Little Sister

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Little Sister by Moya Sayer-Jones, Allen & Unwin
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Moya Sayer-Jones ISBN: 9781743433188
Publisher: Allen & Unwin Publication: March 1, 2005
Imprint: Allen & Unwin Language: English
Author: Moya Sayer-Jones
ISBN: 9781743433188
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
Publication: March 1, 2005
Imprint: Allen & Unwin
Language: English

Dad was just an ordinary bloke who called a bob a bob, and then, through no fault of his own, a bob became ten cents. A quid became two dollars, and Australia became part of the real world. Once television showed us what life could be like it was hard to be satisfied with what you had.'

Moya thinks if her parents had been more like the cool moms and pops' on American TV, life would have been more exciting. But she was stuck in the burbs and how thrilling did that ever get? Exotically named after an Irish tap dancer (after all of the good names had been taken by her two older sisters Sue and Rhonda), Moya tries hard to fit in to her suburban life with very mixed results. Social mobility is now something to aspire to and Moya is bursting to get up and out of that suburban life.

Fast and funny, this is an outstanding memoir of a young life as Moya Sayer-Jones remembers it. Rightly considered as an Australian classic alongside Puberty Blues and Unreliable Memoirs, Little Sister is sharp, warm and wittily nostalgic.

I love to read the stories of young women in our Australian suburbs. What a fertile breeding ground for talent they are, yet so overlooked and even ridiculed. Your book should be an inspiration. If someone in Timbuktu asked me what it was like to live in an Australian suburb I would advise them to peruse your evocative publication.' Dame Edna Everage

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Dad was just an ordinary bloke who called a bob a bob, and then, through no fault of his own, a bob became ten cents. A quid became two dollars, and Australia became part of the real world. Once television showed us what life could be like it was hard to be satisfied with what you had.'

Moya thinks if her parents had been more like the cool moms and pops' on American TV, life would have been more exciting. But she was stuck in the burbs and how thrilling did that ever get? Exotically named after an Irish tap dancer (after all of the good names had been taken by her two older sisters Sue and Rhonda), Moya tries hard to fit in to her suburban life with very mixed results. Social mobility is now something to aspire to and Moya is bursting to get up and out of that suburban life.

Fast and funny, this is an outstanding memoir of a young life as Moya Sayer-Jones remembers it. Rightly considered as an Australian classic alongside Puberty Blues and Unreliable Memoirs, Little Sister is sharp, warm and wittily nostalgic.

I love to read the stories of young women in our Australian suburbs. What a fertile breeding ground for talent they are, yet so overlooked and even ridiculed. Your book should be an inspiration. If someone in Timbuktu asked me what it was like to live in an Australian suburb I would advise them to peruse your evocative publication.' Dame Edna Everage

More books from Allen & Unwin

Cover of the book Australia's Birthstain by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book Indochine: France by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book Horse Crazy! The Complete Adventures of Bonnie and Sam by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book How's school? by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book Handmade Style: Felt by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book The Missing Man by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book Wild Women by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book The Quicksand Pony 15th Anniversary Edition by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book Waging Peace by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book Social Work Practice in Health by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book Salad Days by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book Jasper + Abby by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book Monkeys in the Dark by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book It's True! Animals are electrifying (11) by Moya Sayer-Jones
Cover of the book Mr Chicken Lands on London by Moya Sayer-Jones
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy