Those Girls by Pamela Rushby, Walker Books, PB RRP $19.99 ISBN 9781760657840
Reviewed by
Dianne Bates
New, from award-winning
historical novelist, Pamela Rushby, Those Girls is a YA novel exploring
the roles, and struggles, of women in wartime, especially dealing with the
‘Land Girls’. These girls, aged from sixteen years and older, join the
Australian Women’s Land Army, where they are intended to replace the labour of
men leaving farms and rural properties to join the armed services. About 7,000
Australian women joined: they were paid thirty shillings for a 48-hour week.
When Hilary -- Hilly – whose brother Graham is a
prisoner of war, volunteers in 1942, she’s sixteen years old, having seen a
poster outfit with a picture of a tanned, healthy girl, wearing a regulation
uniform hat and shorts that were, surely, anything but regulation. Hilly
expects to be picking sun-kissed fruit and bottle-feeding fluffy white lambs,
all while she's wearing a flattering uniform. The truth is she is roped into
dirty work, harvesting potatoes, and then picking prickly pineapples. Travelling
to farms across Queensland, She encounters backbreaking work, but also
friendship and fellowship with other Land Army girls.
They include Aileen and Glad,
both of whom are seeking independence for their own reasons. (Aileen is a
married women deserting a young baby). War is a chance for a life away from
family and familiarity, offering adventure and romance. But the posters don’t
mention crutching sheep or 4 am starts. Or the prejudice they would face, and
that some men needed to be fought off, rather than fought for. During
adversity, Hilly finds exactly what she is capable of … and it might be more
than she ever thought possible. She is one of ‘those girls with grit’. She also
goes on dates with American soldier Gene Larsen with her buddies, and his.
Interlaced with the
adventures of Hilly and her friends are real-life episodes such as the riot the
girls witness between American servicemen and locals. There is ongoing action
and much interest in the book which makes for a very engaging read. As well as
girls and women, the book’s historical themes include social life, new
experiences, and the military at the time of war.
Book creator Pamela Rushby is
the author of over 200 books for children and young adults, as well as
children's TV scripts, documentaries, short stories, and freelance
journalism.
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