning and wit.
Her memoir lets us hear what a seemingly demure woman of history might
really have thought.
At the heart of A Room Made of Leaves is one of the most toxic issues
of our own age: the seductive appeal of false stories. This book may be
set in the past, but it's just as much about the present, where secrets
and lies have the power to shape reality.