House of Sticks

Peggy Frew

House of Sticks
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Scribe Publications
Country
Australia
Published
29 August 2011
Pages
288
ISBN
9781921844270

House of Sticks

Peggy Frew

Peggy Frew’s debut novel, House of Sticks, won the 2010 Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for an unpublished manuscript. Her story ‘Home Visit’ won The Age short story competition in 2008. She has been published in New Australian Stories 2, Kill Your Darlings, and Meanjin. Peggy is also a member of the critically acclaimed and award-winning Melbourne band Art of Fighting.

Bonnie has given up her life as a musician to become a stay-at-home mum. She tells herself she has no regrets, but sometimes the isolation and the relentless demands of three small children threaten to swamp the love between Bonnie and her partner, Pete.

Then an old mate of Pete’s arrives. Doug is eccentric and intrusive, and his unsettling presence disrupts Bonnie’s world further. Yet as the cracks really start to show in the life Bonnie and Pete have built together, it seems the dangers might also come from within.

House of Sticks is a revealing portrait of contemporary family life, its joys and compromises, and how quickly things can unravel. It’s about trying to stay connected in our disconnected society; a story of identity and community, loyalty and love.

Review

Back when the Punters Club still existed on Brunswick Street, the Melbourne band Art of Fighting were one of my favourite local bands. Their shows were intimate and measured, but the music could move in an instant from quiet and melodious to heavily layered and intense. Peggy Frew was the bass player and although the band hasn’t released an album since 2007, she has been busy raising children and writing House of Sticks which won the 2010 Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for an unpublished manuscript.

It is a cliché that first novels are autobiographical and the main character Bonnie has put her music career on hold to raise three children. Because of this I must admit that I started reading House of Sticks with some trepidation. But by the end of page one, all anxiety was gone and I was completely absorbed. The writing flows effortlessly and the dialogue is so genuine that I felt I was eavesdropping on Bonnie and her family in their home. The story loosely revolves around an old friend of her partner who shows up on their doorstep causing Bonnie to question her commitment to her new life as a stay-at-home mother. There are eruptions of such emotional intensity in this novel followed by expertly illustrated and quieter domestic moments that the pace of this novel invites comparison to the complexity of Art of Fighting’s music.

The honest and delicate portrayal of domestic life in Melbourne brought to mind Helen Garner and as soon as I finished the last sentence of House of Sticks I went straight to my bookshelf and found The Children’s Bach and began to reread what is one of my favourite Australian novels. Frew’s book reminded me of how fantastic it is to read great local literature and that good novels like this don’t come along very often.

Kara Nicholson is from Readings Carlton

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