Shortcuts
Please wait while page loads.
Cairns Libraries . Default .
PageMenu- Main Menu-
Page content

Catalogue Display

The Last Convict

'It's a good story, Samuel. You're a piece of living history.' Oxford 1863: Young Samuel Speed sets a barley stack alight in the hope it will earn him a bed in prison for the night. He wants nothing more than a morsel of food in his belly and a warm place to sleep off the streets. What he receives is a sentence of seven years' servitude, to be served half a world away in the penal colony of Fremantle, Western Australia. When Samuel boards the transport ship Belgravia, he is stripped of his clothing and even his name, and given regulations of when to rise, eat, clean and sleep. On arrival at Fremantle Prison, hard labour is added to the mix and he wonders if life can get any worse. The only solace he finds is a love of reading, which allows the likes of Tom Sawyer and Oliver Twist to become his lifelong friends. Samuel is granted a ticket of leave in 1867 and full freedom in 1871, but what sort of life can a man forge for himself in the colony, with no skills, no money and no family? Will it be the beginning of the life he has always dreamed of, or do some sentences truly never end?

Item Information
Barcode Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Branch Status Due Date Res.
C9006761484 AB HIL
Audiobook   Stratford Branch . . Available .  
. Catalogue Record 1090431 ItemInfo Beginning of record . Catalogue Record 1090431 ItemInfo Top of page .
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
ISBN 9780655671787
Author Hill, Anthony
Title The Last Convict [sound recording]
Edition Unabridged CD ed.
Published Australia Bolinda/Penguin Audio Australia 2021
Physical description 8 CDs, 9 hrs 30 mins 15.5 cm.
Contents note Fiction
Summary 'It's a good story, Samuel. You're a piece of living history.' Oxford 1863: Young Samuel Speed sets a barley stack alight in the hope it will earn him a bed in prison for the night. He wants nothing more than a morsel of food in his belly and a warm place to sleep off the streets. What he receives is a sentence of seven years' servitude, to be served half a world away in the penal colony of Fremantle, Western Australia. When Samuel boards the transport ship Belgravia, he is stripped of his clothing and even his name, and given regulations of when to rise, eat, clean and sleep. On arrival at Fremantle Prison, hard labour is added to the mix and he wonders if life can get any worse. The only solace he finds is a love of reading, which allows the likes of Tom Sawyer and Oliver Twist to become his lifelong friends. Samuel is granted a ticket of leave in 1867 and full freedom in 1871, but what sort of life can a man forge for himself in the colony, with no skills, no money and no family? Will it be the beginning of the life he has always dreamed of, or do some sentences truly never end?
Subject Literature
Historical fiction
Australian fiction
Additional author Garner, Julian Reader
URL http://www.bolinda.com/images/products/large/9780655671787.jpg
Internet Site http://www.bolinda.com/images/products/large/9780655671787.jpg
Catalogue Information 1090431 Beginning of record . Catalogue Information 1090431 Top of page .