The Yield: A Novel

The Yield: A Novel

by Tara June Winch

Narrated by Tony Briggs

Unabridged — 9 hours, 50 minutes

The Yield: A Novel

The Yield: A Novel

by Tara June Winch

Narrated by Tony Briggs

Unabridged — 9 hours, 50 minutes

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Overview

Winner of the 2020 Miles Franklin Literary Award and 2021 Kate Challis RAKA Award!*

""A beautifully written novel that puts language at the heart of remembering the past and understanding the present.""-Kate Morton

“A groundbreaking novel for black and white Australia.”-Richard Flanagan, Man Booker Prize winning author of The Narrow Road to the Deep North

A young Australian woman searches for her grandfather's dictionary, the key to halting a mining company from destroying her family's home and ancestral land in this exquisitely written, heartbreaking, yet hopeful novel of culture, language, tradition, suffering, and empowerment in the tradition of Louise Erdrich, Sandra Cisneros, and Amy Harmon.*

Knowing that he will soon die, Albert “Poppy” Gondiwindi has one final task he must fulfill. A member of the indigenous Wiradjuri tribe, he has spent his adult life in Prosperous House and the town of Massacre Plains, a small enclave on the banks of the Murrumby River. Before he takes his last breath, Poppy is determined to pass on the language of his people, the traditions of his ancestors, and everything that was ever remembered by those who came before him. The land itself aids him; he finds the words on the wind.

After his passing, Poppy's granddaughter, August, returns home from Europe, where she has lived the past ten years, to attend his burial. Her overwhelming grief is compounded by the pain, anger, and sadness of memory-of growing up in poverty before her mother's incarceration, of the racism she and her people endured, of the mysterious disappearance of her sister when they were children; an event that has haunted her and changed her life. Her homecoming is bittersweet as she confronts the love of her kin and news that Prosperous is to be repossessed by a mining company. Determined to make amends and honor Poppy and her family, she vows to save their land-a quest guided by the voice of her grandfather that leads into the past, the stories of her people, the secrets of the river.

Told in three masterfully woven narratives, The Yield is a celebration of language and an exploration of what makes a place ""home."" A story of a people and a culture dispossessed, it is also a joyful reminder of what once was and what endures-a powerful reclaiming of Indigenous language, storytelling, and identity, that offers hope for the future.

The Yield is a powerful and beautifully written novel that explores the themes of culture, language, tradition, suffering, and empowerment.

It tells the story of August, a young Australian woman who returns home from Europe to attend her grandfather's burial and save her family's ancestral land from a mining company.

HarperCollins 2024


Editorial Reviews

JULY 2020 - AudioFile

Winch, a member of the Wiradjuri people of Australia, shares an epic story of the impact of colonialism on one Aboriginal family. Tony Briggs, himself Aboriginal, demands listeners’ attention with an understated yet compelling narration. He smoothly weaves the indigenous language, defined in an accompanying PDF, into the story as he moves through time to trace the culture from its exposure to colonialism, to its near extinction, to its concerted efforts to recover. His smooth delivery of the stories of Poppy Albert, the patriarch who produces a dictionary; granddaughter August, who is determined to recover and honor her heritage; and the missionary who looks back on the costs of colonialism proves Poppy’s belief that “there are few worse things than memory, yet few things better.” N.E.M. © AudioFile 2020, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

07/06/2020

This angry, elegiac tale of an aboriginal family from Indigenous Australian writer Winch (After the Carnage) explores the charged meaning of the word Ngurambang, meaning country or home in the Wiradjuri language. Albert Gondiwindi, facing a terminal illness, begins writing the story of his Wiradjuri family in the town of Massacre Plains. Upon his death, his granddaughter August, who had moved to England to get away from the town, returns for the funeral. After August learns the family’s home, an old mission station, will be destroyed to make way for a mine, she decides to stay, determined to save the home and land around it. Meanwhile, the reader learns that Wiradjuri artifacts have long since been excavated and removed, along with other brutal details chronicled in letters written by Reverend Greenleaf, the missionary who started the school in the late 19th century. Albert, Greenleaf, and August narrate alternating sections: Greenleaf’s long letter describing mission history is heavily expository, while August’s section is where the plot lives, and it’s enlivened by dialogue with her family. The strongest chapters are from Albert, in narratives framed as dictionary entries of his ancestors and their disappearing culture. While the shifts in narrator interrupt the flow, Winch succeeds at contextualizing August’s story with cultural history. The result is often quite moving. Agent: Pamela Malpas, Jennifer Lyons Literary Agency. (June)

From the Publisher

Winch has built her novel with subtlety and strength. This is a complex, satisfying book, both story and testimony. The Yield works to reclaim a history that never should have been lost in the first place. — The Guardian

