Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

1985

Rate this book
It’s 1985 and Obi’s on the cusp of teenagehood, after a childhood marked by poverty, dysfunctional family dynamics, (dis)organised crime and violence. His dad’s delusional, his mum’s real sick, the Rainbow Warrior just exploded, and it’s time for Obi to grow up and get out of the spacies parlour.

When he and his best mate Al discover a map leading to unknown riches, Obi wonders if this windfall could be the thing that turns his family’s fortunes around. Instead, he’s thrown into an adventure where the stakes are a lot higher than the games he loves.

An electric novel about life in a multi-cultural, counter-cultural part of Auckland pre-gentrification.

339 pages, Kindle Edition

Published May 6, 2025

41 people are currently reading
502 people want to read

About the author

Dominic Hoey

7 books69 followers
Dominic Hoey is a poet, author and playwright based in Auckland, New Zealand.

His debut novel Iceland was a New Zealand bestseller, long-listed for the 2018 Ockham Book Award and his short story 1986 won the 2021 Sunday Star Times Short Story Award. His latest poetry collection I Thought We’d Be Famous was released in October 2019.

Dominic has written and performed two one-person hit shows about his bone disease and his inability to get arts funding. In a former life, Dominic was an MC battle and slam-poetry champion.

Through his Learn To Write Good creative writing course, Dominic has taught hundreds of students around the world how to think dyslexic.

He also works with young people through the Atawhai program, teaching art, yoga and meditation to help them with their mental health and self-esteem.

Currently he lives with a small, vicious dog and dreams of one day owning an animal rescue farm.Zealand International Film Festival and Show Me Shorts.

Dominic is currently working on a new novel and a book of poetry.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
211 (51%)
4 stars
158 (38%)
3 stars
40 (9%)
2 stars
2 (<1%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 63 reviews
Profile Image for Ken.
376 reviews85 followers
August 21, 2025
1985 Dominic Hoey
The book.
Treasure island, half right, got the island bit locked away.....

Obi, his arcade spacies high scores game name, picked after the star wars guy. 11 nearly 12 year old kid living in inner city Grey Lynn, Auckland 1985. Fat poor white, a trifecta winner. His crazy adventure with Gus's nicked treasure map.
Gus sleeping in his lounge just got out after 7 years in prison, friend of his Dad.
Dad, fulltime unemployed poet partime shoplifter and bacon factory worker who really loves Obi's mum.
Mum whose keen on reading, went to Uni, worries all the time about her husband kids but now has the shittiest cancer.

AL, his best friend Pacifica kid whom Obi ropes in on his wacky treasure hunt. Also wants him to win a spacies comp.

Rat's the friend you feel sorry for and let him join your pack, anyway actually wins the spacies comp, so makes Obi and AL look like dummies.

Obi wants to save his house help his mum swoop on in like superman etc etc..he almost nearly kind of got there in the end........nah not even close.

Lui older brother to AL bit of a crush on Summer, Obi older sis. Kind of useful he has a car.

Personal dribble.

Well better than reading a thesis on heart muscle dont get me wrong nothing against layout for myocyte experimentation and Cross-Correlation Algorithms, but really I'd rather have a half eaten orange thrown at my bus window and watching the juice slide on angle as the bus picks up speed going through Grey Lynn. 100% of the way through Poor people with money, which is way more rugged, like catching a clown washing his feet in the kitchen sink. Neway T off time.

Wait a poem or 2 from Dad.

When I am with you
There is no time
When I am here
Each minute is a tooth
I have to rip from my gums.

Shoplifting what's mine
When the pigs catch ya
Hands red as ya politics
My legal advice
Is turn dumb
The only thing you're required to tell them is Huh
And what
Forget where ya live
Forget ya name
Forget why ya got a pocket full of stolen laughter
Your breath is contraband
When ya poor.
Profile Image for Umbar.
374 reviews
July 8, 2025
Dominic Hoey does it again! Loved the characters in this (Al my shaylaaaaa), and as a reading experience it felt a bit gentler than Poor People With Money. DH said something I liked at the Time Out event we went to along the lines of how it's not always 100% depressing and sometimes childhood is just crack up, and I really felt that reading this. It's something I've been thinking about a lot in relation to NZ writing since reading Once Were Warriors and I thought telling the story from a child's perspective let it have a very strong/consistent undercurrent of sympathy but still kept the levity. Perhaps rounded up a smidge, and I enjoyed PPWM a bit more, but just adored Obi and Al sm.

