A cargo of Women

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Pan Macmillan Australia, Mar 1, 2010 - Fiction - 320 pages

A Cargo of Women: The Novel traces the chequered story of one hundred women transported together as convicts in 1829 on the ship Princess Royal. Caught in an England convulsed by industrial change, they became the unwitting and unwilling pioneers of a new land.

Framing them all is the story of the indomitable Susannah Watson who, trapped in the crowded filthy slums of Nottingham, stole because she "could not bear to see her children starving". Separated forever from her husband and four children, Susannah was transported for 14 years but served 16. She endured the convict system at its worst, yet emerged triumphant to die in her bed aged 83 singing Rock of Ages.

First published by Macmillan in 1991, Babette Smith's timeless classic has been hailed as the greatest recounting of an extraordinary chapter in our colonial history.

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About the author (2010)

After graduation from Sydney University, Babette Smith worked in production in theatre and television and in 1983 became National Marketing Manager for the Hoyts Corporation. In 2001 she established a Sydney practice as a mediator, conciliator and dispute resolution consultant. Through much of her corporate career, Babette was also a writer and her occasional journalism included two stints as a columnist: 1997-1999 for the Australian Financial Review and 1989-1992 for ITA magazine. She is the author of Coming Up For Air (2003) and Australia's Birthstain (2008) and lives in Blackheath in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney.

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