Katie Mitchell is a well brought up Catholic girl in the dark ages of the nineteen fifties. Her father loves her very much. Her mother values piety and chastity above all.This is a brave and funny novel about falling rapturously in love and being condemned for it; about wakening sensibility and constraint, and about finding oneself growing up in spite of the voices that say 'no'.
A novel of the fifties that I suspect is largely biographical. It's slow in the early parts but compelling when she talks about her first romantic attachments. 7/10
I really enjoyed it because it was set in Melbourne during the time when my mum was a young woman in Melbourne. I got to see what her life would have been like and the type of restrictions she would have faced. This story was based on the life of a Catholic which also put an interesting spin on things because I went to a Catholic High School so I was able to relate to a lot of this theme running through the story.
A well-written novel about growing up as a Catholic teenager in Melbourne in the 1950's. Throw in an overbearing mother, nuns and an Italian lover and you have one hell of a read. This book should be re-released by Penguin as a Modern Australian Classic, in order to find a new audience who will no doubt enjoy it.