- This new novel from Moreno Giovannoni was announced a few weeks ago as Winner of The Age Book of the Year 2026. On all sorts of levels it's brilliant.
- The author calls it a work of fiction but the historical truth of it underlies it and gives it richness and credibility. It's the story of Giovannoni's family, mainly his father Ugo and his mother Morena who decide to migrate to Australia in the late 1950's. Australia, an English colony, is considered an attractive destination for hard working men and their families. Life in an impoverished Italy after World War II is harsh and offers minimal prospects.
- What I really loved about the story was its absorbing nitty gritty detail about the predicament of being an Italian immigrant to Australia. There is life, there is work, but there is also death. In fact deaths, including murder and suicide, frequently happen. Being an immigrant is hard on all sorts of levels. Tensions run deep. Marriages fracture. It's not really a Fabula Mirabilis, or a Wonderful Story. It's a deep challenge. The colony is biased against foreigners. The book, later a film, They're a Weird Mob, is typical.
- Ugo and his friends worked in the tobacco industry. It was dirty, hard and unforgiving. But it paid a reasonable wage. And allowed them to return regularly to Italy to see their families who they missed so much.
- Here are a few passages:
'He is a foreign boy, learning how to live among the Australians as he goes along. There is no pub drinking culture in his family, no oval football game culture, no interest in the Melbourne Cup or Anzac Day or public drunkenness or vomiting'.
'Ambitious farmers like Ugo grow twenty tons of tobacco in a season. Of the 1200 growers 800 are Italians. It cannot be said often enough. It is an Italian operation'.
'They're really just pagans who have laid a thin veneer of Christianity over ancient beliefs in the gods of vineyards and olive groves....Father Lacey and the Catholic nuns fight a losing battle trying to get the Italians to follow Irish Catholic protocols'.
'His mother and father don't like it here and are getting their little family ready to go. The colony isn't a place you take seriously as somewhere to spend the rest of your life. It is too far away, from mothers and fathers, brothers, sisters, cousins and friends. It is too far from the world. At best all you have here is are small islands of repair in an ocean of desperation'.







