Isabel Howard reviews Dirt Poor Islanders by Winnie Dunn
by Winnie Dunn
Hachette
ISBN 978-0733649264
Reviewed by ISABEL HOWARD
Intercultural struggle is the main question at hand in Winnie Dunn’s Dirt Poor Islanders: how do you define yourself between two different cultures that shape every aspect of your life? Dunn’s novel is written from the perspective of Meadow, a young, mixed-race Tongan and white girl growing up in Mt Druitt in the Western suburbs of Sydney and traces her gradual assertion of who she is as she becomes a young woman. With a liberal peppering of millennial Australian and Tongan cultural references it explores themes of girl and motherhood, sexuality and poverty. But at its crux, it provides an internal viewpoint
=================================Sorry you must be logged in and a current subscriber to view the rest of this content.
Please login and/or purchase a subscription.
