Tag Archives: proxy marriages

Old photos and new pages…

It seems each time I’m writing a book, old photos are a big part of the research and these lovely black and white ones are just a handful of quite a few I kept near as I worked on, The Proxy Bride.

The courageous women who were proxy brides and who banded together to keep their farms going after their Italian husbands were interned during WW2 was a story I wanted to write for such a long time. Nonno Anni initially mentioned it to me many years ago. He spoke with such admiration for the women and how tough they did it. This stayed with me and as time marched on, I didn’t want the story to be lost.

To everyone who’s embraced this book – thank you. I’m very grateful. xx And to those who’ve contacted me recently saying they’ve been unable to find a copy in bookshops, (yes, they’d sold out!) I’m very happy to say they’re available once again, both in stores and online. (If you don’t see a copy in a bookshop you’d like to buy it from, they can order one in for you that should arrive within a week or so.)

Again, thank you for your kindness surrounding this book. It felt the time was long overdue that ‘proxy bride’ was no longer only said in a whisper – a long-hidden part of Australian history. These women were incredibly brave and strong and your recognition of them is giving them a voice too – grazie infinite! ❤️ Zoë x

The Proxy Bride…

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Next book out in September…

HarperCollins have released the blurb about the next book! The Proxy Bride will be out on 7th September and I can’t wait to share it with you. 

“In 1939, Giacinta sets sail from Italy to Australia. Decades later, a granddaughter discovers the true story of her family… A stunningly crafted novel of family, secrets and facing adversity.

Imagine marrying someone you’ve never met …

When Sofie comes to stay with her grandmother in Stanthorpe, she knows little of Nonna Gia’s past. In the heat of that 1984 summer, the two clash over Gia’s strict Italian ways and superstitions, her chilli-laden spaghetti and the evasive silence surrounding Sofie’s father, who died before she was born. Then Sofie learns Gia had an arranged marriage. From there, the past begins to reveal why no-one will talk of her father.

As Nonna Gia cooks, furtively adding a little more chilli each time, she also begins feeding Sofie her stories. How she came to Australia on a ‘bride ship’, among many proxy brides, knowing little about the husbands they had married from afar, most arriving to find someone much different than described.

Then, as World War II takes over the nation, and in the face of the growing animosity towards Italians that sees their husbands interned, Gia and her friends are left alone. Impoverished. Desperate. To keep their farms going, their only hope is banding together, along with Edie, a reclusive artist on the neighbouring farm and two Women’s Land Army workers. But the venture is made near-impossible by the hatred towards the women held by the local publican and an illicit love between Gia and an Australian, Keith.

The summer burns on and the truth that unfolds is nothing like what Sofie expected …

The author of Mezza Italiana brings to life a unique point of migrant women’s untold experience, in a resonant novel of family, food and love.”

The Proxy Bride…

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