I just read "Does my head look big in this" by Randa Abdel-Fattah, a cheery YA novel about a Australian-Palestinian-Muslim girl who's just decided to wear the hijab, and her general hijinks and life. I enjoyed it overall, my main problem was that it was, well, a YA book about Life Love and Self-Identity, and I'm not a big fan of that genre (especially as a not-that-young adult) but I can't blame the book for that. It got a bit anvilicious, issues-driven and preachy here and there ("Be yourself!" "There are many ways to be muslim!" etc) but that goes with the genre. It reminded me a bit of "Looking for Alibrandi", but was more cheery.
Anyway, it was set in Melbourne which (like
melberon's recent posts) made me feel like going back to Melbourne and eating lots of gelato and pasta etc, but also made me think back to my youth and the fact that I don't remember ever reading any YA books set in Perth that I could identify with. In general, I can't think of any books (or fiction in general) set in Perth which are about normal urban life (especially from a female pov), they're all about The Sea and The Bush and The Past and Being A Man. It feels like authors think there's no point telling urban stories about anywhere east of Melbourne :/
So can you guys think of any? And, second and harder question, any you'd recommend?
I'm almost certainly missing something obvious. And no, short stories Do Not Count (well, unless you really HAVE to mention it :))
Anyway, back to the book, as was somewhat transparently the intent I did learn a bit about life for muslim australians. The only muslim australian I've ever really spoken to was Natalie Kettleson (name probably misremembered!) back in highschool, and she made an effort not to mention it very much (I only found out when she asked if there was any alcohol in a black forest cake we had for german class)
I semi-befriended my lebanese-muslim neighbour back in Maylands, but she was in a constant state of culture shock that went well beyond religious differences (she was a very recent immigrant, and was much better settled in by the time they left)
So, yeah, it was interesting. Overall I found her very easy to relate to, especially when I remembered back to when I was christian, though I had trouble getting my head around the "no boyfriends/kissing before marriage" thing (I have trouble enough with the "no sex before marriage" thing, I find the whole idea rather alien as someone whose parents got married when I was six) until I thought "Well, Jane Austen would have felt the same way" :) It got me thinking about my own boundaries and choices: I have no specific religious/moral imperative not to go around in skimpy clothing or be promiscuous, and yet (by local standards) I do neither, and on the whole don't wear makeup or flirt or touch people. So I definitely understand how setting up those sorts of boundaries can actually be very freeing, and how you can still be accepting of other people making different choices. Hmm.
oyceter has a nice review here, and it was her rec relating to
50books_poc that got me to read it in the first place.
Anyway, it was set in Melbourne which (like
So can you guys think of any? And, second and harder question, any you'd recommend?
I'm almost certainly missing something obvious. And no, short stories Do Not Count (well, unless you really HAVE to mention it :))
Anyway, back to the book, as was somewhat transparently the intent I did learn a bit about life for muslim australians. The only muslim australian I've ever really spoken to was Natalie Kettleson (name probably misremembered!) back in highschool, and she made an effort not to mention it very much (I only found out when she asked if there was any alcohol in a black forest cake we had for german class)
I semi-befriended my lebanese-muslim neighbour back in Maylands, but she was in a constant state of culture shock that went well beyond religious differences (she was a very recent immigrant, and was much better settled in by the time they left)
So, yeah, it was interesting. Overall I found her very easy to relate to, especially when I remembered back to when I was christian, though I had trouble getting my head around the "no boyfriends/kissing before marriage" thing (I have trouble enough with the "no sex before marriage" thing, I find the whole idea rather alien as someone whose parents got married when I was six) until I thought "Well, Jane Austen would have felt the same way" :) It got me thinking about my own boundaries and choices: I have no specific religious/moral imperative not to go around in skimpy clothing or be promiscuous, and yet (by local standards) I do neither, and on the whole don't wear makeup or flirt or touch people. So I definitely understand how setting up those sorts of boundaries can actually be very freeing, and how you can still be accepting of other people making different choices. Hmm.
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Arranged marriages?
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I've never read or watched any Jane Austen!
Set in Perth
I'm sure there are some others I've read... just can't recall them off the top of my head.
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This post is currently #2 on Google for [Novels set in Perth], first being http://www.bclbooks.com.au/perthbooks.htm which has pages for other states as well. Further down the results are Manic Streets of Perth which you can preview on Google Book Search, and Belly dancing for beginners by Liz Byrski. Then Choices by Dianne Wolfer published by Fremantle Press who have a fair few YA and adult books, although it's hard to tell from their website how many are set in Perth - I know Blue is only by the pullquote and City of Light is a given away by its title. Other WA publishers - Fontaine Press which doesn't have much Perth stuff, while UWA Press and Hesperian Press are mostly about The Sea and The Bush and The Past and Being A Man.
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Oh I how I remember that. :(
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From memory one was called LA Postcards, which I can't actually find online, and I can't remember the authors name, and I can only vaguely remember it. So you know I could be making this entire thing up. It was about a boy though. Or maybe it told the point of view of a girl as well, she definitely had a part in the story.
Mind you, I can't remember reading all that many books about normal rural life (especially for a townie in the south west) either that particularly grabbed me. I can remember a few desert/wheatbelt type ones that I enjoyed though.
I think though, Tim Winton kinda has the market on those kinda books in WA, which is a shame, because it kinda means nothing good gets written. There's also the fact that the majority of the population do live in the East side of Australia, and as such there's larger groups of urban artist/hippy kinda areas in those cities, and its always easier to write about what you're surrounded by. :P
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There's also a more recent science-fictiony young adult novel called The Fur (I think) set in a post-apocalyptic Perth where the western suburbs are sealed off and quarantined from the rest of the state. Wikipedia linky (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fur_(novel)) to prove I'm not making this up, it seems more obscure than I'd thought.
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Then clearly you are not really a girl!!
You've encountered some fiction set in like 1700-1900 right, though? *tries to remember if you studied history, fails at memory*
I must admit, I don't know how similar the sets of attitudes really are anyway, but that's the closest thing I could lay my brain on to relate to.
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EDIT: Wait, now I remember! In 2005ish actually started a near future scifi comic set in the eastern suburbs about a telepathic mind controlling cult, but got bored of the idea after drawing the second and third pages. See, that's the Darling Ranges in the background! (They're the closest thing we have to mountains in this state)
Wow, nothing like looking at old drawings to make me happy with my current skill level :D
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I've found Ben Elton unreadable in general.
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Bah to style and theory, I want novels set here because I live here :) And, subtle as the difference may be, an urban story set here is not the same as one set on the east coast.
Good point about Aboriginality, though.
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I think Sean and Tess Williams have some post apocalyptic sf set in WA, too.
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Re: Set in Perth
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