---
product_id: 3452263
title: "The Narrow Road to the Deep North: A novel Hardcover – Deckle Edge, August 12, 2014"
brand: "richard flanagan"
price: "VT7622"
currency: VUV
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 7
url: https://www.desertcart.vu/products/3452263-the-narrow-road-to-the-deep-north-a-novel-hardcover
store_origin: VU
region: Vanuatu
---

# The Narrow Road to the Deep North: A novel Hardcover – Deckle Edge, August 12, 2014

**Brand:** richard flanagan
**Price:** VT7622
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

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- **What is this?** The Narrow Road to the Deep North: A novel Hardcover – Deckle Edge, August 12, 2014 by richard flanagan
- **How much does it cost?** VT7622 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.vu](https://www.desertcart.vu/products/3452263-the-narrow-road-to-the-deep-north-a-novel-hardcover)

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## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 5.0 out of 5 stars







  
  
    “And wouldn’t that put some cream in their coffee…”
  

*by J***I on Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2016*

This powerful, sensitive and evocative novel on the human condition, in extremis, which was recommended by a fellow Amazon reviewer (not to mention Man Booker), helped me reconnect with Australian literature after an absence of several decades. I had read a substantial amount of Aussie literature, back when down under beckoned as a viable alternative. Yet my knowledge was stuck in the days when “everyone” was reading Patrick White’s 
  
Voss (Penguin Classics)







  
  
    . White would go on to rightly win the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1973.  I’ve been to Australia three times, twice on the American government’s “dime.” And so I was amused when Flanagan had his protagonist, Dorrigo Evans attempting to escape from me (and my kind) since “Sydney was full of American GIs from Vietnam on R&R” (p. 364). Tut, tut. I really was not that unruly; my intentions were easily traced, searching for a mindset that, as Flanagan said much earlier in his novel, wouldn’t object to shocking the patrons of the hotel restaurant, which he said far less banally, and much more suggestively: “And wouldn’t that put some cream in their coffee.”War. Richard Flanagan was never in a war, nor was he apparently ever in the military. But his father was. His father was a prisoner of war who worked on the infamous “death railway” between Thailand (Siam) and Burma. And that experience is the core of this novel. He listened to his father well. And what is depicted is war, in extremis. Virtually no American (or Aussie!) had these experiences in Vietnam. And virtually no Allied troops had these experiences fighting Germany during the Second World War. It was a “perfect storm” of “honor,” “racism,” and the massive collision of the tectonic plates of empires. Flanagan brings all of that out so well. Japan, once so quiet, introspective, simply wanting to be left alone, was dragged onto “the world’s stage” in the 19th century, and assumed it role with a vengeance. The “white man” had no place in Asia. Japan would assume the role of providing “guidance” to the natives there. The last third of the novel is “epilogue,” what happened to the survivors of the Death Railroad after the war was over. Vengeance was dressed up in the robes of judicial proceedings. Nakamura, one of the leaders of the camps who managed to escape that vengeance/justice notes the irony: “they only prosecuted us for what we did to them, never what we did to the Chinese.”This is a novel in “high definition.” There are numerous crisp, searing images that will remain with me for the rest of my life. The structure of the novel, with the foreshadowing of events, and the interconnectivities that resulted from a country/continent which had a population that was less than some of today’s megalopolis, was brilliantly done. The title itself is taken from Matsuo Basho’s work of the same name, a link between the experiences of these two very different countries. And Flanagan’s prose is rich, meaningful, and almost perfectly wrought. Dominant is the theme of personal honor – often a good thing – run amok, to use a word now in English, which was derived from the language of Java, where Dorrigo Evans was captured. The Japanese were intent on building a railway because the white man said it could not be done, all for the glory of the emperor, their own version of the ancient pyramids, an analogy Flanagan makes several times. And there is also the disastrous consequences derived from the personal honor of the ever so mundane attempt to retain one’s own bodily functions.I’ll never be able to look at fish “captured” in an aquarium again, without thinking of this novel. As well as a major betrayal of ethics in the medical field: “Because he thought my white lab coat would help him.” And an issue that seems to unite the survivors of all wars: what to tell the families of the ones who didn’t make it, particularly if they died in futile or foolish circumstances: “What did you say?  The right thing.  Lies.” Flanagan uses the eternal truths of great literature, so it is no surprise that the homecoming of Ulysses is featured as part of a wedding toast. And medical failures haunt: the repeated grasping for a femoral artery that wasn’t there.It is also a novel about the missed opportunities in love. The book’s cover hints at that also, about a woman who had the “…audacity in wearing a big red flower in her hair…” in the bookstore. She became a haunting obsession. So… if you are going to Sydney… wear a crimson camellia in your hair, though a magnolia blossom might do, along with the pearls, and don’t “walk on by” on that iconic bridge, but stand hand-in-hand, and savor the time that is left. 6-stars.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 4.0 out of 5 stars







