Tiffany narrowed her setting down, mainly, to two adjoining properties: Harry’s dairy farm and the house of Betty and her two children. There was ‘something about the place’, and she decided to write a story set there. With Mateship, set in the 1950s, Tiffany was doing some work around Cohuna, just south of the Murray River. He stops this huge grain train in the middle of the street, and goes to get a hamburger in the milkbar, and nobody can cross to the other side!’ The train does actually run down the main street and the whole town stops if the train driver decides he wants to have lunch. ‘With Everyman’s I was doing some work in the Mallee and there was just something about Wycheproof. ‘I just get these kind of passions for particular country towns,’ Tiffany tells me. She has set both her novels in Victorian country towns, in areas she visited through her work as an agricultural journalist. There is a particular sense of place in the writing of Yorkshire-born, Melbourne-based Carrie Tiffany. Now, her second novel Mateship with Birds-a compelling and elegant meditation on family, desire and country life-confirms the author’s attraction to the past and the land. 399Ĭarrie Tiffany’s debut novel Everyman’s Rules for Scientific Living was published in 2005 to high praise. A version of this article was published in The Big Issue No.
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