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Heyman - Fury : A Memoir

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Heyman Fury : A Memoir
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    Fury : A Memoir
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Praise for Fury A gripping and brilliantly written story of a young womans - photo 1
Praise forFury

A gripping and brilliantly written story of a young womans survival, up there with the very best of adventure memoirs such as The Salt Path by Raynor Winn or Cheryl Strayeds Wild. Kathryn Heyman has pulled off an amazing feat, giving a true story of trauma and recovery all the narrative pull and beauty of the best of novels. Her account is a literary work that will stand the test of time and has international bestseller written all over it.

Louise Doughty

Fury took my breath away. Heyman writes with such brio, muscularity and physicality; her trademark humour, honesty and energy vibrate on every page. This memoir is a triumph, the journey it tells of a girl shaping herself in her own fashion a salutary reminder of the crushing oppression that girls face every day and the courage and the fury that it takes to get out from under that.

Jill Dawson

Heyman has every kind of courage there is. As a girl she dares the world to treat her as equal. It doesnt, but she holds on to her ambition and her imagination in the face of the thousand shocks that female flesh is heir to; the litany of sexual terror women and girls dodge each day. And so, Fury is searing, thrilling and redemptive.

Anna Funder

This powerful, ultimately joyous memoir shows howin the teeth of a gale a damaged girl can find her own strength, and fight for her own path.

Jennifer Byrne

A vital addition to the national conversation. A searing, moving, deeply honest achievement.

Nikki Gemmell

Distressing, thrilling, immaculate and vitally important.

Clare Wright

Fury is that old, old story in which a vulnerable girl becomes a victim, but it is made new by Kathryn Heymans bold, brave and poetic voice. She tears open what it means to exist in a predatory male world. Its a confronting and compelling memoir, and also an uplifting one: the great triumph is in the art, the storytelling, the very words, that have saved her.

Debra Adelaide

I cant remember when a book gripped me so tight and so hard. This stunning, harrowing memoir is a fierce testament to the power of words and books to save a life an intoxicatingly triumphant story that defies the odds, as a fearless young womans spirit refuses to be crushed by the law or defeated by a roiling sea.

Caroline Baum

Each chapter is like a punch in the guts. It will move you, shock you andyesmake you furious.

Jane Caro

Moving and ultimately triumphant, a story of survival and reinvention about a woman who refuses to let the system, her family and the men from her past, destroy her will to live and the truth of who she really is. Inspiring and brave.

Sarah Lambert

This sensitive, searching book broke my heart. Heyman transcends her harrowing Australian girlhood by taking herself to sea. That she regains her body and her self is a triumph. Utterly compelling.

Carrie Tiffany

Heyman is a woman looking at the past with clarity and speaking to the present clearly: enough

Bri Lee

For Stephi Leach,
who saw the woman that the girl might become,
and helped me to see her too

Contents

B loody B onaparte . He shouted into the air, the words flapping away from him like seabirds. You fucker. This fucking gulf. His shouting turned to howling, the pitch running higher and higher. His face lifted to the storm-whipped sky, a fist raised to the wheeling seabirds, their clacking squeals drowning him out. I caught only occasional words: fucker, Bonaparte, useless. Some words flew out to me, teetering on the metal trawling boom, the rust sliding into my palms, the storm spray spitting up. The deck seemed an ocean away, never still. Even with the rolling of the boom, I could feel the constant tremor in my legs. I was fifty metres from the safety of the deck, standing on a piece of metal less than a foot wide. Twenty metres below me the dark ocean rose and fell, surging with its foamy mouth.

Rust, the taste of it, mixed with salt, with fear. Forever after this, I will associate the smell of rust with fear, with the arse-clenching terror of almost-certain death. Despite all the moments that led me to that trawling boom, and that storm in the middle of the Timor Sea all the moments of near-death, near annihilation this is the one that turns my stomach to liquid years, decades, later. Even now, writing this on solid ground, my legs have begun to tremble. My body, asking me not to remember. We have got this far, my body and me, without trawling up the mud and mess of it all, the memories that made me.

On the deck, next to the gob-spitting, fuck-shouting skipper, the deckhand Davey held a light above his head. Each time another wave roared up, the light was swallowed by the water and the dark. Behind each loss of light, he called, Sorry, Im sorry. Sorry not just for the loss of light but for his wounded arm, bandaged to the shoulder, which meant that it was me out there on the slippery boom, trying to pass tools down to Karl, the first mate suspended from the broken boards with a spanner clenched between his teeth while the waves roared.

We should have hauled the nets up when the storm started. We should have learned some skills, had a less desperate, more capable crew. We should have he should have listened to Karl. We should have battened down, settled down, gone to ground. All the should haves, useless when the thick salt spray is in your face, when the black night is whipped by wind and wild rain. Desperation made us keep going, lowering the nets when we could hear the rumble across the sea, could feel the lift of the wind, the waves whitening as the sky turned dark. Karl had looked up at the sky, sniffed the air, and called up to Mick in the wheelhouse, We shouldnt shoot away. Its going to turn bad. Mick had clambered out, standing with legs wide on the tray, hands on his hips, eyes narrowed while he followed Karls gaze. His first skippers job, a favour from the uncle who owned the fleet. It made him anxious, unsure of his own footing. The nets dangled above us; Karls hand hovered on the winch. Karl waited, and then added, It looks like itll be rough, skipper. What do you reckon? He might as well have been an alpha dog, a wolf, rolling over to show his belly. But it didnt work. When Mick shook his head and said, We cant afford to miss a catch, Karl nodded and said okay. It was only after the skipper scrambled back to the wheelhouse that Karl said, He doesnt know anything about what its like out here. He couldnt read the gulf if it was printed on a poster in front of his stupid face.

The booms on the Ocean Thief stretched out on either side of the boat, wide arms forming a crucifix across the moving palette of the sea. On a good day, these trawling booms glinted with tropical heat. Inhabited by temporary colonies of seabirds terns with punk hairstyles, gulls spreading their white wings, sometimes a sea hawk on those days they had something soothing, domestic, about them. A marine Hills hoist, an aquatic, static windmill. But not that day. Not that night.

My bare feet curved, my toes gripping the narrow width of the bar holding me unsteadily as the boat lurched. Following Karls instructions, Id hooked my arms over the narrow band that formed a sort of rail above the boom. Mouth dry, terror at the back of my throat, I leaned forward, clutching a Dolphin torch in one hand, the beam rising and falling as the wooden boards below me slapped up and down with the slide of the ocean. Waves smacked against the boards with the force of a punch. The metal cut into the softness of my armpits. Framed by the black of the water snapping at his feet, Karls face flashed in and out of the light, his hand reaching up to mine.

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