When Fact and Fiction Collide: Read an Extract from The Woman Who Knew Too Little by Olivia Wearne

When Fact and Fiction Collide: Read an Extract from The Woman Who Knew Too Little by Olivia Wearne

My parents were initially amused by my decision to join the police force. They already had two children satisfactorily married; if their stroppy middle child wanted to try her hand at something unusual, then so be it. As my mother told the neighbours, frequently within my hearing, ‘Where better to find an available husband?’

‘Cop or crim?’ I’d once asked.

‘Either—or perhaps a criminal—it pays better!’ Mum and the neighbour had cackled.

I certainly didn’t look the part of a female officer, with my damp brown eyes and serviceable chestnut waves that should have carried a warning: Frizzes When Wet. My childlike overbite made me appear harmless, if not a little dim. Soft as I may seem, I’ve been told I’ve a tongue like a razor strop. And I can walk for twenty miles on nothing but a cup of tea, and frequently have cause to do so.

My parents Noel and Wilma had been progressive enough to ensure that my older sister Martha and I completed our School Certificate, leaving me with more job options than most career-minded young women. Still, none of the available professions struck me as being sufficiently significant or unique. I wanted to do something exceptional. I’ve a fiercely competitive nature that Mum claims is my cross to bear. Which seems hypocritical, coming from a dedicated midwife. Possibly she’s jaded because her career was pulled out from underneath her. My father used to joke that he and Wilma fought for space at the sink of a night to wash the blood off their hands (no cause for alarm, Dad’s a butcher).

The main obstacle to my ambitions, other than being of the fairer sex, was my lack of any singular ability. I was competent over consummate, doomed to come in second place. My childhood brass bedhead was decked with red ribbons, the runner-up’s blushing shade. Martha, having promptly produced three offspring for her dentist husband, assured me children would quench the desire for recognition, replace it with a deeper satisfaction: the creation of life; nurturing whelps into able citizens. I remain unconvinced, particularly as Martha has a desultory hands-off approach to my nieces and nephew, and conversely complains that parenting is a yawn.

Mother considered nursing to be the obvious choice. I was reluctantly inclined to agree. I’m diligent and obstinate, no pushover for exploitative doctors or belligerent patients. Yet six months’ training confirmed my reservations. I had no yen for emptying bedpans or lancing boils. By that stage I’d seen Rosalind Russell in His Girl Friday, the top-billing Saturday matinee at the Theatre Royal. I instantly fancied myself as a fast-talking career gal. I ditched nursing to try my hand at secretarial college, happening to miss by a year the commencement of the war, where, as a nurse, I might have met with more dramatic ailments. I soon decided typing was the pits. I abandoned the course, relinquishing the dream that it would somehow open a door into journalism…

Continue reading the extract here…

Buy a copy of The Woman Who Knew Too Little here.

Reviews

A Twist on an Unsolved Mystery: Read Our Review of The Woman Who Knew Too Little by Olivia Wearne

Review | Our Review

8 February 2023

A Twist on an Unsolved Mystery: Read Our Review of The Woman Who Knew Too Little by Olivia Wearne

    Related Articles

    Podcast: Olivia Wearne on the Policewomen of 1940s Australia

    Podcast

    13 February 2023

    Podcast: Olivia Wearne on the Policewomen of 1940s Australia

      Publisher details

      The Woman Who Knew Too Little
      Author
      Olivia Wearne
      Publisher
      HQ Fiction
      Genre
      Fiction
      Released
      01 February, 2023
      ISBN
      9781867203827

      Synopsis

      1948. An unidentified dead man is found on Somerton Beach, Adelaide. Officer Kitty Wheeler yearns to work the case - but the city's women police are typically assigned to more domestic matters. A wryly funny, sharply observed novel about one of Australia's great mysteries, and the life choices available to mid-century women.

      December, 1948. Officer Kitty Wheeler is a member of the Women Police, responsible for 'upholding the moral virtue' of Adelaide's at times unruly and amorous citizens. Patrolling Somerton beach one night, Kitty and her partner spot a man leaning against the sea wall, apparently drunk. It's late, they're tired, and they leave him to sleep it off ...

      The man is dead, his identity unknown, and Kitty has missed a career-making opportunity. In the following months, the case of the Somerton Man grips first Adelaide, then Australia, as bizarre clues point towards international espionage, Eastern mysticism or salacious scandal. Kitty, preoccupied with the case, joins the investigation wherever she can, although the men are firmly in charge. Meanwhile, she must decide whether she wants husband and family, or a career - in 1940s Australia, she can't have both. Her boyfriend Peter wants to pop the question, but Kitty is keener on solving the case ...

      Olivia Wearne has threaded Kitty's story into the real-life 1940s mystery of the Somerton Man. This intriguing, sharply observed and wholly engaging novel explores the life and crimes of a city and its people, few of whom are without their secrets.

      Olivia Wearne
      About the author

      Olivia Wearne

      Olivia Wearne was born in Melbourne in 1977. She is both a novelist and a screenwriter with several film credits to her name and a Masters in creative writing. Olivia now resides in Ballarat, Victoria, where she writes at the kitchen table that she shares with her filmmaker husband and two young sons.

      Books by Olivia Wearne

      COMMENTS

      Leave a Reply

      Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *