Puberty Blues (novel)

This article is about the novel. For the film, see Puberty Blues. For the TV miniseries, see Puberty Blues (TV series).
Puberty Blues
Author Gabrielle Carey
Kathy Lette
Country Australia
Language English
Genre Novel
Publisher McPhee Gribble
Publication date
1979
Media type Print
Pages 144
ISBN 978-1-742759-28-9
OCLC 50270616
791.4372

Puberty Blues (1979) is a novel by the Australian writers Gabrielle Carey and Kathy Lette. It is their first published book. It has long been controversial with adults but much sought out by teenagers for its depictions of adolescent sex. A film based on the novel was released in 1981. A television series based on the novel began airing in 2012.

Plot summary

The novel is set in Sutherland Shire in the 1970s. Deb and Sue are thirteen-year-old high-school students whose lives are about male surfers, panel vans, straight-leg Levis, skipping school, getting wasted and fitting in. The girls strive to become "surfie chicks", the groupies that hang around the surfer-boy gangs of southern Sydney. Adhering to rules that prevent them from eating or going to the toilet in the surfers' presence, the girls manage to become members of the most prestigious gang, and are assigned boyfriends, but to the boys they are just sexual objects. After Deb suffers a surprise miscarriage, and the introduction of heroin takes its toll on their social group, the girls finally become disillusioned with the sexism and narrow-mindedness of their crowd and decide to become surfers themselves.

Themes

Puberty Blues addresses the sexism of surf culture and youth culture in general in Australia in the 1970s. It also deals with what would become common young adult themes such as love, sex and identity.[1]

Critical reception

The novel was the third to be published by McPhee Gribble and thus occupied a special place in the development of Australian literature.[2] There were strong reactions to the depictions of underage sex, rape, pregnancy, drinking and drug-taking. Many were scandalised, while others defended it as a feminist work,[3][4] with Germaine Greer calling it a "profoundly moral story".[5] As the book was largely autobiographical, it also drew attention from those who it was based on.[6] But Kylie Minogue spoke for many when she said, "I don't recall reading Puberty Blues so much as devouring it. I was about thirteen, alone in my bedroom with the door firmly shut. I was fascinated." It is now regarded as a classic.[7]

The pressures of public attention caused Carey and Lette to go their separate ways.[8]

Adaptations

In 1982, the novel was adapted to the film Puberty Blues directed by Bruce Beresford from a screenplay by Margaret Kelly. The lead actors were Nell Schofield and Jad Capelja. The film has been criticised for removing or downplaying some of the more controversial content from the novel.[9]

In 2012, the novel was adapted to the television series Puberty Blues, starring Ashleigh Cummings and Brenna Harding.[10]

References

  1. "Gabrielle Carey". Channel Ten. 2012. Retrieved 28 November 2012.
  2. "Works published by McPhee Gribble". AustLit. Retrieved 28 November 2012.
  3. Speed, Lesley (Spring 2004). "You and me against the world revisiting 'puberty blues': depicting thirteen-year-old girls having sex, consuming alcohol, smoking marijuana and defying adult authorities, Kathy Lette and Gabrielle Carey's 1979 novel Puberty Blues (1) caused a scandal upon its original publication". Metro Magazine (140): 54.
  4. McMahon, Elizabeth (2005). "Puberty Blues Takes Feminist Generationalism to the Beach". Australian Feminist Studies. 20 (48): 281–289. doi:10.1080/08164640500280241.
  5. Greer, Germaine (2002). "Foreword (2)". Puberty Blues. Picador. pp. xi.
  6. McPhee, Hilary (2001). Other People's Words. Picador. p. 154.
  7. Minogue, Kylie (2002). "Foreword (1)". Puberty Blues. Picador. pp. ix.
  8. Helen Grasswill - Producer (30 September 2002). "The Big Chill". Australian Story. Series 7. Episode 5. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  9. Gleeson, Kate (18 January 2012). "Show True Puberty Blues, Not Whitewash". The Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney. p. 13.
  10. "Life After Puberty". Australian Story. 24 September 2012. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
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