"Unmissable." — The Guardian

“[A] wily, appealing novel….A testament to the saving grace of language itself, and to the corrosive consequences when it falls out of use and disappears.” — Wall Street Journal

A lyrical, courageous storyteller, Winch redefines Australia in this generational tale of reclamation and hope.  — Sunday Times (London)

"A deep and affecting novel, [and] one of the summer's literary must-reads." — Bustle

"Winch makes a strong statement, beautifully rendered." — Library Journal (starred review)

Take courage when you read this book. You’ll need it. Winch asks big questions ... Is the answer within us? — Bruce Pascoe, author of Dark Emu

"The Peoples, languages and wildlife of Australia have been purposely decimated for a great many years. The history of this vast land is a tragic one and this young Indigenous author has taken it on in a graceful act of retrieval and witness. The dictionary and use of Wiradjuri words is transporting. Birrabuwawanha—to return, to come back. The Yield is a fine novel, and one not without hope." — Joy Williams, author of Pulitzer Prize finalist The Quick and the Dead

A lyrical and generous writer, Winch’s prose shimmers through this extraordinary tale of cruelty, dislocation, love and resilience. —  Judging Panel for the Prime Minister’s Literary Award

Already a best-seller in Australia, Winch’s second novel is a clear-eyed look at the experiences of native people and the ways in which history is inherited through generations.Booklist

A beautifully written novel that puts language at the heart of remembering the past and understanding the present. — Kate Morton, internationally bestselling author of The Clockmaker’s Daughter

"The Yield is, by far, the Australian novel of 2020 that you won’t want to miss." — Book Riot

"The humorous undercurrent to some of Winch’s short stories has no place here, and this is a more serious work than her previous books—but while she may have developed a more sophisticated style, her work is no less vivid, and this is an astonishingly elegant and powerful second novel." — Melanie Kembrey, Sydney Morning Herald

A groundbreaking novel for black and white Australia. — Richard Flanagan, Man Booker Prize winning author of The Narrow Road to the Deep North

Mesmerising and important. — Melissa Lucashenko, 2019 Miles Franklin award-winning author of Too Much Lip

Winch offers a stark account of how Aboriginal peoples are ignored, abused and their cultural beliefs stomped on, [but] The Yield's final message is one of hope. — Buzzfeed

The Yield is a story of hope and preservation — Buzzfeed

The Yield sings up language, history, home, blood - all the important stuff. — Paul Kelly, author of How to Make Gravy

A work of immense scope and sensitivity.  — Jessie Cole, author of Deeper Water

 Reap the wisdom this book yields. — The Saturday Paper

The Yield is the work of a major talent. It hypnotises with its lyricism, with the juxtaposition of horror and hope, and the candid look at family, country and history. It’s a work to be savoured, to be enjoyed in the sun on a winter’s day, and then to be shared—as widely as possible! — Madelaine Dickie, National Indigenous Times

The Yield...is a poignant story of personal and cultural reclamation and survival. — The Australian

As August navigates her connection to home, to family, and seeks to save what is left of it, the three stories collide in a beautiful ending. The story touches on many types of trauma that have been inflicted on Indigenous Australian’s from the colonization of Australia. Beautifully written, this was a deeply moving story that showed that regardless of the brokenness, the spirit of culture is so much stronger. — ReadWithWine

"A brilliant novel: deeply thought provoking, challenging, intelligent, sophisticated in style, and beautifully written, despite the brutality and sorrow that the history, and narrative, is awash with." — Theresa Smith Writes

Nothing short of a landmark Australian novel, simultaneously timeless and yet urgently a story for now, with sentences that’ll knock the wind out of your gut. — Benjamin Law, author of The Family Law

The Yield is a bleak and beautiful book that eloquently phrases the weight of history, with an ultimately uplifting sensibility at its heart: that of the power of storytelling across thousands of years.  — Anne Barnetson, Australian Bookseller + Publisher

Winch’s urgent novel is a chance to listen. A moving and evocative story of Aboriginal Australia. Hope shines through this contemporary novel of a culture dispossessed and the importance of preserving language. Winch is a Wiradjuri author and here she writes about the Wiradjuri language which was once thought to be extinct but has now been preserved. The Yield is current, timely and an important must-Read for all Australians.  — Dean, Better Read Than Dead

It’s another mesmerizing tour de force, throwing a spotlight on Australia’s broken heart.  — Juliet Rieden, Australian Womens Weekly

This is a big hearted, hopeful book. More hopeful, maybe, than we deserve.  — Miles Allinson, Readings

I just finished this book and it is ABSOLUTELY extraordinary. Intensely moving, gripping, brutal and yet so full of generosity. I learned so much especially about the lyrical Wiradjuri language. Brilliant.  — Annabel Crabb, author of The Wife Drought

The Yield uniquely and powerfully shows how revolutionary a shift from an imported language to an Indigenous language might be ... such aesthetically and ethically ambitious writing. Reap the wisdom this book yields. — Maria Takolander, The Saturday Paper

This is an astonishingly elegant and powerful second novel.  — Louise Swinn, The Sydney Morning Herald

Judging Panel for the Prime Minister’s Literary Award

A lyrical and generous writer, Winch’s prose shimmers through this extraordinary tale of cruelty, dislocation, love and resilience.

