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Captain Thunderbolt and His Lady

The true story of bushrangers Frederick Ward and Mary Ann Bugg

Carol Baxter    
Format: Paperback - C format
Pages: 376
AUD $32.99 inc. GST
Captain Thunderbolt and His Lady

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More about this book

He was the gentleman bushranger ... she was the woman who rode with him. Full of action and drama, this is the richly detailed and unputdownable true story of Captain Thunderbolt and his lady.

Description

He was the gentleman bushranger ... she was the woman who rode with him. This is the true story of Captain Thunderbolt and his lady.
'Bail up!' demanded Captain Thunderbolt before he shouted the bar with the inn keeper's own profits. Driven into banditry by injustice, this colonial Robin Hood, magnificent horseman and skilled bushman was celebrated by his victims as vigorously as he was hunted by the law.
She was his chief lieutenant, his eyes and his ears. Intelligent and beautiful, Mary Ann Bugg dressed as a man, rode like a man, and helped keep Thunderbolt ahead of the troopers and trackers intent on pursuing him to his end. Until one day...
Compellingly written and richly detailed, Captain Thunderbolt and His Lady has it all - action, drama, and two protagonists who defied social conventions for freedom. This is an unputdownable story of an extraordinary partnership and a fresh retelling of one of Australia's greatest bushranging stories.
'What a well-written, cracking read.' - Emeritus Professor Bruce Kercher

Awards

Longlisted, 2012 Davitt Crime Writer's Award


Carol Baxter is an adjunct lecturer at the University of New England and Fellow of the Society of Australian Genealogists, and author of An Irresistible Temptation and Breaking the Bank. Her website is www.carolbaxter.com

ISBN: 9781742372877
Australian Pub.: September 2011
Publisher: ALLEN & UNWIN
Imprint: ALLEN & UNWIN
Subject: Australasian & Pacific History
Edition Number: 1

Reader reviews

'This is one of the best reads I have had in a long time. The story is not just about Fred Ward's bushranging, it is the story of a young colony trying to find its way. We have the uncomfortable relationship between those sent out as convicts, the native born settlers, the indigenous tribes and the British born ruling classes. The colony of NSW was a melting pot of classes at a time when the world was changing.

Carol Baxter uses language which at times is poetic yet keeps the reader turning the pages. The story flows easily from character to character, scene to scene.

The story of Mary Ann Bugg, Thunderbolts Lady deserves a book of its own. Her life from conception to death is explored in a manner that is compassionate and enlightening.

Whether you enjoy Australian history or are just looking for a good read this is the book for you. I loved it.' - J. Redmond, VIC

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