Blue and black

Featured in

  • Published 20201101
  • ISBN: 978-1-922212-53-5
  • Extent: 264pp
  • Paperback (234 x 153mm), eBook

MY MOTHER WAS a worrier. She speculated endlessly about whether her pie would be considered the best at bake sales or if the ladies at the hairdresser truly liked the way she kept her hair. She worried about whether my manners were good enough to make me stand out among the local children.

But her worry didn’t seem to extend to my safety. I was able to wander our little town of Briggs as I pleased. There wasn’t really anywhere for me to get in trouble. One pub, a local grocer and a park in dire need of an upgrade were about the extent of my choices beyond the tiny school.

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Share article

More from author

Spectrums

FictionElsie THERE IS LIGHTNESS and darkness. Everyone knows that. There is a name for the shade that is neither light nor dark: grey. But there...

More from this edition

Samples of gifts and giving

IntroductionClick here to listen to Editor Ashley Hay read her introduction ‘Samples of gifts and giving’. AT THE END of the first day of spring, the clear sky...

Talon

Poetry(I thought it lost like a gate left open or a one-winged parenthesis, the hooked talon my father brought back from India in 1932, and later gave to me when...

Stone. Tongue.

Poetryi. Evening falls, and rooms grow dark, then light. Through the open window, a cricket starts up its whirring. Steam rises from the kettle. The tea grows stronger...

Stay up to date with the latest, news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.