Omar Musa will be in conversation with Beejay Silcoxon his new novel Fierceland, a globe-spanning epic of power and family secrets
How do you mourn your father when you know his secrets? After many years abroad, Roz and Harun return to Malaysian Borneo for the funeral of their father Yusuf 鈥 and to reckon with their inheritance. A renowned palm-oil baron during Malaysia鈥檚 economic rise, Yusuf built the family鈥檚 immense wealth by destroying huge tracts of rainforest. What his children know is that he was also responsible for the violent disappearance of a man who stood in his way.
Harun has become a successful tech entrepreneur in Los Angeles, Roz is an artist struggling to stay afloat in Sydney. Now they want to return something their father stole from the forests of their homeland. In their quest for redemption they grapple with the legacy of power and corruption, dreamers and exiles, thugs and zealots. Most dangerous of all, they are haunted 鈥 by the ghosts of colonialism, the ghosts of family, the ghosts of language, and the ghosts of the forest itself.
A trailblazing journey across the globe, Fierceland weaves the past and the present into an emotionally powerful family saga that plays out at a mythical scale.
'Potent and powerful, Fierceland is a shapeshifting novel of great reckoning; a brutal, beautiful study of wilderness within and without, of the ghosts that afflict and follow in the wake of family, legacy and complicity.' 鈥 Hannah Kent
Omar Musa is an author, visual artist and poet from Queanbeyan, New South Wales and is currently based in Borneo and Brooklyn.. He has released one novel, four books of poetry (including Killernova), five hip-hop records, and an acclaimed one man play, Since Ali Died. His work has appeared in The Best Australian Stories and Best of Australian Poems.
His debut novel, Here Come the Dogs, was long-listed for the International Dublin Literary Award and the Miles Franklin Award. He was named one of the Sydney Morning Herald鈥檚 Young Novelists of the Year in 2015.
Beejay Silcox , book critic and author. has been described as 鈥渢he most significant new Australian critic in decades鈥. In addition to her literary and cultural commentary, Beejay works as a professional reader, an interviewer, prize judge, editor, award-winning creative writing educator and is the former Artistic Director of Canberra Writers Festival.
Karen Viggers, best-selling Canberra writer, veterinarian, and podcaster will give the vote of thanks.
Books are available for signing from 5.30pm and again after the event.
Additional information:
Registration is required for this event.
鈥痑re available around campus should you require them.
To help keep everyone safe, please ensure that you are familiar with, and follow, the advice from .
If you do not feel well, please refrain from attending this event.
By registering for this event, you are accepting our鈥.
A podcast will be made available after the event.
TEQSA Provider ID: PRV12002 (Australian University) | CRICOS Provider Code: 00120C
Location
Tangney Rd, Acton ACT 2601 (ANU Building 153)
Acton, ACT, 2601
Contact
- ANU Communications & Engagement