  
  
    Brilliant at times, but marred by some notable flaws as well
  

*by C***S on Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2014*

The Narrow Road to the Deep North is an immensely gripping and thought-provoking work, but one also marred by some notable flaws as well.  I'll start with the novel's strengths, of which there were many.The scenes at the POW camp were incredible, and this is clearly the heart and the soul of the book where the major themes and ideas play out.  For the most part, this is an incredibly brutal but also nuanced storyline, where Flanagan does a very good job of deconstructing and questioning such fundamental and taken-for-granted constructs such as "heroism", "duty", and "virtue" and instead portrays a flawed, and often bleak, image of humanity.  Despite the close personal connection to the topic (Flanagan's father worked on the railroad as a POW), it is a risky one given the many well-known and iconic works that have tackled this or a similar subject (e.g., Bridge over the River Qwai, King Rat, Empire of the Sun, Unbroken ... I'd argue that, although there are perhaps more differences than similarities between the two works, there are even parallels with Anthony Doerr's recent best-seller All the Light We Cannot See as well).  Yet, Flanagan succeeds brilliantly, and these scenes work well on several levels of meaning and engagement as a reader.I thought that the post-war storylines were compelling as well.  The irony that these men (captors and captives alike) were at their most alive when they were in the most inhumane conditions makes for a bittersweet denouement, as most continued to fight the war--albeit internally--long after the fighting ended.  In both the POW camp as well as the post-war scenes, I thought Flanagan did a nice job of telling a cohesive story from multiple perspectives.  As a result, multiple and more nuanced perspectives emerged, greatly enriching the story.Unfortunately, this novel had some glaring weaknesses as well, at least in my opinion (reading some of the other reviews, it looks like I am not alone on some of these issues at least).  As others have pointed out, the romance with Amy is just not well-written or compelling.  This is a critical issue, because Amy is key to understanding Dorrigo's thoughts and actions before, during, and after the war.  To work, the reader needs to love Amy as Dorrigo does, to yearn for her, put her on a pedestal, to believe there are two types of women: Amy, and everyone else.  Instead, I found myself oddly indifferent to Amy--she just did not excite or seduce me as she apparently excited Dorrigo.  Part of the problem, for me at least, is that like pretty much every female character in the book (who are few and far between) she is largely defined in terms of her relation to the men in the book; we see "Amy the trapped wife" and "Amy the yearning lover" but we don't really get to know just "Amy".  I was really excited when the perspective shifted to Amy's partway through Part 2.  However, while we learn more backstory, we don't really learn that much more about her, other than she also has the same "I don't know why, but I'm completely smitten with this person!" feelings as Dorrigo, while the reader is just left with the "I don't know why" part of that sentiment.  This is not helped by Flanagan's saccharine and melodramatic writing in this section, which makes Dorrigo seem more like an infatuated 15 year old rather than a doctor in his late twenties.  Their lovemaking is cringe-worthy (this book has the dubious distinction of being nominated for the "Bad Sex Award of 2014" by Literary Review), and I will unfortunately probably not be able to get the line "Hands found flesh; flesh, flesh" out of my head for a while.  Because Amy is such a key part of Dorrigo's identity, the flaws of this story line also make Dorrigo a little harder to relate to as a character, particularly when it comes to his womanizing and his treatment of his wife and family.That was my main criticism, but a major one--I was sorely tempted to stop reading the book by the end of Part 2; I'm glad I stuck with it, but it says something that a romantic dalliance is more "painful" to read than scenes of torture and death in a POW camp.  However, there were a few other irritants.  In general, although the Australians were nuanced, complex characters, the Japanese were pretty one note: brainwashed/unthinking monsters in a state of denial.  This was a very regrettable missed opportunity to provide more nuance on the other side of the equation ... many Japanese did indeed buy into the propaganda, but many others didn't.  Some resisted (and suffered for it), while many others bowed to the powerful social and cultural pressure to conform.  On the other hand, I thought the story of Choi Sang-min, as a Korean prison guard for the Japanese, was quite powerful and evocative.  As a final critique, I felt that Flanagan's writing often did not flow well, especially toward the beginning of the book.  Many sentences had multiple clauses, on different subjects, awkwardly joined together by a mash of commas and semi-colons.In reviewing this book, I struggled for a while about whether to give this book 3 stars or 4.  Ultimately, however, I feel like the strengths of the book outweigh the negatives, and by time I got to Part 3, the Part 2 "romance" with Amy and other issues quickly receded from my mind.  I recommend the book, but remain slightly unfulfilled ... this novel had the pieces to be a truly great work, yet it falls just a bit short of that potential.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Fantastic read!
  

*by M***H on Reviewed in Germany on October 28, 2023*

A real look into what Australian POWs went through - some parts quite tough to read. Very well written. Would defiantly recommend.

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*Store origin: VU*
*Last updated: 2026-05-06*