Told with great force, 'For The Term Of His Natural Life' is a narrative of great suffering - of whips, chains and man's inhumanity.
There is no attempt to soften the truth of degradation and dark cruelty in convict Australia. And yet the novel is filled with life, and peopled with vivid characters, Rufus Dawes, condemned to transportation for a crime he did not commit, is one of the most unforgettable characters of Australian literature.
This is perhaps Australia's most significant and most famous 19-century colonial novel and has found success both in Australia and abroad - it has been translated into German, Dutch, Swedish and Russian. It was serialised from 1870 to 1872 and published as a work for the first time in Australia in 1874.