NOTE: This review contains SPOILERS.
Sixteen-year-old Lindsey crushes on her teacher, dreaming of escaping a cold home with a violent father and an intimidated, emotionally absent mother.
But when she ‘seduces’ him – although the man, nearly twice her age, who turns out to be a truly despicable character, should very well know better – and gets pregnant, her in many ways sheltered world of wealth comes crashing down along with her dreams.
Sixteen-year-old Lindsey crushes on her teacher, dreaming of escaping a cold home with a violent father and an intimidated, emotionally absent mother.
But when she ‘seduces’ him – although the man, nearly twice her age, who turns out to be a truly despicable character, should very well know better – and gets pregnant, her in many ways sheltered world of wealth comes crashing down along with her dreams.
On the cusp
of sexual revolution, pregnancy outside of marriage is still a taboo, unmarried
mothers shamed and shunned, sent away to have their children put up for
adoption.
In one such home for unmarried mothers, Lindsey is faced with a different reality of poverty and exhausting work, coming face to face with people she used to look down upon but who become her only friends when everyone else turns their backs on her and from whom she learns not only about suffering she couldn’t imagine before but also about perseverance.
In one such home for unmarried mothers, Lindsey is faced with a different reality of poverty and exhausting work, coming face to face with people she used to look down upon but who become her only friends when everyone else turns their backs on her and from whom she learns not only about suffering she couldn’t imagine before but also about perseverance.
Initially a
deluded girl who stubbornly sticks to her pipe dream with her head in the sand,
Lindsey made me pity her, but I soon started empathise with her, being reminded
of how hard it must have been for women in the time where they were dependent
on men, purposely kept in the dark about the facts of life, with sex education non-existent, then shamed for the consequences of actions often
not of their own design, lied to, manipulated, and finally coerced into giving
their children up for adoption.
Set against
the backdrop of women’s emancipation movement, Liza Perrat depicts these issues
as well as the challenges of the aftermath of losing the children they are not
allowed to grieve for as their sole existence is shameful and best to forget in
the eyes of society, such as depression and suicide attempts, in a multi-faced
way that inspires a whole range of raw emotions in the reader, but most of all
an admiration for women like Lindsey and her friends.
Thus, The Swooping Magpie is above all a testimony
of women’s strength. With a collection of colourful characters and an exquisite Australian setting, it is a
truly gripping and quick read (I finished it in two days) and might be, in my
opinion, Liza Perrat’s best work to date.
Thanks to
the author for kindly sending me a copy of The
Swooping Magpie in exchange for an honest and unbiased review.
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