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THE GRASS WAS ALWAYS BROWNER
Sacha Jones
Releasing May 1st, 2016
Finch Publishing
The
Grass Was Alway Browner by Sacha Jones is the story of a
strong-willed, smart yet often less than sensible, curious and questioning girl
growing up as the middle-child of three children. Her parents are old, and
old-fashioned, deeply impractical, idealistic and naive, not best suited to negotiating
the rough and rugged terrain of suburban Sydney in the 1970s-80s.
Sacha
is not only the middle child, but she is stuck in the middle of the muddle and
mess of her family’s situation. She sees and suffers more than her siblings do
– or so she feels. However, one advantage of her position is that she is sent
to study ballet to treat her asthma, and through ballet she finds a way out of
her predicament.
Sacha’s
determination to escape her humdrum existence and ‘become Russian’ saw her push
through and succeed against the odds (wrong-shaped head, wrong feet, overall
wrong build) and a father who is strongly against her becoming a ballet dancer.
He describes ballet as ‘a frivolous and selfish pursuit, too focused on
appearances.’ His own dreams are focused on a desire to save the Third World.
However, in their very different ways, Sacha and her father are more alike than
either would care to admit.
In
becoming a dancing star, Sacha surprises no-one more than her legendary dance
teacher – an actual Russian – Mrs P, Tanya Pearson. However, her father was
right about ballet.
Although
it gives Sacha the escape she desires, there is a heavy price to pay. And when
she sets off for London to further her dance career, it is in part because the
Australian dance scene betrayed her trust.
Award-winning
playwright, poet and novelist Stephanie Johnson says of The Grass Was Always
Browner, “Nineteen seventies suburban Sydney comes winningly alive in Sacha’s
light-hearted girlhood memoir of boundless optimism, pink milk, tutus, triumph
at the Eisteddfod and a horse in the back garden.”
The
Grass Was Always Browner is a laugh-out-loud
memoir and a cautionary reminder that the grass is not always greener on the
other side of the fence.
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Extract 1: The Grass Was Always Browner by Sacha Jones (Finch Publishing) (382 words)
A glimpse of family life
Dad’s homecoming I left entirely to Tim. On Fridays these would consist of him standing hand-in-hand with Mum on our front veranda, which was elevated above the street level, not unlike a stage, and when Dad pulled up to park on the verge down by the road, Tim would yell out in his best stage voice: ‘Have you got the grog, Dad?’ for Fridays were grog-buying night and thanks to Tim the entire neighbourhood knew it. There was nothing Mum could do to curb his enthusiasm, try as she might, and despite the needlessness of his inquiry (Dad always had the grog)...
It was good of our laundry to squeeze in a second toilet, because it had recently been called upon to accommodate a second fridge – chiefly for the purpose of storing Dad’s back-up grog. Toilets and fridges are not entirely natural roommates, and indeed the arrangement may well have been illegal. And because of the lack of space in the laundry, when you sat on the toilet, one knee bumped the washing machine and the other the second fridge. This leant a certain rustic quality to the experience, but the advantage of the arrangement was that if you ever overheated whilst sat on the toilet, a not uncommon experience living in Australia, you could reach a short arm out and relieve yourself by the cool of the open fridge door. And while there, you were free to peruse the contents of the fridge, beyond the grog, to consider your next meal while eliminating your last. Some might call that efficient.
Efficient or not, I avoided the laundry toilet for all but the gravest of toilet emergencies, especially at night when the slugs came out. I did not like slugs. Indeed sitting with the slugs I felt was only fractionally better than literally exploding with poo, which is why I put it off until that was nearly the case. The laundry door naturally did not reach all the way down to the concrete floor so it was a free for all for the slugs to come and go as they pleased, congregating around the base of the toilet, possibly because it was inclined to leak. And being Australian slugs they were naturally well fed, and roughly the dimensions of your average-sized seal.
Sacha Jones
has a PhD in Political Theory from the University of Auckland and has variously
taught politics, preschool and dancing. She lives with her family on the
outskirts of a proper forest (in Auckland, New Zealand) and returns as often as
it will have her to the land of fake forests and improbable fruits where she
grew up (Frenchs Forest, Sydney).
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ReplyDeleteCrystal, Tasty Book Tours
Book sounds really good. Thanks for the chance!
ReplyDeleteawesome giveaway
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