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Noted Young Adult (YA) author Rebecca Lim validates the strengths of this novel when she says “This book will move you. It navigates the mess, chaos and complexities of life with grace.”
As part of the growing pantheon of YA novels written by First Nations authors My Spare Heart is a strong, engaging, endearing and authentic story which will appeal to years 9, 10 and 11. Its awards include Highly Commended: Best Young Adult, Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards, 2023; longlisted: Best Designed Young Adult Cover, Australian Book Design Awards, 2023, shortlisted: Griffith University Young Adult Book Award, Queensland Literary Awards, 2023.
My Spare Heart covers a wide range of topics which will resonate with your students but you will need to be conscious of students whose own lives may be affected by family breakdown, alcoholism and its effects on others, especially family as well as mental health. But the novel is also a positive affirmation of the need to find outlets for one’s pain and dislocation and in this case, it is through sport and friendship, specifically basketball. The book is also an affirmation of identity and specifically connection to Country and how one’s connections can give adolescents strength through challenging situations. It fits perfectly with the syllabus requirements of exploring youth cultures.
The NSW 7-10 English Syllabus states that across each stage, the selection of texts must give students experiences of a range of cultural, social and gender perspectives, including from popular and youth cultures. We know that student interest and engagement will be heightened if the texts mean something to their lives. Texts which explore youth cultures will be effective choices, especially for disengaged or reluctant readers. You might consider youth cultures as a broad umbrella or entry point for a series of units.
While there is no specific definition currently in the new 7-10 English Syllabus glossary, this definition from the English 7-12 Syllabus 2012 is still very relevant:
“The shared beliefs, knowledge, creative activities, customs and lifestyle of young people, particularly teenagers, within a culture.
Youth cultures develop in those societies which differentiate teenagers as a group separate from children and adults. In Australia, the dominant youth culture identifies closely with popular culture and finds expression in the music and multimedia texts of popular culture.”
My Spare Heart is a pacy and engaging story written from the point of view of Phoebe who is seventeen. Her parents have divorced and now Phoebe has moved to live with her father, an academic and his new partner, Caitlin. Phoebe is resentful of the move from her life in the city not only because of a new school (a Steiner school) but she is protective of her mother who has become increasingly dependent on alcohol. Removed from the day to day life with her mother, Phoebe is now becoming more aware of the extent and gravity of her mother’s addiction. But Phoebe struggles with her new school, a competitive basketball team and her relationship with her father’s new partner. While Phoebe’s dad is Aboriginal, her mother is not and Phoebe’s growing understanding of her own culture and identity will become part of her strength and recovery. Alcohol features in other families too, all white so that the challenges of alcoholism is more broadly examined and Jared Thomas increases our awareness that families are vulnerable in these stressed environments.
Thomas says one of the inspirations for writing My Spare Heart was to show that the problem of alcoholism is a broad one.
Dr Jared Thomas is a Nukunu person of the Southern Flinders Ranges. He has written a number of YA books including Songs that Sound Like Blood. His novel, Sweet Guy, was short-listed for both the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards and the Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature. Jared Thomas was awarded the Kuril Dhagun Indigenous Writing Fellowship for his novel, Calypso Summer. He attributes his success at representing the adolescent voice to his three daughters, who have provided him with advice and valuable proof-reading.
Read Cara Shipp’s Listening from the Heart: Rewriting the Teaching of English with First Nations Voices (2023 AATE 150pp) to explore better ways to engage with First Nations People and their stories, their histories and cultures and to understand the protocols and appropriate terminology to use when reading and studying texts by First Nation authors. This warm, wise and generous book will be a huge help in the classroom.
Text requirements: My Spare Heart is extended prose, a novel by an Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait author. It has cultural, social and gender perspectives, including from popular and youth cultures.
Concepts could include Narrative, Point of View, Characterisation.
A student: uses a range of personal, creative and critical strategies to interpret complex texts EN5-RVL-01
A student: analyses how meaning is created through the use and interpretation of increasingly complex language forms, features and structures EN5-URA-01
Representation
Code and convention
Connotation, imagery and symbol
Point of view
Characterisation
Narrative
A student: evaluates how texts represent ideas and experiences, and how they can affirm or challenge values and attitudes EN5-URB-01
Perspective and context
Style
(English K-10 Syllabus 2022 © NSW Education Standards Authority for and on behalf of the Crown in right of the State of New South Wales, 2023)