The Oldie

My Oz trials

When I was a teenager in the 1950s, my parents always took my sister and me, in December, to a relative's farm about 300 miles from Sydney.

The journey took most of the day, chiefly on unsealed roads. The farm was over 3,000 acres, and around 20 miles from the nearest town.

There was no power to the house, which meant no fans to alleviate the intense heat. Flies and mosquitoes were abundant, and thousands of them were unattractively embedded in the sheets of sticky paper

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Oldie

The Oldie12 min read
History
Viking, 464pp, £20 In this follow-up to his 2021 bestseller Empireland, wrote Andrew Marr in the Times, Sanghera ‘tries to understand why the modern British display such amnesia about their forebears’ vast, world-changing project.’ Although the book
The Oldie14 min read
Pursuits
WELSH WONDERS On a recent cold and blowy afternoon, I spent a few hours in a series of greenhouses, sniffing exotic scents and marvelling at the sheer abundance of flowering bulbous plants. I was just a mile from the National Botanic Garden of Wales
The Oldie3 min read
Apocalypse Now?
Are we all doomed? A lot of publishers seem to think so. The only question, it sometimes seems, is whether it's going to be climate change, another pandemic, or murderous Terminator-style Artificial Intelligence that finishes us off first. But a hand

Related Books & Audiobooks