Also, another big win for aphantasia gang. <3 Grey Lynn, loved to read about a Grey Lynn/Auckland-at-large before my time, loved reading the name of the street I lived on in uni. Top tier book cover too.
12 reviews1 follower
August 5, 2025
I started out a bit skeptical but, before I realised it, I was truly engrossed. Initially obi felt more like a point to make than a person but by the middle of the book things had changed and I really saw the character as being real. The Dad felt sometimes real and sometimes like a little bit of a stand in.

The characters of Al and Gus were especially well realised and I liked the way things eventually ended with the treasure hunt.

I think the book captured the chaos of that kind of living situation well. There is the feeling of change over the course of the book and it makes me oddly nostalgic for a NZ I never knew.

The Politics is not the main point of the book but you can’t escape it. I think a comment in point in the book is right though that in the 1980s people felt briefly like things were in flux and anything could happen.

Having it from a child’s perspective makes things a bit less pointed I think. Obi’s world view is pretty black and white and fairly partisan, so the few times he’s forced to see things in little shades of grey are pretty impactful.

Finally there were some beautiful lines in there which still sit with me.
Profile Image for Moira.
215 reviews3 followers
May 14, 2025
I seldom give 5 star ratings but I was enchanted by this memorial of a childhood in Grey Lynn before gentrification. Obi, the Spacies Wiz, his feckless father and ailing mother are all so vividly drawn. The arc of the story is so well written. At once hilarious and sad, it builds to a perfect conclusion.
Bravo!!
Profile Image for Alice Mander.
43 reviews2 followers
June 21, 2025
“We’re ourselves, even in grief”

This book isn’t perfect, but it was a gut punch. The first book to make me cry in years - not because it’s sad, which it is, but because it’s beautiful.
Profile Image for jimmy ellison.
109 reviews
December 27, 2025
tama swallows universe??

adored this so much, wholeheartedly recommend for anyone who's lived in tāmaki makaurau. big ups to lui and al and aunty, sys ak!!
Profile Image for Kim.
35 reviews14 followers
July 6, 2025
I couldn't put this down! A coming-of-age novel set in multicultural Crummer Road, Auckland, during the 1980s. Obi, a young boy surrounded by the harsh realities of poverty, addiction, and unemployment, spends most of his time hanging out with his best friend Al, skipping school, and playing arcade games whenever he can scrape together enough coins. He lives with his parents, both recovering heroin addicts and his older sister, who has her own challenges.
At one point, Obi asks his mum why they don’t just run away. "Where are we going to go?" she replies. "The car’s fucked and no one’s got a job."
As someone who grew up in Auckland during that time, I recognised all the familiar landmarks of Grey Lynn, Ponsonby, and K-Road that shape Obi’s world. The struggles are raw and real, but the story is also full of warmth, neighbourly connection, and unexpected humour.
Profile Image for Abby Fergz.
34 reviews
February 7, 2026
I consumed this on an ill fated trip to Tāmaki Makaurau, holed up in an apartment near albert park. It was cool reading this book here, transposing the ghost of the pre-gentrified auckland in this novel to the spaces i walked through. A different time for sure but theres still blood and vomit in the streets which i found a weird comfort.

' "I don`t want you getting into dumb shit like those men out there." She pointed towards the window, I didn't know if winning a spacies comp counted as dumb shit. Probably. But I knew she was talking about Dad, and Sam and Gus and the Surrey Crescent drunks and the sad-eyed addicts and criminals and all the other people who populated our stories. "There's no happiness in that life, just an endless celebration of pain," she used to say.

But there will always be a romance to the car crash. to the street fight, to the life thrown reckless into the fire. And anyway it felt like no matter what page you turn to, it was just another story about someone losing everything.'

'As far as I knew, our family didn't have a culture to speak of, just left- wing politics and various forms of escapism. My parents church was the kitchen table, or the pub or the second-hand bookstore. Our legends spoke of revolutionaries and artists, iconoclasts tearing tiny holes in the world, briefly letting in pinpricks of light.'

