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Part mystery, part coming of age story, The Van Apfel Girls are Gone is set in a distant suburb on the encroaching bushland, over the long hot summer of 1992.
It's the summer of the school's Showstopper concert. The summer Tikka never forgot. The summer the Van Apfel sisters disappeared. Blackly comic, sharply observed and wonderfully endearing.
'We lost all three girls that summer. Let them slip away like the words of some half-remembered song and when one came back, she wasn't the one we were trying to recall to begin with.'
Tikka Molloy was eleven and one-sixth years old during the long hot summer of 1992 - the summer the Van Apfel sisters disappeared. Hannah, beautiful Cordelia and Ruth vanished during the night of the school's Showstopper concert at the amphitheatre by the river, surrounded by encroaching bushland.
Now, years later, Tikka has returned home to try and make sense of the summer that shaped her, and the girls that she never forgot.
Blackly comic, sharply observed and wonderfully endearing, this is Picnic at Hanging Rock for a new generation, a haunting coming-of-age story with a shimmering, unexplained mystery at its heart.
Staff Review by Olivia Fricot
Paul Keating is Prime Minister and the shadow of the Cold War has dwindled, but the fervour surrounding Lindy Chamberlain still lingers. Parents watch their children just that little bit closer as they run about in the backyards of their neighbours, every moment coloured with the threat of impending disaster.
This is the mood captured by the enthralling debut novel from Felicity McLean. Part domestic thriller and part Australian Gothic drama, The Van Apfel Girls Are Gone is a dreamy and evocative story that is as captivating on the last page as it is on the first.
The Van Apfel girls in question are Ruth, Hannah, and Cordie Van Apfel, three sisters living restlessly under the thumb of their father and his oppressive religious zeal. When all three of them vanish without a trace one night during a school concert, panic and suspicion take root in their suburban valley community. Watching it all unfold is Tikka Malloy, friend and neighbour to the Van Apfel girls and the book’s curious narrator.
The book moves erratically through time, switching between Tikka’s perspective as a girl in 1992 in the midst of unfolding tragedy, and as a woman in 2012 still navigating the delicate trauma of it all. Tikka at eleven-and-one-sixth years old is a precocious little thing, alternating between bouts of pitying self-obsession and childish curiosity that make her rather unreliable as a narrator. What you do see through her eyes, however, is more than enough to unsettle you. She sees trouble in almost everyone – a gossipy neighbour who may know more than she lets on, a cagey school teacher who occasionally seems a little too friendly – but especially in the fanatical Mr Van Apfel himself. Some of the things she witnesses only make sense in hindsight, sharpening the mystery to a thrilling point. Much has already been made of the novel’s ending, so I won’t go into detail (although I do have my own theory) – part of the bittersweet delight of reading this book lies in discussing it with other readers.
The Van Apfel Girls Are Gone has been compared to Jefferey Eugenides’ The Virgin Suicides and it’s certainly a fair comparison, but this book has a distinctly Australian feel to it. It put me in mind of my own childhood, of lazy summer afternoons spent lolling about in the sun by the neighbour’s pool after a day spent running through the bush. I knew girls exactly like Tikka and Cordie, and I knew the tricky politics of neighbourhood friendships all too well. Working with the novel’s powerful nostalgic pull are subtle echoes of Picnic at Hanging Rock, both the book by Joan Lindsay and Peter Weir’s 1975 film, in its portrayal of the surrounding bush and the dread it inspires once the sun sets. Felicity McLean has chosen her setting perfectly, as the bush mirrors the hidden dangers of suburbia in a way that feels almost claustrophobic.
It’s this subtle blending of childish innocence with brooding malevolence that makes The Van Apfel Girls Are Gone so good, and which marks out Felicity McLean as one of Australia’s most exciting new novelists. Don’t hesitate to read this one.
About the Author
Felicity McLean is a writer and a journalist. Her writing has appeared in The Good Weekend, the Daily Telegraph, the Herald Sun, the Big Issue and more. She has written fiction and non-fiction books and has been published by HarperCollins Publishers, Allen & Unwin and Black Inc. Her latest book, Body Lengths, was co-written with Olympian Leisel Jones. It won the 2016 Australian Book Industry Awards 'Reader's Choice' for Small Publisher Adult Book of the Year, and it was Apple iBook's 'Best Biography of 2015?. As a ghostwriter she has collaborated with celebrities, sports stars, business leaders and others.
