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Lisdalia
Lisdalia
Lisdalia
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Lisdalia

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It's bad enough being the smartest kid in the school, but when you're a girl, and when your father still thinks it's a man's world, and when you never learned to back down from an argument, it's even worse. Lisdalia has all these problems . and more. Of course, it helps if you have a couple of really good friends, like Mike and Tanja, and a teacher who cares, but in the end, when things get serious, it's who you are inside that counts. Who ever said it was easy being a kid? LISDALIA is the second volume in Brian Caswell's critically acclaimed Boundary Park Trilogy which began with Mike and concludes with Maddie. Lisdalia won the 1995 Multicultural Children's Literature Award and was Highly Commended in the 1995 Human Rights Award for Children's Literature.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 20, 2015
ISBN9780702257971
Lisdalia

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    Lisdalia - Brian Caswell

    Anonymous

    1

    THINGS ITALIAN …

    Dad was playing his music again.

    Opera.

    Who else’s dad would be caught dead playing that kind of stuff? Okay, so Terry Dickson’s dad loved Country and Western and always had it thumping full-blast when he picked poor Terry up in the ute every afternoon, embarrassing the hell out of the poor kid. And Maddie’s family played this weird Chinese music that sounded like someone strangling a cat — and failing. But opera?

    Dad bought a whole series of The World’s Greatest Operas, one a week from the newsagent. It took him six months to get them all. Each cassette came with a glossy magazine which fitted into an impressive black-and-gold vinyl binder and explained all about the opera and its composer and a whole pile of other deep and meaningful stuff — none of which he ever read. But they still had pride of place in the little bookcase next to the stereo cabinet.

    My father has always believed in culture.

    And besides, most operas are sung in Italian.

    Even though he lined up in the early seventies with Mum and all the other New Australians to get the Citizenship, which hangs on the wall of the family room, he’s still fiercely patriotic when it comes to all things Italian. Cars, soccer. And old fifties vintage movies, without sub-titles, that he brings home from the video shop and makes us all sit through.

    Even the pictures on the walls in our house are all prints of Italian masters; we have the Last Supper in the dining-room and a big gold-framed Mona Lisa over the leather lounge in the formal room, the one no one’s allowed to sit on. We even have an imitation marble copy of Michelangelo’s David in the bathroom — with a fig-leaf covering the rude bit.

    Well, they might have written the operas in Italian, but I’ll let you into a little secret. Even though I understand Italian, I can’t make out half of what they’re screeching about. But what was the point in making a scene that afternoon? It was Saturday, and for once Dad didn’t have a job on. He deserved a chance to relax.

    There were plenty of things I couldn’t stand about my father, but he did work incredibly hard. If he had a big job on, he would be up before dawn and often not get back before dark. He made great money; there’s always work for a good concreter. But I watched him sometimes — when he thought no one could see — and he looked almost old.

    He would massage the palms of his hands and you could sense the pain he was feeling. It seemed impossible for those hands to feel pain; they were so … hard. Concrete isn’t kind to your skin, and his was like rough leather.

    He was sitting there, eyes closed, in his favourite chair, with a glass of wine on the floor next to his foot. At first I thought he was sleeping, but then I saw the movement of his finger on the arm of the chair. He was tapping in time to the music.

    I couldn’t help it. I walked over to him and kissed him on the top of his head. He opened his eyes and smiled, but he didn’t say a word.

    Anything I can get you?

    He just shook his head. He had his music, he was relaxing: he didn’t need anything else.

    Well, I’m just going over to Michael’s for a while. We have some schoolwork to do. He nodded and closed his eyes again.

    As I opened the front door, there was a quiet point in the music. His voice drifted out to me.

    Lisdalia! Non essere tardi.

    Don't be late.

    I won’t be. As usual. I replied in English. My language.

    I shut the door gently behind me.

    2

    SPITTING INTO THE WIND

    What’s got two legs and bleeds a lot?

    I knew I’d regret it, but it really didn’t make any difference. When Tanja decides to tell you one of her sick jokes, it doesn’t matter if you answer or not, she’ll tell you anyway. I played along.

    I don’t know. What’s got two legs and bleeds a lot?

    Half a dog!

    What did I tell you? S.I.C.K. Sometimes, I think she’s totally beyond help. But I couldn’t help laughing; she looked so funny trying not to crack up at her own joke.

    Tanja’s really great to have around. You can’t stay unhappy when she’s in one of her jokey moods — which is just about all the time.

    I’d got to school feeling pretty down. Again. And she must have noticed, because she slipped into her routine almost as soon as she saw me walk in through the gate.

    Boundary Park High School. Government-issue dark-red brick, with the trim painted a sort of unripe apple-green — some kind of effort by the Education Department to add a little life to the place. I guess. They’d planted trees, too. Mostly mimosa, wattle and bottlebrush and a few other natives. We learned the names in one of our first science lessons in the place. At least, I did.

    That’s one of my big problems. I learn things. I’ve never had any trouble remembering facts. Gets you great marks at school, but it makes it pretty hard to keep friends. It worked like that all through Primary and after the first two weeks of High School, it didn’t look like anything much was going to change.

    That’s why Tanja was so important. She knew how hard it could be to fit in, and she didn’t give a damn. She certainly wasn’t the most incredible looking girl in Year Eight. In fact, if you showed a school photo to a total stranger, she probably wouldn’t even rate a mention. She wasn’t ugly either, mind you, but with Tanja it didn’t matter. She could have looked like the princess or the frog — it wasn’t her looks that grabbed your attention, it was her personality. You couldn’t ignore her. She simply wouldn’t allow it. And she absolutely wouldn’t allow you to feel

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