'But also theres a loneliness in not being anchored to nothing, to being a guest in your own life. Mum always told us to question everything. Good advice for sure. But it's like reading the end of a book first. Not much is special when you really stare at it.'
Profile Image for Jo V.
123 reviews1 follower
August 22, 2025
I don't know why I do this to myself; I get so emotionally invested in a story and characters when reading this type of book. Such a brilliant read however, now feeling very sad and very emotional that I've finished. Like the wrap up at the end but would've liked more information on what happens to Summer.

This book had me feeling very grateful that I didn't have that kind of childhood or have to go through that kind of poverty. Adults who don't want to adult really shouldn't be having children. It just makes me so mad.

Love all the Auckland streets and landmarks, got a kick out of being able to pinpoint exactly where the locations were. It's funny though comparing the Auckland of the eighties to now, so many changes that that area has gone through.
Profile Image for Sam Gribben.
130 reviews2 followers
January 20, 2026
What a fucking great book. Much nostalgia. Set unapologetically in the neighbourhood. I ride down the street on the cover every day to work.
Main character is 12 going on 13 in 85. I was 10 going on 11, so very relatable. Although I was definitely not a grey Lynn kid back then, and the grey Lynn school he describes if very different to the one our kids spent 10 years at. Guess we’re the rich cunts from across the street.
Profile Image for Libbie Gillard.
8 reviews
November 6, 2025
It’s a weird feeling to feel such nostalgia in a book from a time you never experienced. Fucking amazing writing
Profile Image for Victoria .
77 reviews1 follower
November 9, 2025
Poignant, funny and tragic snapshot of 1980’s Grey Lynn complete with timely cultural references and bookended by the Rainbow Warrior bombing.
Dominic Hoey can spin a yarn in a manner reminiscent of Trent Dalton.
Profile Image for Kat.
97 reviews10 followers
January 3, 2026
big fan, i love nz fiction
Profile Image for Carole.
1,143 reviews15 followers
January 20, 2026
I absolutely loved this historical coming of age novel set in Auckland. Obi is mostly trying to stay fed and win at the 'spacies' arcade games at the local dairies and takeaways. He loves his parents, but they don't do a lot of parenting! Money is very tight but in spite of that and their various problems (addiction, illness, alcohol, shoplifting and other crime), the family do love each other. Obi's mate Al is a great character too, usually turning up when there's food around. This book reminded me a lot of the movie Boy and at times of Trent Dalton's Boy Swallows Universe. The story is told through young Obi's eyes, and there are loads of great one-liners and subtle humour. Highly recommended, especially if you remember being a kiwi kid in the 1980s.
Profile Image for Adam Van Kampen.
24 reviews1 follower
November 22, 2025
Disappointing because I adored Poor People With Money. I just couldn’t get into this one.
Profile Image for Tim Etherington.
13 reviews1 follower
June 18, 2025
Humorous, introspective, and nostalgic. If you’re a millennial in New Zealand, I highly recommend.

Even though I was born a decade after the book’s setting, I still felt a familiar comfort in its backdrop — a time and lifestyle so close, yet so far from my modern life. It was easy to imagine myself in Obi’s shoes: kicking rocks with my mates, trying to cling to innocence while being drop-kicked into adulthood by life’s many curveballs. It’s funny how some things are kept secret from children, yet we still expect them to understand.

The story and setting are quite depressing — but for those who grew up that way, humour is often the best way to cope. The story strikes a great balance and feels authentic. Hoey has a great writing style — poetic when he needs to be, but never just to pad the word count. I look forward to seeing what else he has to offer.

There’s no happy ending here, but that’s the thing with life: the ending is neither happy nor sad — it just is.
Profile Image for Kenny Charlton.
75 reviews3 followers
May 22, 2025
an adult revision on childhood poverty

dominic Shows his poetic strength in 1985, every chapter being a standalone poem

given the reflectory nature of the writing it has given more capacity to stretch the descriptions of things better and larger than his previous work being set and child hood and our introspective protagonist having years to chew on discriptions

1985 is not about the ending but the journey to it, I found most characters intently likable and believable only since finishing remembering I didn't have a mate called Lui to defend me in school

