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Newcastle Herald
Newcastle Herald
Simon McCarthy

Scott Bevan revisits his roots on the banks of the Hunter River

Hunter writer Scott Bevan has revisited his 2012 'love letter to the region', The Hunter, returning to the water 10 years on. Picture from file
Hunter writer Scott Bevan has revisited his 2012 'love letter to the region', The Hunter, returning to the water 10 years on. Picture from file
Hunter writer Scott Bevan has revisited his 2012 'love letter to the region', The Hunter, returning to the water 10 years on. Picture from file
Hunter writer Scott Bevan has revisited his 2012 'love letter to the region', The Hunter, returning to the water 10 years on. Picture from file

The old adage goes that you can't step in the same river twice, but as Hunter writer Scott Bevan has found, it's not always the river that changes.

The former Newcastle Herald reporter has revisited his 2012 tome, The Hunter, which charted a solo kayaking journey along the region's arterial waterway, appending an extended epilogue to the new edition titled The Return, which he will launch at the Maitland Regional Art gallery at 5.30pm this evening with noted film director and long-time friend Bruce Beresford.

In 2011, Bevan, having just returned from a correspondent's stint in Russia, was eager to reconnect with his regional roots in the Hunter, and charted a solo kayaking voyage along the then drought-ravaged Hunter River.

The voyage connected him with a cast of local characters who appear in the work and now, after almost a decade, and a sometimes-literal-sometimes-metaphorical flood of change in between, the writer set out to reconnect with the waterway and himself.

"It's a new, old book," he said yesterday, describing The Hunter as a love letter to the region and the colony that became the nation.

When the first edition went out of print, he said, it was the perfect excuse to revisit the work.

"I thought I would write an epilogue, and I just kept writing," he said after charting a second journey in 2021.

He describes the new edition as a study of change and constancy. After stepping away from his media career, and in the wake of the pandemic, he said he felt the same urge to reconnect that he had when he arrived home in 2011.

"A river gives the impression that it's not changing at all, but of course it does," he said, "Paddling down the river in 2011, some of the people who had helped me and who I got to meet had moved away, sadly some had died, but so many were still there. I got to meet new people who were as hospitable and generous as those who I met in 2011, and this was the constant.

"There are those cornerstone of the Hunter - one of them is the river and as far as I'm concerned another is the generosity of the people. And if you want to explore that all you have to do is plonk a kayak in the river and start paddling - it's beautiful that that hadn't changed."

The book is two stories in one, with The Hunter reprinted in full and the additional section, The Return.

The book will be available for purchase at the launch and at Hunter bookstores. Tickets for the event are free and details are available via the MRAG website.

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