The Thorn Birds: A Book Review
77Of all of Colleen McCullough's novels, The Thorn Birds made the greatest impact on my ideas of what a great book should be. I was drawn into the story and could not put it down until I finished it a week later. McCullough takes a turbulent cast of characters and places them in many different scenes throughout the world, but the most important parts of her book take place in Australia. McCullough was born and raised in Australia, but she studied neurology abroad and went on to teach the subject at Yale Medical School. McCullough writing career has spanned over four decades, and she has covered a wide variety of topics such as medical crimes and the Roman Empire. However, The Thorn Birds is most arguable her best and most powerful novel of all time.
The story begins in New Zealand at the turn of the twentieth century when Megan Cleary and her poor family are struggling to make ends meet. Megan's mother has a dark secret about the birth of her first son, Frank, who also happens to be her favorite child in comparison to the others. Megan is treated the worse out of all the children because she is a girl and her mom's actions indicate that boys have "more worth". After several years of struggle in New Zealand, Megan's family moves to Australia to help their elderly aunt, Mary Carson, run a sheep station in the Outback. Their lives improve economically and socially with the introduction of Ralph de Bricassart, a kind hearted Roman Catholic priest that has a soft spot for Megan. This is the beginning of a golden period on Megan's life when she is finally getting the attention she deserves and craves, and Ralph sees no problem in giving these things to Megan because she is still a little girl. However, as she becomes older their association because more scandalous and Mary Carson become more jealous. Upon Carson's death she bequeaths her estate to Ralph, which prompts him to leave the presence of Megan to pursue more prestigious positions in the Catholic Church.
Ralph and Megan
The story between Ralph and Maggie is very timeless because it deals with forbidden love and wanting what we cannot have. Even though the two eventually give into their carnal desires, they can are never able to have a relationship. Interestingly, it is Megan who makes herself suffer and yearn for Ralph for many years, while he goes on to pursue his great career in the church. Ralph is obsessed with becoming the "perfect priest," but he learns after his week with Maggie he can never be "perfect"' Ralph continues to strive to be a better priest and his love for Maggie helps him become a more understanding one.
I guess I found this book so interesting because through history, and even today, many woman will put their lives on hold yearning for a man, but will the man do that? Most of the time he will not. Maggie desires to have what she cannot because Ralph is the only person that truly love her. Her mother neglected her as a child and they only begin to have a relationship later in life when the two realize they have more in common than they ever thought they would. Talk about history repeating itself, but you can read the novel to figure out what I mean about that because I do not want to give too much away.
McCullough does a wonderful job with researching the historical facts of her books and I actually feel that I am transported to the times and places where Ralph and Megan "lived". Megan's husband Luke is a very infuriating character, but it is interesting to see how he comes into the mix throughout the story. McCullough deals with many believable and human issues, which is why her books continue to be popular and well read since the first publication. Once again I encourage you to read this book if you like good historical fiction and even though this book does not have the classic happy ending, it has much promise and hope for the future in the way this story comes full circle.
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4 Colleen McCullough THORN BIRDS Tim INDECENT OBSESSION
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The Thorn Birds-McCullough, Colleen-New Book
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Lot of 3 COLLEEN MCCULLOUGH Books Novels
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The Touch by Colleen McCullough (2003, Hardcover)
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Comments
Thank you Ahmu!
If you just read this (your post doesn't say when you read it) good for you! wonderful to know that this older book still has fans! I loved this book, must have read it 4 times it's first ten years out. Had to keep buying new copies as I'd give away the one I'd just finished to some friend who'd never read it! For me it was as powerful a book as Gone With The Wind had been in the 1930s. Great to be reminded of it again!
I read the book when I was seventeen, but it is just timeless for me. This book got me started on reading Colleen McCullough books, but I have to say that The Thorn Birds is the best of all of them. Gone With The Wind is also another book I loved, no one has been able to write a Southern classic close to what Mitchell achieved.
I agree with you. For a man who loves me and I am married to, I would leave everything(job, career and anything else) to be everything that the guy wants me to be.
Thanks for reading and commenting countrywomen. The Thorn Bird's is one of the most engrossing books I have ever read, and the movie is pretty good too. I would recommend checking these out sometime.
i prefer this novel because the character development is much more intense.
Yes the book is much better, I agree with you.
I read this many years ago but like you SweetiePie, I found it spell binding. True how it pulls you in and holds you.
I agree, it has been thirteen years since I read the Thorn Birds and I still love it to this day. In my opinion this is one of Colleen McCullough's best books because I have read a few others, but the Thorn Birds will always be my favorite. Morgan's Run was well researched because she captured the details of the grueling voyage on a ship to the penal colony in Australia, but the problem was I felt like I was in prison with Morgan. I enjoyed the latter part of the book when Morgan is finally settled on Norfolk Island and remarries. The Touch was also good, but many of the themes were reminiscient of the Thorn Birds. I have noticed authors often repeat similar themes throughout their books, and the originals tend to be my favorites. I still like McCullough's writing tremendously though.















ahmu says:
2 years ago
nice book review u do