1985 has a world unraveling, unbeknownst to them that everything is about to fall apart

i wasn't surprised by the ending
it did however feel quiet rushed and explained.
however when youre a child, most things being told to you are 'hopefully' a gentle surmise

I would recommend this book
Profile Image for Chanelle.
5 reviews
June 26, 2025
The storytelling and character building of 1985 are so beautifully woven together - I felt completely transported to the Grey Lynn of the mid 80s while I was reading this book. The characters felt so authentic. I laughed out loud, I felt sick (sewage covered dog etc), I cried. Brilliant.
Profile Image for Bruce.
377 reviews14 followers
August 16, 2025
4.5* (thinking of rounding up to a 5*)

"when you’re not paying attention, that’s when things fall apart real quick"

Wow. That was a ride.

Poor People With Money was a grimy, punchy, brilliant anxiety-fest. If anything, 1985 may even be better.

1985 paints a vivid picture of life on the margins in 1980's Grey Lynn, full of chaos, crime, and the harsh realities of family. 11 year old Obi's world is a daily grind of scraping together enough coins to play spacies. The adults in Obi’s life are deeply flawed and dysfunctional, battling drugs, booze, crime and illness. It feels so raw and authentic Hoey can only be talking from experience of his own childhood neighbourhood.

Hoey fondly gives a voice to the disenfranchised and he does it with brilliance, humour, and heartache all rolled into one. You run through multiple emotions across each short chapter. This novel is both nostalgic and a warning that the past isn’t rose-tinted as Hoey keeps it real, right through to the last page. This is wonderful writing - each page has quotable poetic turns of phrase injected into the gritty, often heartbreaking story.

Hoey is possibly one of the easiest writers to read – I ate up this powerful novel and just wanted to start over after I finished the last page. Neither optimistic nor pessimistic, Hoey just tells life as it was in 1985 Grey Lynn, where everyone has excuses for their shitty behaviour.

“Dad, is Mum okay?” My words turned to mist in front of my face. “Yeah, of course,” he smiled, like fresh paint on a burning house. Devastating.
Profile Image for Mandy de Kort.
49 reviews
September 6, 2025
Oh man, this was such an excellent read. I had people looking at me strangely as I kept laughing out loud. Sometimes with tears streaming down my face. As an elder millennial (on the cusp of being gen x), I grew up in Auckland during the timeframe this story was set in. It was so relatable. Kids were built different back then, it’s amazing we all survived to tell our stories 😅
This one followed the life of Obi, in his quest to find a large sum of cash one of his crooked father’s associates buried, prior to incarceration. Dad is too busy writing poetry, drinking beer and fixing the car to find a job, and mum is sick. Big sister Summer is moody and often awol. Obi wants to save the house from being taken by the bank; and to buy the new Commodore 64 for himself. Obi and his mate Al (the little scoundrels) get an A for effort, they both dream big but sometimes plans are not well thought out.
They get themselves in lots of shit, but always seem to get themselves out of it just in the nick of time.
I’m so glad I picked this one up. Highly recommended.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Amy.
3 reviews1 follower
August 14, 2025
It's been a long while since I've finished a fictional book so quickly and I never write reviews either but I just have to share my thoughts.

The characters felt so familiar as if I lived down the road from them and it reminded me a lot of my own childhood and the kids I went to school with. I felt really homesick, too, as someone who adopted Auckland as my home away from home before crossing the ditch.
I loved reading so many familiar place names and it was fun travelling with them to locations I can actually picture in my mind.

I laughed out loud many times throughout the book but I also felt so much concern and care for everyone, especially Al.

I almost gave it 4 stars due to a handful of typo's (I'm a stickler) and there were some aspects of the storyline that felt a tad unfinished or like it wrapped up too quickly, but overall I loved the story so much that I had to give it 5.

I'm very much looking forward to reading more of Dominic Hoey's work.
Profile Image for Andrea.
190 reviews1 follower
September 14, 2025
A good read, well structured and fun. Creates ( or recreates) a world you want to spend time in.

I'm probably biased because I lived in Grey Lynn as a child in the late 80s/early 90s, in Prime Road around the corner from Surrey Crescent and two blocks from Grey Lynn Park (two locations that feature prominently) not to mention two streets away from the protagonist's Crummer Road address.

