What’s It About?
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Synopsis
When Eleanor Freeman’s enigmatic stepmother, Ida, dies in a suspicious fire, a lifetime of secrets begins to unravel. Was Ida an Indonesian spy entangled in the murders of the Balibo Five and unspeakable war crimes?
Haunted by the past and pursued by those who would prefer the truth to remain buried, Eleanor flees to a crumbling lighthouse on the mid-north coast of NSW. There, amid salt-lashed cliffs and gathering shadows, she unearths a decades-old conspiracy of betrayal, silence and bloodshed – one that stretches from the halls of Canberra to the ravaged villages of Timor-Leste.
Revelation Beach dares to expose one of Australia’s most shameful cover-ups, where lives were sacrificed for oil, gas and political expediency. At once a literary page-turner and a powerful reckoning, this novel asks the question: How far would you go to uncover the truth?
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Backstory
Susan Francis spent a year in Indonesia in 1980, where she experienced conversations shutting down when she walked into social settings and witnessed chunks of articles in the newspapers blacked out by the censor’s heavy hand as ongoing resistance by the Timorese filled the media. This led her to years of researching this bloody history. In Revelation Beach, Susan intricately weaves fact with fiction to highlight our crucial relationship with our northern neighbours and the devastation when we chose to look away from genocide. With the fiftieth anniversary of the journalists’ deaths in October 2025, Revelation Beach showcases one of the greatest government cover-ups in Australian history.
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Endorsements
Praise for Revelation Beach
“Rich with vivid detail and evocatively drawn, Revelation Beach is a compelling reckoning with a dark chapter in our past.”
— Mark Brandi, award-winning crime writer
“A literary page-turner for thriller lovers and everyone with an interest in Timor-Leste and Australia.”
— Tony Park, best-selling author of adventure thrillers
Susan Francis has taken the tragic story of the Balibo Five as a starting point to create a psychologically intricate cross-cultural thriller with the superbly rendered Eleanor as its complex and unwilling protagonist. Reminiscent of Christopher Koch at his best.
— Ed Wright, editor and critic
An exquisitely absorbing thriller that works as equal parts mystery and meditation on Australia’s tangled and ignoble history in East Timor and Indonesia. Susan Francis writes her characters with such depth and believability that you can almost touch them.
—Dr Gordon Peake, award winning writer 'Beloved Land,' international consultant, lecturer, podcaster, former senior advisor to United States Institute of Peace.
