Book review: "Ladies' Rest and Writing Room"
by Kim Kelly
April 4, 2024
This slim novella
(just over 120 pages) tells the story of two women who had been at
school together and who meet up again as adults in totally different
life circumstances - one as a socialite from a wealthy family, the
other a shop attendant at the Farmer's department store. Daisy Bluebrook comes to the Ladies' Rest and Writing Room in the store to
write undeliverable letters to her lover who didn't return from the
First World War; Clarinda Littlemore is the shop assistant who tends
to the needs of the ladies who use the room.
Set in the early 1920s, the story captures the feeling of the
times - relief that the war is over, optimism for the future, the
futility of war itself, the sense of needless loss. It also brings back a time when the words
"department store" meant an establishment that provided for the
social needs of shoppers as well as the clothes and foodstuffs
required by everyday life. The stores tended to occupy complete city
blocks and were owned by some very rich people. (The last reminder of those days is
probably the Mark Foy's building which now houses the Downing Centre
court complex. Mark Foy also built the Hydro Majestic at Medlow Bath
as a place where his friends could relax.)

The Farmer's storefront in the 1920s.
From the collection of the State Library of New South Wales
(Mitchell Library)
The book won the prestigious
20/40 Prize
in 2023, and can be summed up well by the comments from the judging
panel.
Why this book is different
Two
young women, brought up to expect conventional lives, are thrown
together in unexpected circumstances. Each has suffered a
devastating loss that challenges their belief in life and
themselves. It's rare to come across a work of deep psychological
insight conveyed with such verve and lightness of touch.
Why we liked it
Kelly sweeps the
reader into the lives and passions of her two central characters and
into the bustling city streets of Sydney in the 1920s. A powerfully
moving book that sparkles with vitality.
The book is an enjoyable read and with its short length can
easily be read in an afternoon, an afternoon that takes you back to
the very different times and people of the 1920s. You can probably find a copy at the
Oberon Library or you can buy a copy from
Finlay Lloyd.
About the Author

Kim Kelly has a prodigious authorship of books to her name, and
doubles as an editor for a book publisher. You can see all about her
at her
web site. She gave a talk about the book at the Oberon Library
on Friday, March 22, 2024.