This year’s
shortlisted novels explore a variety themes including loss, desire and betrayal
in settings from the East End of London, through to Paris, Australia, and
India.
Jean Fullerton’s Wedding Bells for Nurse Connie takes us back to 1948 where for Nurse
Connie Byrne, preparing for the start of the NHS and to marry her sweetheart,
Malcolm, life looks pretty straightforward – that is until Dr MacLauchlan
arrives...
Readers have
commented on the authentic detail in your novel; can you tell us more about what
your starting point was?
Not only was I born and grew up in East
London but I have spent much of my working life as a district nurse in East
London. My first job on the District was in the London Borough of Newham which
is made up of the old areas of East and West Ham, Stratford, Forest Gate and
Manor Park and the old neighbourhood around the Royal Docks in Canning Town.
Like Connie I visited people with
diabetes to give them their morning insulin but unlike her I didn’t have to
boil a glass syringe for ten minutes beforehand and I never had to ask my
patients to bake gauze squares in the oven alongside the evening meal to
sterilise them. There were hundreds of other ways mine and Connie’s practice
differed, but what never changes is how nursing involves human drama, joy and
tragedy. I believe that my family and professional background breathes
authenticity into Nurse Connie’s world.
It came from a song that has haunted me
for years. ‘Little Boy Lost’ (by Aussie songwriter Johnny Ashcroft tells the
true story of a child lost in the bush. The boy was found, safe and well, after
what was then Australia’s biggest search. That song always brings a tear to my
eye. It started me thinking about being lost – and how there is more than one
way to be lost. That’s where this book
came from.
Pamela
Hart’s The War Bride is the story of war bride Margaret Dalton who when arriving in Sydney in
1920, to reunite with her ANZAC husband Frank, finds out from the Army that he
already has a wife. Devastated, Margaret must find a new home, a new job… and,
perhaps, a new love. But what if the Army was wrong?
This is a fascinating
story; we asked Pamela where the idea came to her:
I found the germ of the story for The War Bride while I was researching my
last book, The Soldier’s Wife. As soon as I heard about a Margaret who came
to Sydney as a war bride only to find that her husband had abandoned her, I
knew I had to write her story. The book
is set around Sydney Harbour, especially around Lavender Bay, which is where I
teach writing for the Australian Writers’ Centre. Any time I was running low on
inspiration, I just had to walk out my classroom door and gaze at the harbour
in all its many moods, and I was right back in 1920 with my characters.
Leah
Mercer’s Who We Were Before follows
protagonists Edward and Zoe, who two years on from the death of their
young son couldn’t be further apart. A weekend in Paris might be their last
hope for reconciliation, but mischance sees them separated before they’ve even
left Gare du Nord. Lost and alone, Edward and Zoe must try to find their way
back to each other—and find their way back to the people they were before.
This novel
confronts some difficult themes and we asked Leah what led her to tackle them
in her novel:
It was written shortly after my
father died, and it provided a much-needed outlet for my own grief. I hope it
shows that healing can happen when sadness brings people together, instead of
driving them apart.
Ann O’Loughlin’s
The Judge’s Wife is
a tale of enduring
love and scandal that begins in 1950s Dublin and unravels across decades and
continents, digging up long-buried family secrets along the way. This is the
love story of Grace, the judge’s wife, and Indian doctor Vikram Fernandes. The Judge’s Wife asks whether love
really can last forever.
We asked Ann what
inspired the rich detail in her writing:
So many things! A small piece of marble pushed into my hand
by a workman at the Taj Mahal, the beautiful jewellery, gowns and outfits sent
by a rich relative in twice yearly parcels from the US to my West of Ireland
home and a year in India living amid the coffee estates of South India which changed
my life. All of these gave me glimpses
into different worlds and helped me build the background to the story.
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