Small-Town Life is Unforgiving: Read an Extract from Southern Aurora by Mark Brandi

Small-Town Life is Unforgiving: Read an Extract from Southern Aurora by Mark Brandi

Tippy was a super dog. Best one we ever had.

A kelpie, black as ink with a white patch on his chest. Nothing and no one could stop him. Best dog in town. Easy.

Only thing was, sometimes he liked to run away.

Mick reckoned he was going out rooting, because it’d mostly happen in spring and he’d usually be gone for a  couple of days at least. Sometimes he’d come back with long welts across his back, like someone had given him a whipping.

After the fourth or fifth time, Mick reckoned we couldn’t have him loose in the backyard anymore, so he chained him to the water bowl, with a padlock and everything. Tippy’s water bowl wasn’t a normal one like people get from the shops. It was this enormous cast-iron pot we scavved from the tip. Really heavy.

We found him miles away, dragging that cast-iron pot along the road like a complete mental case. He must’ve been desperate for a root, to drag it all that way. It still had some water in it, so he could have a drink when he got tired. That’s what Mick said.

Mick’s my older brother, and he has an opinion on most things, even if he’s wrong sometimes. Mick’s real name is Michael, but everyone calls him Mick, even Mum. He really cracks it if you call him Michael.

Only Nan called him that. She’s the only one who could get away with it. She’s the one who called me Jimmy too. My real name’s Jim, but it was Jimmy that stuck. Mum says I was named after Jim Hawkins in Treasure Island, which is a movie and a book. She says she’s only seen the movie, though.

When the water bowl didn’t work, Mick chained Tippy to the fence out back. He didn’t like it much. He barked a lot. Then he’d go quiet for a bit. Then he’d start up barking again.

I realised later that the quiet time must have been when he was thinking about what he was gonna do. Planning it all out…

Continue reading the extract here…

Buy a copy of Southern Aurora here.

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          Publisher details

          Southern Aurora
          Author
          Mark Brandi
          Publisher
          Hachette
          Genre
          Fiction
          Released
          28 July, 2023
          ISBN
          9780733649325

          Synopsis

          The unforgettable new novel from the Dagger award-winning author of Wimmera, Mark Brandi. A novel that shows small-town life is unforgiving if you're from the other side of the tracks.

          We always listen out for the train when we're down in the cutting because sometimes they come quicker than you expect. There aren't as many trains as there used to be. Mostly just the freight ones, like the one that nearly killed us on the bus... The best train is the Southern Aurora. It goes all the way from Melbourne to Sydney, and from Sydney to Melbourne. It stops in Mittigunda because we're pretty much exactly halfway between.

          Jimmy is a kid growing up fast on the poorest street in town. He tries to do everything right and look out for his mum and his younger brother. His older brother is in jail, so it's up to Jimmy to hold things together. But small-town life is unforgiving if you're from the other side of the tracks.

          If only his mum didn't drink so much.

          If only he could win the school billycart race.

          If only his best friend understood.

          If only he could stop his mum's boyfriend from getting angry.

          If only he was there.

          Jimmy soon learns that even when you get things right, everything can still go wrong.

          Mark Brandi
          About the author

          Mark Brandi

          Mark Brandi's bestselling novel, Wimmera, won the coveted British Crime Writers' Association Debut Dagger, and was named Best Debut at the 2018 Australian Indie Book Awards. It was also shortlisted for the Australian Book Industry Awards Literary Fiction Book of the Year, and the Matt Richell Award for New Writer of the Year. His second novel, The Rip, was published to critical acclaim by Hachette Australia in March 2019.Mark's shorter work has appeared in The GuardianThe Age, the Big Issue, and in journals both here and overseas. His writing is also sometimes heard on ABC Radio National.Mark graduated with a criminal justice degree and worked extensively in the justice system, before changing direction and deciding to write. Originally from Italy, he grew up in rural Victoria. Mark now lives in Melbourne and is working on his next work of fiction.

          Books by Mark Brandi

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