A Tender Tale: Read an Extract from The Improbable Life of Ricky Bird by Diane Connell

A Tender Tale: Read an Extract from The Improbable Life of Ricky Bird by Diane Connell

She believed there were two types of disaster. There were catastrophes like tidal waves and landslides that came crashing down on their victims with brutal and unavoidable force. Then there was the type of disaster that happened without fanfare, the terrible thing that crept up and slithered in. This thing was silent and relentless like decay but its accumulated effects were devastating. It not only destroyed your life but it also left you feeling impotent and guilty as if you should have noticed earlier and done more to prevent its advance.

Ricky’s disaster had arrived with stealth. At first, the changes were minor and she had resisted in small ways. She’d worried but trouble had seemed like a distant possibility, so she didn’t go all out to protect what she had. But things kept disintegrating and falling away until she realised it was too late to do anything. Now her father was packing things into boxes and she was powerless to stop him. She struggled to understand this change, to rearrange the way she thought and felt. But it wasn’t any use. The undoing of her family and her life in Brixton was like the drip, drip, drip of water on stone, the wearing away of solid particles by soft persistence until finally there was a hole.

In the move to Camden, Ricky suffered a great loss. It was a yawning emptiness that terrified and disoriented her but what came in its place, the unspeakable slithery thing that inveigled itself, was far worse than any of her losses.

She heard Dan slam the back of the rental truck and leaned over the driver’s seat to look in the wing mirror. It was a quick glance but he was already there, as if anticipating her. He raised his eyebrows and smiled at her reflection. She quickly sat up again.

He rapped his knuckles on the driver’s window. ‘Once I get the bike in the back we’ll be ready to rock ’n’ roll!’

Her mother laughed, which made Ricky want to scream because Dan was about as hilarious as an infection. She consid­ered various diseases before settling on syphilis.

It was hot inside the truck’s cab. The backs of Ricky’s legs were sticking to the vinyl upholstery. Her ponytail was damp against her neck. She desperately wanted short hair, a boy’s number three, but her mother said no. The ponytail was a compromise…

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Reviews

A Big-Hearted Story: Read Our Review of The Improbable Life of Ricky Bird by Diane Connell

Review | Our Review

2 May 2022

A Big-Hearted Story: Read Our Review of The Improbable Life of Ricky Bird by Diane Connell

    Publisher details

    The Improbable Life of Ricky Bird
    Author
    Diane Connell
    Publisher
    Simon and Schuster
    Genre
    Fiction
    Released
    26 April, 2022
    ISBN
    9781761101366

    Synopsis

    If you were charmed by The Curious Incident, laughed with Eleanor Oliphant and cried over A Man Called Ove, you will love Ricky Bird.

    No one loved making forts more than Ricky. A fort was a place of safety and possibility. It shut out the world and enclosed her and Ollie within any story she wanted to tell ...

    Ricky Bird loves making up stories for her brother Ollie almost as much as she loves him. The imaginary worlds she creates are wild and whimsical places full of unlimited possibilities.

    Real life is another story. Ricky’s father has abandoned them and the family has moved to a bleak new neighbourhood. Worse still, her mother’s new boyfriend, Dan, has come with the furniture.

    But Ricky Bird is a force to be reckoned with. As the mastermind of so many outlandish adventures, her imagination is her best weapon. As her father used to say, if you can spin a good yarn you can get on in life.

    The trouble is that in the best stories characters sometimes take on a life of their own and no one, not even Ricky, is able to imagine the consequences.

    Beautifully written, heartbreakingly funny and deeply moving, this book has already been compared to The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-timeLost and FoundShuggie BainEleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine and A Monster Calls. But Ricky’s story is all her own – and it will stay with you long after the last page.

    Diane Connell
    About the author

    Diane Connell

    Diane Connell was born and educated in New Zealand and has lived and worked in Japan, France and the UK. She began her writing career in a newspaper office in Tokyo before becoming an advertising copywriter and writing for the international non-profit sector. For many years she lived in Paris, where she began writing as a novelist. She later moved to London, where her first two books, Julian Corkle is a Filthy Liar and Sherry Cracker Gets Normal, were published under the name of D.J. Connell. She now lives in Sydney.

    Books by Diane Connell

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