It's the summer of the school's Showstopper concert. The summer Tikka never forgot. The summer the Van Apfel sisters disappeared. Blackly comic, sharply observed and wonderfully endearing.
'We lost all three girls that summer. Let them slip away like the words of some half-remembered song and when one came back, she wasn't the one we were trying to recall to begin with.'
Tikka Molloy was eleven and one-sixth years old during the long hot summer of 1992 - the summer the Van Apfel sisters disappeared. Hannah, beautiful Cordelia and Ruth vanished during the night of the school's Showstopper concert at the amphitheatre by the river, surrounded by encroaching bushland.
Now, years later, Tikka has returned home to try and make sense of the summer that shaped her, and the girls that she never forgot.
Blackly comic, sharply observed and wonderfully endearing, this is Picnic at Hanging Rock for a new generation, a haunting coming-of-age story with a shimmering, unexplained mystery at its heart.
Staff Review by Olivia Fricot
Paul Keating is Prime Minister and the shadow of the Cold War has dwindled, but the fervour surrounding Lindy Chamberlain still lingers. Parents watch their children just that little bit closer as they run about in the backyards of their neighbours, every moment coloured with the threat of impending disaster.
This is the mood captured by the enthralling debut novel from Felicity McLean. Part domestic thriller and part Australian Gothic drama, The Van Apfel Girls Are Gone is a dreamy and evocative story that is as captivating on the last page as it is on the first.
The Van Apfel girls in question are Ruth, Hannah, and Cordie Van Apfel, three sisters living restlessly under the thumb of their father and his oppressive religious zeal. When all three of them vanish without a trace one night during a school concert, panic and suspicion take root in their suburban valley community. Watching it all unfold is Tikka Malloy, friend and neighbour to the Van Apfel girls and the book’s curious narrator.
The book moves erratically through time, switching between Tikka’s perspective as a girl in 1992 in the midst of unfolding tragedy, and as a woman in 2012 still navigating the delicate trauma of it all. Tikka at eleven-and-one-sixth years old is a precocious little thing, alternating between bouts of pitying self-obsession and childish curiosity that make her rather unreliable as a narrator. What you do see through her eyes, however, is more than enough to unsettle you. She sees trouble in almost everyone – a gossipy neighbour who may know more than she lets on, a cagey school teacher who occasionally seems a little too friendly – but especially in the fanatical Mr Van Apfel himself. Some of the things she witnesses only make sense in hindsight, sharpening the mystery to a thrilling point. Much has already been made of the novel’s ending, so I won’t go into detail (although I do have my own theory) – part of the bittersweet delight of reading this book lies in discussing it with other readers.
The Van Apfel Girls Are Gone has been compared to Jefferey Eugenides’ The Virgin Suicides and it’s certainly a fair comparison, but this book has a distinctly Australian feel to it. It put me in mind of my own childhood, of lazy summer afternoons spent lolling about in the sun by the neighbour’s pool after a day spent running through the bush. I knew girls exactly like Tikka and Cordie, and I knew the tricky politics of neighbourhood friendships all too well. Working with the novel’s powerful nostalgic pull are subtle echoes of Picnic at Hanging Rock, both the book by Joan Lindsay and Peter Weir’s 1975 film, in its portrayal of the surrounding bush and the dread it inspires once the sun sets. Felicity McLean has chosen her setting perfectly, as the bush mirrors the hidden dangers of suburbia in a way that feels almost claustrophobic.
It’s this subtle blending of childish innocence with brooding malevolence that makes The Van Apfel Girls Are Gone so good, and which marks out Felicity McLean as one of Australia’s most exciting new novelists. Don’t hesitate to read this one.
About the Author
Felicity McLean is a writer and a journalist. Her writing has appeared in The Good Weekend, the Daily Telegraph, the Herald Sun, the Big Issue and more. She has written fiction and non-fiction books and has been published by HarperCollins Publishers, Allen & Unwin and Black Inc. Her latest book, Body Lengths, was co-written with Olympian Leisel Jones. It won the 2016 Australian Book Industry Awards 'Reader's Choice' for Small Publisher Adult Book of the Year, and it was Apple iBook's 'Best Biography of 2015?. As a ghostwriter she has collaborated with celebrities, sports stars, business leaders and others.
ISBN: 9781460755068
ISBN-10: 1460755065
Published: 18th March 2019
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Number of Pages: 304
Audience: General Adult
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Country of Publication: AU
Dimensions (cm): 2.2 x 23.4 x 15.4
Weight (kg): 0.346
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