Booklist

Already a best-seller in Australia, Winch’s second novel is a clear-eyed look at the experiences of native people and the ways in which history is inherited through generations.

Bruce Pascoe

Take courage when you read this book. You’ll need it. Winch asks big questions ... Is the answer within us?

Wall Street Journal

[A] wily, appealing novel….A testament to the saving grace of language itself, and to the corrosive consequences when it falls out of use and disappears.

Bustle

"A deep and affecting novel, [and] one of the summer's literary must-reads."

Joy Williams

"The Peoples, languages and wildlife of Australia have been purposely decimated for a great many years. The history of this vast land is a tragic one and this young Indigenous author has taken it on in a graceful act of retrieval and witness. The dictionary and use of Wiradjuri words is transporting. Birrabuwawanha—to return, to come back. The Yield is a fine novel, and one not without hope."

The Guardian

Winch has built her novel with subtlety and strength. This is a complex, satisfying book, both story and testimony. The Yield works to reclaim a history that never should have been lost in the first place.

Sunday Times (London)

A lyrical, courageous storyteller, Winch redefines Australia in this generational tale of reclamation and hope. 

Booklist

Already a best-seller in Australia, Winch’s second novel is a clear-eyed look at the experiences of native people and the ways in which history is inherited through generations.

Wall Street Journal

[A] wily, appealing novel….A testament to the saving grace of language itself, and to the corrosive consequences when it falls out of use and disappears.

Benjamin Law

Nothing short of a landmark Australian novel, simultaneously timeless and yet urgently a story for now, with sentences that’ll knock the wind out of your gut.

Theresa Smith Writes

"A brilliant novel: deeply thought provoking, challenging, intelligent, sophisticated in style, and beautifully written, despite the brutality and sorrow that the history, and narrative, is awash with."

Paul Kelly

The Yield sings up language, history, home, blood - all the important stuff.

The Australian

The Yield...is a poignant story of personal and cultural reclamation and survival.

Book Riot

"The Yield is, by far, the Australian novel of 2020 that you won’t want to miss."

Jessie Cole

A work of immense scope and sensitivity. 

Annabel Crabb

I just finished this book and it is ABSOLUTELY extraordinary. Intensely moving, gripping, brutal and yet so full of generosity. I learned so much especially about the lyrical Wiradjuri language. Brilliant. 

The Saturday Paper

Reap the wisdom this book yields.

Madelaine Dickie

The Yield is the work of a major talent. It hypnotises with its lyricism, with the juxtaposition of horror and hope, and the candid look at family, country and history. It’s a work to be savoured, to be enjoyed in the sun on a winter’s day, and then to be shared—as widely as possible!

Louise Swinn

This is an astonishingly elegant and powerful second novel. 

Maria Takolander

The Yield uniquely and powerfully shows how revolutionary a shift from an imported language to an Indigenous language might be ... such aesthetically and ethically ambitious writing. Reap the wisdom this book yields.

Kate Morton

A beautifully written novel that puts language at the heart of remembering the past and understanding the present.

Juliet Rieden

It’s another mesmerizing tour de force, throwing a spotlight on Australia’s broken heart. 

Richard Flanagan

A groundbreaking novel for black and white Australia.

Anne Barnetson

The Yield is a bleak and beautiful book that eloquently phrases the weight of history, with an ultimately uplifting sensibility at its heart: that of the power of storytelling across thousands of years. 

ReadWithWine

As August navigates her connection to home, to family, and seeks to save what is left of it, the three stories collide in a beautiful ending. The story touches on many types of trauma that have been inflicted on Indigenous Australian’s from the colonization of Australia. Beautifully written, this was a deeply moving story that showed that regardless of the brokenness, the spirit of culture is so much stronger.

Melanie Kembrey

"The humorous undercurrent to some of Winch’s short stories has no place here, and this is a more serious work than her previous books—but while she may have developed a more sophisticated style, her work is no less vivid, and this is an astonishingly elegant and powerful second novel."

Melissa Lucashenko

Mesmerising and important.

Miles Allinson

This is a big hearted, hopeful book. More hopeful, maybe, than we deserve. 

