Jump to content

Sea Menace

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sea Menace
AuthorJohn Gunn
LanguageEnglish
Genrechildren's fiction
PublisherConstable, England
Publication date
1958
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePrint
Pages192pp
Preceded byGibraltar Sabotage 
Followed bySubmarine Island 

Sea Menace (1958) is a novel for children by Australian author John Gunn, illustrated by Brian Keogh. It was joint winner of the Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers in 1959.[1]

Plot outline

[edit]

At the time when William Bligh was Governor of New South Wales, young Paul Harris, his cousin and uncle, journey from London to Sydney to farm in New South Wales. Their ship founders and they are set upon by a group of desperate men.

Critical reception

[edit]

A reviewer for The Canberra Times found that nowhere "is there anything specially Australian about the people or the setting; except for one mention of 'eucalyptus' trees and some description of early Sydney it might all be happening anywhere. But all this matters little; the story is the important thing, and it is told in a straightforward and vigorous style that holds the interest even when the courage and skill of the two boys and their grown-up friends, and the succession of hairbreadth escapes, would otherwise seem just a little too good to be true."[2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]