Very much enjoyed this book. I can't say it has a plot though - more like just following the day to day of a fellow as he travels a section of his life journey. Character development is really good, I did feel that I got to know the characters quite well. It was written in 1917, set in Ballarat at the time of the Gold Rush and Eureka stockade, written by a woman posing as a man (I guess to get published) and this shows in the white colonial language used and the storyline of England as the Mother Country. In some ways it is 'birth of a nation' stuff but from an extremely white Anglo Saxon viewpoint, reflective of both the time it was written and the time in which it is set. I was going to write that there is 'barely' any mention of indigenous characters but now that I've finished the book I'm finding it hard to recall ANY mention of First Nations people, so I am changing 'barely' to 'none'. If you can keep it in the context of when it was written and 'forgive' therefore the very narrow POV, it's actually a lovely story about people finding their way in a new country with all the setbacks and achievements involved. Main character shat me on and off - he finally finds some kind of contentment at the end (or at least he thinks he does at this stage of his life), for which he looks to the skies and thanks God, when in reality it is absolutely his loyal, smart and savvy wife who has come to understand him completely and has done her 'duty" in supporting him no matter what. He'd have been in a very different place without her. Looking forward at some point to reading books 2 and 3 of this trilogy.