Josephine Wilson,
for Middleborough

Josephine Wilson is a Perth-based writer  and academic. Her novel Extinctions (UWA Publishing, 2016) won the  inaugural Dorothy Hewett Award, the 2017 Miles Franklin Award, the Colin Roderick Award, and was nominated for the Prime Minister’s Literature Award.  Her first novel was Cusp, (UWA Publishing, 2005). Her creative output includes performance, poetry, essays and reviews. She lectures in English and Creative Writing at Murdoch University. 

Middleborough

Middleborough is a semi-realist novel set on a long suburban street that runs between highway and river. At the highway end is public housing, 1960s high rise and a half-way house for men transitioning from long-term incarceration, at the river-end cliffside mansions made of oil, gas, and gold inexorably rise in value. But who can think  about class on a day like this? Certainly not the women of upper-upper Middleborough, most of whom have already slipped into their buttery Lycra. And not Mariana and Audrey, who both live towards the highway end and who have their own reasons for avoiding gyms and Lycra. But as the day unfolds, events  far offshore in the Indian ocean will precipitate a local catastrophe which, while hindsight may well declare predictable (if not inevitable), to the people of Middleborough arrives as shocking, extraordinary and from the point of view of the synoptic chart, absolutely inexplicable.

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