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'While Stella Miles Franklin took on the world, her beloved sister Linda led a short, domestic life as a wife, mother and sister. In a remarkable, genre-bending debut novel Amy Brown thrillingly reimagines those two lives – and her own – to explore and explode the contradictions embedded in brilliant careers and a woman’s place in the world. Sliding Doors meets Wifedom.
'Stella Miles Franklin’s autobiographical novel My Brilliant Career launched one of the most famous names in Australian letters. Funny, bold, often biting about its characters, the novel and its young author had a lot in common. Miles went on to live a large, fiercely independent and bohemian life of travel, art and freedom.
'Not so her beloved sister Linda. Quiet, contained, conventional, Linda was an inversion of Stella. A family peacemaker who married the man Stella would not, bore a son and died of pneumonia at 25.
'In this reflective, witty and revealing novel, Amy Brown rescues Linda, setting her in counterpoint with Stella, and with the lives of two contemporary women: Ida, a writer whose writing life is on hold as she teaches and raises her young daughter; and Stella, a singer-songwriter who has sacrificed everything for a career, now forcibly put on hold. Binding the two is the novella that Linda might have written to her sister Stella – a brilliant alternative vision of My Brilliant Career.
'Innovative and involving, My Brilliant Sister is an utterly convincing (and hilarious) portrait of Miles Franklin and a moving, nuanced exploration of the balance women still have to strike between careers and family lives. It gives a fresh take on one of Australia’s most celebrated writers and an insight into life now.' (Publication summary)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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How Not to Drown : An Intricate Puzzle of a Book
2024
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , March no. 462 2024; (p. 40)
— Review of My Brilliant Sister 2024 single work novel'Ida, a secondary school teacher in Melbourne with a four-year-old daughter, Aster, in childcare, lives in a post-Covid world of masks, mindfulness apps, remote learning, and video calls. Recently relocated from New Zealand when her partner, a lecturer in Cultural Studies, is offered a more prestigious job at an Australian university, she has relinquished the possibility of continuing her own academic career. He seems unwilling to share household tasks or help to tend to their child, despite the fact that they are both working, and distances himself by immersing himself in his study and going on long runs. In the opening passage, we are presented with Ida’s childhood memory of being on a beach, where she pretends that she knows how to swim – or rather, that she has learned ‘how not to drown’ – which now seems an apt metaphor for her marriage.' (Introduction)
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The Less Brilliant Life of Stella’s Sister
2024
single work
review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 17 February 2024; (p. 14)
— Review of My Brilliant Sister 2024 single work novel -
Shadow Lives in My Brilliant Sister
2024
single work
review
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings [Online] , February 2024;
— Review of My Brilliant Sister 2024 single work novel 'Amy Brown’s debut offers an original literary triptych that pushes beyond the mythology of Miles Franklin. This exceptional novel interrogates what it means for women to accept or reject a conventional life.'(Introduction)
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Amy Brown My Brilliant Sister
2024
single work
review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 5 February 2024;
— Review of My Brilliant Sister 2024 single work novel -
‘Poetic’, ‘Fearless’, ‘A Creative Triumph’: The Best Australian Books Out in February
2024
single work
review
— Appears in: The Conversation , 4 February 2024;
— Review of My Brilliant Sister 2024 single work novel ; We All Lived in Bondi Then 2024 selected work short story ; Politica 2024 single work novel ; The Great Undoing 2024 single work novel ; Monument 2024 selected work poetry prose ; The Pulling 2024 selected work autobiography essay ; All the Words We Know 2024 single work novel ; The Next Big Thing 2024 single work novel
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‘Poetic’, ‘Fearless’, ‘A Creative Triumph’: The Best Australian Books Out in February
2024
single work
review
— Appears in: The Conversation , 4 February 2024;
— Review of My Brilliant Sister 2024 single work novel ; We All Lived in Bondi Then 2024 selected work short story ; Politica 2024 single work novel ; The Great Undoing 2024 single work novel ; Monument 2024 selected work poetry prose ; The Pulling 2024 selected work autobiography essay ; All the Words We Know 2024 single work novel ; The Next Big Thing 2024 single work novel -
Amy Brown My Brilliant Sister
2024
single work
review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 5 February 2024;
— Review of My Brilliant Sister 2024 single work novel -
Shadow Lives in My Brilliant Sister
2024
single work
review
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings [Online] , February 2024;
— Review of My Brilliant Sister 2024 single work novel 'Amy Brown’s debut offers an original literary triptych that pushes beyond the mythology of Miles Franklin. This exceptional novel interrogates what it means for women to accept or reject a conventional life.'(Introduction)
-
The Less Brilliant Life of Stella’s Sister
2024
single work
review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 17 February 2024; (p. 14)
— Review of My Brilliant Sister 2024 single work novel -
How Not to Drown : An Intricate Puzzle of a Book
2024
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , March no. 462 2024; (p. 40)
— Review of My Brilliant Sister 2024 single work novel'Ida, a secondary school teacher in Melbourne with a four-year-old daughter, Aster, in childcare, lives in a post-Covid world of masks, mindfulness apps, remote learning, and video calls. Recently relocated from New Zealand when her partner, a lecturer in Cultural Studies, is offered a more prestigious job at an Australian university, she has relinquished the possibility of continuing her own academic career. He seems unwilling to share household tasks or help to tend to their child, despite the fact that they are both working, and distances himself by immersing himself in his study and going on long runs. In the opening passage, we are presented with Ida’s childhood memory of being on a beach, where she pretends that she knows how to swim – or rather, that she has learned ‘how not to drown’ – which now seems an apt metaphor for her marriage.' (Introduction)