Ann Scotchmer’s Diary 1918–1919 by Carole Lander (Checkword Publications (www.checkword.com.au) ISBN: 978-0-646-94587-3 (paperback) RRP: $15.00
Ann
Scotchmer (eleven years old) writes in her diary about one crucial year of her
life – between 1918 and 1919. It starts at the end of World War I and covers
the period of the Spanish flu in her hometown of Nowra, New South Wales.
This
is a historical fiction based on real people and real events in Nowra when it
was a relatively new town but already thriving with three pubs and two schools.
Ann descends from two prominent families of the region.
On
her father’s side, Grandpa has established J.J. Scotchmer & Son, Tailors,
and Fitters where Ann loves folding the cloth and sorting the buttons. On her
mother’s side, Grandpa Fitzgerald has built the Imperial Hotel, which is the
setting for celebrations – birthdays, Christmas and the annual fair.
‘We’re
a privileged family’ her aunt says. And we see this in the way the Scotchmer
household runs. But living through a pandemic raises Ann’s awareness of how
life can be for the less fortunate.
When
the soldiers return from Europe and the town holds parades and parties to
celebrate the end of war, Ann believes that life will get better forever. But
then the influenza epidemic hits the town. The public school is turned into a
temporary hospital and Ann’s Catholic school also closes. She experiences the
same boredom and concerns as modern day kids did with Covid-19. But for her, there
is no technology to ease the situation and death is much closer because the
poor hygiene poses a greater threat than today.
Yellow
flags begin to appear in the windows of sick peoples’ homes and the newspaper
provides a daily count of the deaths. Ann comments on it all in her diary. She
also confesses her ambition to be an artist and her efforts make for delightful
illustrations in the book.
As
the eldest of six children, all the others being boys, Ann longs for a sister.
And now her mother is pregnant again.
Throughout
the story, Ann is unable to forget the cryptic message a fortune-teller gave
her at the Nowra fair. Especially when Mother is asked to help a young girl who
has just given birth, and the girl’s husband has the influenza.
The
climax of the story is what follows on from this visit.
There
is sadness in this tale – but it ends positively. Ann learns to be resilient
like Grandma Fitzgerald, daughter of a convict-made-good, who turns out to be a
great role model for our heroine.
Today’s
young readers will be able to connect Ann’s experience of a pandemic with their
own contemporary experience. And Ann might even become the artist that she
longs to be.
To
purchase a copy of this book, visit www.checkword.com.au or one
of the local bookstores in the Shoalhaven district of New South Wales.
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