Q&A: Alison Edwards, Author of Two Daughters

Q&A: Alison Edwards, Author of Two Daughters

Can you tell us a little about your book?

Two Daughters follows two women: Ava, an ambitious academic, and Laurie, an unmotivated writer. Ava comes from Australia and marries into a powerful family of the British establishment, while Laurie lives with her very anti-establishment father, a Marxist professor. When Ava inevitably buckles under her new circumstances and gets caught up in a scandal, Laurie begins investigating her. Needless to say, this puts them on a collision course!

What inspired the story?

I was picturing the kind of book I like to read, or the kind of film I like to watch. Something that feels (to me) smart and funny and quirky. Diverse characters who are relatable but also kind of out there. I love tropes like country-to-city, working-class-to-elite, anything that sets up a clash. And I knew I wanted it to be partly set in Cambridge. I did my PhD at King’s College there and it was filled with wacky, larger-than-life characters: the girl who always wore full Victorian dress, the guy who carried around a pot plant called Mildred, the group that reenacted medieval battles in the meadows. Not to mention the students always up in arms with some protest or another.

You write from the perspective of two very different characters. Which one was your favourite to write?

Yes, they’re basically polar opposites. Ava is desperate for security in life, whereas all Laurie wants is freedom and independence. Ava is trying to avoid having a baby; Laurie is determined to have one even if it means going it alone, without a partner. Both have oddball friends—Ava has this gregarious Thai coworker who becomes her best friend and her worst influence, and Laurie has her two best gay friends, one very flamboyant and one staid and reserved. Actually, I think I had the most fun writing the friends!

What are your favourite books of all time?

I’ve no clue whether they’ve aged well, but as a teenager I buried myself in books like Tomorrow When the War Began by John Marsden and The Power of One by Bryce Courtenay. I remember them being so rousing and transporting. And others got me through tough times or gave me some special insight. I remember reading Marian Keyes when I had just arrived in Germany for a study abroad program. I was alone in this bleak, bare room, with no money and terrible German. I started reading The Other Side of the Story and suddenly I felt like I had friends and the world made sense again. More recently, I got a lot out of Becoming by Michelle Obama, who I love. She wrote about dragging Barack to marriage counselling because she was always alone with the kids and not able to pursue her own career. And the therapist basically told her to take responsibility for herself. I’m not saying it’s the answer to every problem, but sometimes I ask myself, WWMD (what would Michelle do)?

What are 3 books you have read recently that you absolutely loved?

I’m on a run of spectacular books at the moment! The last one I read with my book club was Enter Ghost by Isabella Hammad, which follows a British actress with Palestinian roots who joins a grassroots production of Hamlet in the West Bank—could you come up with a more intriguing premise? I’ve also just finished If I Had Your Face by Frances Cha, about five women in Seoul dealing with art, sex, money (lack thereof), plastic surgery and hellish mothers-in-law. And finally, I’m currently reading Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield (what’s with all the brilliant British authors born in the nineties?!). It’s about a deep-sea researcher whose submarine gets stuck on the ocean floor. It’s described as horror meets science fiction, which is a bit of a departure for me, but so far I’m gripped!

Buy a copy of Two Daughters here.

Reviews

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7 August 2024

Your Preview Verdict: Two Daughters by Alison Edwards

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    12 June 2024

    Better Reading Preview: Two Daughters by Alison Edwards

      Publisher details

      Two Daughters
      Author
      Alison Edwards
      Publisher
      Allen & Unwin
      Genre
      Fiction
      Released
      30 July, 2024
      ISBN
      9781922928047

      Synopsis

      For Ava, heading to university in Sydney is her escape from a poverty-stricken upbringing. Her mother is long gone, her father able to provide love but little else. On the other side of the world, Laurie tolerates university only at the insistence of her father, a Marxist professor. Her mother died in childbirth, and Laurie dreams of freedom, far from the Cambridge cloisters.

      It is within these college grounds that Ava and Laurie cross paths. They could not be more different, and yet as each grapples with the lasting effects of losing a mother, their lives become entwined in ways neither could have anticipated.

      Alison Edwards' brilliant novel Two Daughters explores family, class, social justice and love with a large dose of wit, the occasional detour into darkness, but always with the heartbeat of hope.

      Alison Edwards
      About the author

      Alison Edwards

      Alison Edwards is an Australian/British author and linguist. She was born and raised on the south coast of New South Wales. She has lived in Europe and the UK ever since semi-failing to return home from a university exchange program in Germany. She studied journalism and international studies before obtaining a PhD in linguistics at the University of Cambridge. She is now based with her family in Amsterdam, where she works as a translator, editor and sometime academic. Two Daughters is her first novel.

      Books by Alison Edwards

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        As a regular reader, I can say that this excerpt is really interesting. The story of two women from completely different worlds seems dynamic and emotional, and the contrast between the academic environment, the British elite and anti-establishment upbringing adds depth. I particularly liked how the author conveys the atmosphere of Cambridge — with its eccentric characters, protests, and peculiar academic chaos. This description makes the story vivid and cinematic. By the way, while reading about travel and cultural clashes, I remembered a convenient service for legalising documents apostille alberta , which may be useful for those who are also involved in studying or working abroad.