I feel that the book does fall into the trap of having the narrator remark on things that would have been not at all remarkable at the time. The constant "Yeah, I remember that/I had one of those" detracts from the plot and the self-conscious attempts at existential poetry often don't come off.. Other parts are effective, like the way Obi navigates (or tries to) life like a video game.

By the way, I read a paperback but the kindle edition was the only one available on Goodreads. Not sure if maybe it was only published in physical form in NZ?
Profile Image for Linda.
800 reviews41 followers
January 9, 2026
I really loved this book, set In 1985, as the title says, in Grey Lynn, Auckland New Zealand. Obi is 11 and from an impoverished family. A mother dying, a father with fanciful ideas but no inclination to work, a teenage sister lashing out at the world and a best mate Al who has his back.
Obi seems to live from meal to meal, always looking for some money to play spaces or buy food. His father is teaching him to steal when he’s not drinking or writing poetry. When Obi finds a map he thinks lead to treasure he talks Al into helping him look for it. It means they won’t lose the house, his mum will get better life will be better.
We all know life isn’t like that. This is a wonderful snapshot in time told through the eyes of a young boy, a culture of poverty, sickness, a dysfunctional family and criminal activity.

Already a favourite.
Profile Image for Samantha.
79 reviews
November 9, 2025
What a great read by a fellow Kiwi author. Loved reading about how different Auckland was back in the 80's and the references to certain streets and landmarks that I visit now.
So incredibly Kiwi with our language, profanities and jokes but also the poverty and sadness (which is relevant in today's climate).

Al was definitely my favourite character and is the best friend that we all should have. The dad made me so angry throughout the book - a sad no hoper who likes to drink, and writes shitty poetry. I really couldn't believe a person like him exists because let's be honest, no body wants to work and I REALLY couldn't believe he wouldn't get his act together for his wife that he claimed to love more than anyone else.

So good, so Kiwi, so sad, and 100% bullshit free.
Profile Image for K.V. Martins.
Author 7 books8 followers
October 20, 2025
4.5 What a fresh voice! I loved Obi's character, and it was a smart choice to have an 11-year-old as the narrator. Hoey has a distinctive writing style (not for everyone, I'd say) but it's authentic and refreshing.

1985 is a 'working class adventure', set in Grey Lynn, Auckland, before gentrification. It's funny and sad, and some moments really tug at your heart.

Themes are poverty, illness, dysfunctional relationships, and the multicultural families that lived on Crummer Road in the 1980s.

No HEA ending but it's a book I will think about for quite some time.

4.5 stars because of the typos and odd editing issues.
Profile Image for Bec.
14 reviews1 follower
January 3, 2026
this books smashes you in the face with nostalgia. i loved reading about auckland before my time. from k road to mount eden, cruising around aotea square, hot chips and cokes only costing you less then $10, the drives out in titirangi, the centrepoint cult (yuck) and how life was in grey lynn before all the “rich cunts” moved everyone along. god i’d kill to read more of Obis story. i want to know what happens to summer and what movies Al ends up making.

as someone who had a shit dad and lost their mum, this book really took me out. i moved to australia in 2019 and im sitting here at midnight fucking sick with homesickness.

would absolutely recommend
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Imogen Macalister.
17 reviews
August 1, 2025
This book was a page turner, with some funny aspects that were unique and refreshing to read. I really liked the characters and their relationships with one another, and the insight into this world which is familiar to what I know yet so different. I never thought something could romanticise poverty but somehow this book made me nostalgic for it… I suppose this was the point. I had hoped the ending would give me some kind of inspiration to get out of the hole of my own life but bro just went travelling so it did not. I enjoyed the fathers poetry possibly more than the novel
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Karen.
250 reviews
January 31, 2026
For those not familiar with 80s Auckland there are somethings that might be lost in translation, but for me this was a nostalgic read. I used to live in Ponsonby in the mid 80s before gentrification. A lot of familiarity in places like The Gluepot and Ivans, the old houses in Crummer road etc. The book reads a bit like a teen novel in writing style, although the content does not. Hoey writes gritty realism, his style is easily accessible, and I particularly loved the poetry. It's reminiscent of Sam Hunt or Gary McCormack, who I heard recite many times in the smokey Gluepot bar.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 63 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.