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Plot Summary

The Road from Coorain

Jill Ker Conway
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Plot Summary

The Road from Coorain

Nonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | Adult | Published in 1989

Plot Summary

The Road from Coorain is a 1989 autobiographical novel by Jill Ker Conway. Ker Conway is perhaps best known as the first female president of Smith College, the largest of the Seven Sisters colleges. The book details Jill's upbringing in Australia, up through her early adulthood and acceptance to Radcliffe College. The Road from Coorain was adapted into a two-hour long biopic in 2002. The film starred Katherine Slattery as Jill and Juliet Stevenson as her mother.

Jill Ker Conway was born in 1934, in the great Australian outback, or “bush.” She first lived in Coorain, a small sheep station in New South Wales, and the first part of the book details her upbringing there. Her family comprises her father; two elder brothers, Bob and Barry; and above all – the most important figure in her life – her imperious and complex mother, Eve, a woman whose long shadow falls across the entire autobiography. The landscape in Coorain is stark, beautiful and majestic, but the family lives in an isolated area, and Jill's only childhood playmates are her brothers. Eve teaches Jill to love reading and learning, and Jill spends much of her free time teaching herself from books. Her free time is not as abundant as she'd like, however, because Jill is often enlisted to help running the farmstead.

When Jill is only eight years old, an extended drought descends upon Coorain, killing most of the family's sheep. Founded during the Great Depression, Coorain had been a big gamble for Jill's parents, and the sheep station did not, at first, do well. But over time it began to thrive – until the drought. In its wake, Jill's father was especially hard hit; owning a great farm had always been his dream. After years of watching his life's ambition literally wither away, Jill's father dies in 1944 in a bizarre diving scenario that Jill suspects was suicide.



The young family is distraught, but Jill's mother persists for three more years. So, unfortunately, does the drought. Finally, Eve makes the fateful decision to pack up and move her family to Sydney. As they leave Coorain, Jill resolves to be her “father’s agent in the family and muster the energy to deal with such further disasters as might befall us.”

Once in Sydney, Jill is taunted by her peers for the British accent and manners her parents had taught her. When this becomes problematic, Eve enrolls her in an elite private girls' school called Abbotsleigh, where English mannerisms are in vogue. Here, Jill first begins to show signs of the scholarship that will one day make her renown. After Abbotsleigh, Jill enrolls at the University of Sydney. She studies English and history, graduating in 1958 with honors. Afterwards, she seeks a trainee post in the Department of External Affairs, but is turned down by the all-male committee on account of her gender.

But life in Sydney is no urban idyll. Jill's brother Bob dies in a car crash, which devastates Eve, who has still not fully recovered from the loss of her husband and Coorain. Jill's mother deteriorates; the once formidable woman, out of her element in Sydney's urban environment, and now twice bereaved, becomes increasingly controlling and manipulative. She develops multiple substance abuse problems, and becomes more and more interested in the paranormal. Jill eventually, in the course of her studies, reads Carl Jung's “The Positive and Negative Aspects of the Mother Archetype,” identifying herself as Persephone and her mother as Demeter. She fears that for her mother to lose control of her daughter would be her final undoing. Illuminated by the essay, and out of a sense of duty to her father, Jill at first decides to remain with her mother, feeling obliged to take care of her.



Eventually, Jill finally realizes she must free herself from Eve's influence and blaze her own trail through life. In 1960, at twenty-five years old, she moves to the US to study Australian history at Radcliffe College.

Ker Conway's tale is uniquely and vividly told. As a historian, Ker Conway weaves her personal coming-of-age story into Australia's own: as England's global status declines, Australia is forced to reckon with its unique history and geopolitical position. In some ways, Ker Conway's long battle to free herself from the stifling influence of her mother parallels Australia's attempts to forge an international identity for itself as more than a mere territory of a once-great power.

The Road from Coorain was not the last of Ker Conway's memoirs, and was followed by two subsequent works of autobiography. The first of these, True North (1994), picks up where Ker Conway leaves off in The Road from Coorain, detailing Jill's acclimatization to America, the establishment of her academic career, and how she met the love of her life. The second, A Woman's Education (2001), follows Ker Conway from the immediate lead up to her appointment as Smith College's first woman president, through her retirement.
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