Frieda: A New Australian by Marianne Musgrove, Omnibus Books 2016
This novel in the ‘A New Australian’ series for middle grade is a delight as well as informative. Did we all know about the concentration camp on Torrens Island in South Australia for Germans, even second or third generation, during WW1? Many were also incarcerated during WW2. This is the first children’s book I’ve seen dealing with this event. The setting for Frieda is 1914 Unley and how interesting it is to walk those streets as they were. The impeccable research is tucked safely under the surface and doesn’t interfere once with Frieda’s story. The well-paced plot has tension, bitter moments and sweet, interspersed with quotes from Goethe and Lutheran beliefs. Top that up with Marianne Musgrove’s assured writing and you’re in for a treat.
After immigrating to Australia, Frieda endures prejudice, bullying and her father taken away. But Frieda is strong: she finds the courage to be her true self and fights back. Not in revenge, she is her father’s daughter after all. She finds a special way to remember her father and others which brings together a community.
Frieda’s father is a hopeful, wise man who Frieda loves very much. His attitude is summed up in Goethe: ‘Every day we should hear at least one little song, read one good poem, see one exquisite picture and if possible, speak a few sensible words’. To me his favourite Goethe saying echoes throughout the book in the choices Frieda makes, the way she grows and how her story made me feel: ‘Sometimes our fate resembles a fruit tree in winter. Who would think that those branches would turn green again and blossom, but we hope it, we know it.’
This is an important book for German history in Australia and I hope every school buys class sets. Themes include immigration, displacement, belonging, prejudice, resilience, forgiveness and hope.
PS: Marianne wrote in her inscription on my copy that Frieda and Kerenza* would have been friends. I think that’s true and maybe there’s another story…
*Kerenza: A new Australian