Better Read Than Dead Dean

Winch’s urgent novel is a chance to listen. A moving and evocative story of Aboriginal Australia. Hope shines through this contemporary novel of a culture dispossessed and the importance of preserving language. Winch is a Wiradjuri author and here she writes about the Wiradjuri language which was once thought to be extinct but has now been preserved. The Yield is current, timely and an important must-Read for all Australians. 

Buzzfeed

Winch offers a stark account of how Aboriginal peoples are ignored, abused and their cultural beliefs stomped on, [but] The Yield's final message is one of hope.

The Sydney Morning Herald

The humorous undercurrent to some of Winch’s short stories has no place here, and this is a more serious work than her previous books – but while she may have developed a more sophisticated style, her work is no less vivid, and this is an astonishingly elegant and powerful second novel.

Library Journal

06/12/2020

DEBUT Three distinct narratives bind together Winch's riveting story of Australia's Indigenous people. From the proud patriarch Albert "Poppy" Gondiwindi and his peculiar bilingual dictionary, a haunting history of his ancestors the Wiradjuri comes alive, depicting their lore, their love of the land, their cruel defeat by white settlers, and his punishing days in the Boys' Home after his parents were run off their land. In 1915, the Rev. Ferdinand Greenleaf writes letters to His Excellency the Governor describing white acts of horror he has witnessed but gets not replies. Instead, with Britain at war, Greenleaf is taken to an internment camp for German settlers, where his fierce commitment to the Aborigines earns him extra punishment. Gondiwindi's granddaughter August returns for Poppy's funeral after 10 years in England. Although her arrival brings back painful memories, it also coincides with a mining company takeover of the land. She quickly grasps the importance of her heritage and uses her grandfather's dictionary, Greenleaf's letters, museum records of stolen Aboriginal artifacts, and buried native bones to challenge the company. VERDICT The Aborigines' story is one of yielding, of not taking from the land but of bending to the will of others, a tragic picture of the Australian colonial period. Winch makes a strong statement, beautifully rendered. [See Prepub Alert, 12/2/19.]—Donna Bettencourt, Mesa Cty. P.L., Grand Junction, CO

JULY 2020 - AudioFile

Winch, a member of the Wiradjuri people of Australia, shares an epic story of the impact of colonialism on one Aboriginal family. Tony Briggs, himself Aboriginal, demands listeners’ attention with an understated yet compelling narration. He smoothly weaves the indigenous language, defined in an accompanying PDF, into the story as he moves through time to trace the culture from its exposure to colonialism, to its near extinction, to its concerted efforts to recover. His smooth delivery of the stories of Poppy Albert, the patriarch who produces a dictionary; granddaughter August, who is determined to recover and honor her heritage; and the missionary who looks back on the costs of colonialism proves Poppy’s belief that “there are few worse things than memory, yet few things better.” N.E.M. © AudioFile 2020, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2020-03-29
An Aboriginal woman uncovers her heritage, and her painful past, to save her family’s home.

August Gondiwindi, a dishwasher in London, receives word that her grandfather Poppy Albert has died and knows she must return to Massacre Plains, the small Australian town her family has lived in for generations—a place she hasn’t visited in years: “Go back full with shame for having left, catch the disappointment in their turned mouths, go back and try to find all the things that she couldn’t find so many thousands of kilometres away.” She arrives at the family farm, Prosperous House, and as she helps her grandmother Elsie prepare food and clean for the large collection of aunts and uncles gathering for the funeral, she runs into former classmates and old flames and wrestles with her long-dormant grief at the disappearance of her sister, Jedda, who vanished when August was 9 and Jedda, 10. She also discovers that this may be the last time she sees her childhood home—her grandmother will soon be forced out of Prosperous House because a company plans to open a large tin mine on the land. Interwoven with August’s story are two other narrative strands: a lengthy letter from the Rev. Ferdinand Greenleaf, who founded the mission that eventually became Prosperous House to “build a home of safety for the poor waifs and strays,” and sections from a dictionary Poppy Albert was compiling of their family’s native language before his death, which includes words from the author’s ancestral Wiradjuri language. Albert’s entries are easily the most charming parts of the book. “The dictionary is not just words—there are little stories in those pages too,” he writes, and the same is true for his own effort, which weaves in reminiscences of meeting Elsie, fond memories of raising Jedda and August, and stories from his ancestors. But August’s chapters suffer from a lack of clarity; it’s often difficult to understand why events are significant, especially in the novel’s more dramatic latter half. Too often, it’s simply that the sentences are bewildering: “When the previous evening, like a virus, the true rumour that Rinepalm Mining had set an open day at the town hall filtered into the Valley, and back streets, the men and women, though on the edge of heatstroke, leapt from their houses and headed into town.”

A story woven from profound, overlooked historical material that’s sadly marred by sloppy execution.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940173712356
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 06/02/2020
Edition description: Unabridged
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