Find where to buy Amethyst and all my other books here on my BWL Author page
Of late I have been contemplating
on how life changes over the years, but really when you come to think about it,
apart from their mode of living, choice of religion, color or creed humans are
the same the world over. What we mainly crave is someone to love and somewhere
to call home. What brought this on was my latest book, Amethyst. This one is
set in a small Australian town. Now to be honest I have always lived in a large
city or the outer suburbs of one so my background in this story was based on
what I learned from visiting friends at some time or another who resided in
country towns much like the Yewbank featured in this book.
It got me thinking about my
childhood living in a North London street surrounded by city-dwellers and the
more I thought about it our street and surrounding area was not unlike a small
town. I had an unusual childhood as three families lived in the house I was
brought up it. We, that’s my parents, and any of my nine siblings who happened to
still be at home, shared the bottom four rooms plus what we pompously called
the kitchen but was in fact no more than a scullery. Anyone who has lived in an
older style house in London who is around the same vintage as me will know what
I am talking about.
So, the middle two rooms plus a small kitchen were rented by my mother’s sister who had two girls, the eldest being a year or so older than me. At the top of the house in two rooms plus two attic bedrooms was my eldest brother and his wife with their son and daughter. As you can imagine because we were all related we intermingled and thought nothing of going up and down and mingling (or interfering) in the lives of all occupants. In those days there was no such thing as childcare, after-school care, kindergarten or crèche. If the mother had to go out to work for financial reasons then either her mother or grandmother would care for the child/children and failing that a neighbor.
Now the reason I considered this
was not a lot different to life in a small town is because we knew all our
neighbors by name and all their offspring. We kids would all play out on the
street or in each other’s back gardens, often disappearing for hours at an end.
I can’t recall my mother asking where I’d been or who I had been with, I guess
she had sixth sense or knew that anyone we talked to or played with must be all
right as they were local. Mind you, she had a few simple rules: 1. Never take
lollies from a stranger, especially a man. 2. Never go into the house of
someone you don’t know. 3. This one came along when I got older—don’t let a boy
touch you. Now, she never went as far as explaining just where he shouldn’t
touch you. Oh, and following on from this one was—it’s up to us girls to say no
to a boy. Likewise she didn’t explain fully which question we were supposed to
say no to. I found out later that none of my four older sisters fared any
better with their sex education (guess that has changed fundamentally over the
years as now the teenagers seem to know it all) The last rule was that if you
got into trouble you asked a policeman for help. I don’t know if it is any
different where you live but I can’t remember the last time I saw a policeman
on the street, they all drive around in their cars these days.
Our mother was always there when I
came home from school or work. If she wasn’t then you knew she was up the local
shops. We had an extensive extended family who kept in touch by mail. There was
no telephone or email back then, but we always managed to learn when there was
a wedding, funeral, birth in the family or any other special occasion and often
had parties where distant relatives would be invited. Being such a large family
any get together often evolved into a party.
I attended a small church school
which still thrives today (I love Google Maps) and knew most of my classmates
and where they lived and would often visit them in their homes. Of course there
were a few that I was advised not to mix with as someone in THAT particular
family had acquired a bad name. But isn’t that the same in every small
town—there’s always the black sheep. When our mother passed away in 1964 as the
funeral cortege passed along the shopping street someone who remembered her
with fondness came out of almost every shop and bowed their heads in respect
for a much loved woman.
Another thing that started me
reminiscing is that the backdrop in Amethyst is the game of football—soccer as
it is called in England, and footy here in Australia. Because we lived a
stone’s throw from the old Arsenal football club, my brothers and all the local
lads would go off to the matches when they were played at home. We knew not to
go out about the time that the match finished as in those days everyone had to
catch a bus or train home and there would be a three mile long queue of
exuberant or glum men, depending on the outcome of the match, all waiting to
get home. But I can’t remember any fights breaking out as they formed an
orderly line as they discussed the good or bad day’s football.
Perhaps I sound melancholy when I
go back in my mind to those days, but believe me the memories are all fine. Not
many people share a childhood such as mine and if they did then we all know how
lucky we were. I had an email from one of my nieces in England a while ago
saying how she still remembers and cherishes the years in that house in that
street and my answer was that it was such a huge part of all our lives that it
lives within us and always will.
The pictures are of my old primary
school, the church where I was bridesmaid to my sisters and where I got
married, and the house where I grew up. All are still there as you see, and there are not many changes since those far off days. There was no tree outside our house and of course probably only one or two cars parked in the street back then.
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Showing posts with label country town or city living. Show all posts
Showing posts with label country town or city living. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 26, 2017
All things change—or do they--asks Tricia McGill
Labels:
country town or city living,
football,
life and its changes,
life in the last century,
reminiscing,
Tricia McGill
I was born in London but moved to Australia with my husband many moons ago. I always had the urge to write full time but wasn't able to fulfill this dream until I retired early from the fashion industry. Most of my contemporary romances are set in Victoria where I live or Tasmania my second favourite state. I have always loved to read Time Travels so it was obvious that I would like to write them. I love the research entailed in writing them and also historicals. All my books are with publisher Books We Love, and I am proud to boast that I was no 1 on the BWL best sellers list 2015/2016 and in the top 10 best selling authors in 2017. My greatest achievement was winning the Australian Romance Writers Book of the Year award with my Traces of Dreams that is now re-titled Remnants of Dreams. I am a fervent animal lover and support various charities that do their best to help animals in need around the world. I also volunteer for a local community group helping disabled people with their computers.
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