Greek-Australian Writers’ Festival 2025 – Reading Note 86: Koraly Dimitriadis

Reading Note 86: I first heard of Koraly Dimitriadis in the early-2010s when I came across her Twitter discussions. I looked up her books and saw them described as “portraits of life”, “ghosts of the old country”, “emotional self-examination” and at that time, I just couldn’t engage, purely based on my own personal situation where I was overwhelmed with life demands that I couldn’t bear reading someone else’s take filled with gritty reality.

A book cover The Mother must must die" by Koraly Dimitriadis

A dark blue sky, red earth sea with a person looking to the horizon. The o in mother is a moon.

However, it is more than a decade later, the Greek-Australian Writers’ Festival is hosting Koraly Dimitriadis, and though I can’t really say that I am not busy, I am certainly not as overwhelmed by life’s demands as I used to be (the amazing liberation of no longer tending to the physical and emotional needs of teenagers while also working and studying)! So during the semester break, I sat down with Dimitriadis’s collection of short-stories The Mother Must Die and it had this deep, clawing impact upon me.

The opening story “They Put Me in my Grave” was an amalgam of so many Greek mothers’ voices I have encountered in my life, including my own mum. The mother in the story grieving the shame that is brought upon her life by her daughter divorcing her husband, refusing to acknowledge her daughter’s pain. The mother looking back at the betrothal remembering the couple’s “Promise” to her to stay together echoed my own mother telling my Anglo boyfriend (and now husband of nearly 30 years) that “it is better you kill me than shame my family with divorce”. In that first page, I felt ill at reading further but also damned if I didn’t as the writing was compelling.

Every short story is a telling of modern-day Australia where there is a negotiation of cultural expectations, personal grief and lost dreams. Of the 15 stories, the ones that stood out to me were “They Put Me in my Grave”, “Theo and Haroula”, the devastating “Smelly Francesco”, and “The Bridal Wars” where Tasha belligerently casts her vote following her father’s preferences, on the eve of finally becoming self-aware through her viewing a documentary on Fast Fashion, regretting her vote and seeing life and wedding processions through an ethical fashion lens – a lazy Saturday night watching TV changing Tasha’s life trajectory.

I absolutely loved this book which was felt so close to so many people I knew, including myself, but also so distanced from my own life. It was like a sliding door to a life I somehow avoided. Dimitriadis’s writing style mirrors so many Greek-Australian writers like Peter Polites and Will Kostakis who occasionally inject a local Greeklish (or is it Greenglish???) vernacular which makes each story accessible and personal.

Koraly Dimitriadis will be at the Greek-Australian Writers’ Festival on Sunday 27th of April. Buy tickets here: https://www.trybooking.com/events/landing/1347314

I read a print copy of this book, borrowed from a NSW public library.

The Blurb from Koraly Dimitriadis’s publisher:

The fashion industry is killing the planet but I really need that new designer handbag… Her daughter is divorcing and she’s going to die because of it… The mother must be medicated… I’m in Australia but I just want to be in Cyprus… She’s never had an orgasm and still lives with her parents…Anything my boys want they get… He’s got a whole bank of chicks on his phone… Ever since I came to this country I been in bed… Until her children can get her the new drug for the MND, she will dream of her village in Greece…Conquests are about scoring the chicks, but he’s never going to turn out like his nonno… They never talked about what her uncle did again… The money made him go mad… My mummy is sad, she keeps talking about ‘court and custody’, but I’m going to take the potion and make everything better…

Broken people trying to make their way back to hope. Stories of identity, divorce, sexuality, parenting, domestic violence, and the working-class migrant experience. Bestselling poet Koraly Dimitriadis’s debut collection will transport you into the minds of disenfranchised characters, troubled men, children who live in two homes, and women trying to break free.

Greek-Australian Writers’ Festival 2025 – Reading Note 85: Shelley Dark

With the Greek-Australian Writers’ Festival https://greekfestivalofsydney.com.au/…/greek-australian… being held this Sunday, I thought I would post about some of the sessions that we are running this year. I have read many of the books which are being presented this year.

Reading Note 85: We will be launching Shelley Dark’s Hydra in Winter on Sunday. This is such a wonderful and delightful read. Part genealogical study, part history, another part memoir and writing guide. I loved how Shelley Dark expresses her every day, researching her family’s first ancestor in Australia, Ghikas Voulgaris. Voulgaris was a Greek-Hydriot sailor turned pirate captured off the coast of Malta, and sent to 7 years in the colony of New South Wales in the early 19th century. Voulgaris leaves Hydra as a young man during the Greek War of Independence (1821-1829), yet he never returns to Greece, staying in the colony of New South Wales for the rest of his life despite receiving a pardon and free repatriation after he had served his time.

Book cover for Hydra in Winter by Shelley Dark. Blue Sky, blue sea, quintessential whitewashed buildings with terracotta rooves, sailing boat going past.

I love the Argo-Saronic islands of Greece and have visited Hydra many times while visiting my aunt on the nearby island of Poros. Poros itself gets a brief visit from Dark on her way to Hyrda which in winter transforms back to a tourist-free haven with a long-time literary tradition.

Shelley Dark’s book launch is at 3pm at the Greek-Australian Writers’ Festival. Tickets are $15 for the whole day and includes lunch. https://www.trybooking.com/events/landing/1347314

The Festival Blurb:

In Hydra in Winter, Dark sets off for her husband’s ancestral island in search of the story of Ghikas Voulgaris, one of seven Hydriot pirates captured and sent to Australia as convicts in the early 1800s. What begins as a historical quest also becomes a lesson in slow travel—walking Hydra’s hills, delighting in Greek seafood and wine, and meeting the relaxed and ever-hospitable locals. Her sojourn on Hydra later sparked a much longer research journey, taking her to Malta, Portsmouth, the Kew Archives in London, and Ireland to further investigate the pirate for her historical novel about the pirate, Son of Hydra, due for publication in 2025. In conversation with Festival Director Dr Helen Vatsikopoulos.

Greek Australian Writers’ Festival 2025

The Greek-Australian Writers’ Festival returns for its 4th year. Some time last year, I volunteered to help out at the festival, and due to some other short-term work I was conducting at the time, ended up as the Deputy Director of the Festival. Over the next day or so, I will be posting some reviews of the authors and their books who will be presented at the festival.

For those of you who live in close vicinity to Sydney, come to Little Bay on Sunday for a day of reading and writing centring on Greek-Australian perspectives as well as Australian stories with Greek themes. We have 12 authors and 3 book launches. Tickets include lunch so book ahead! https://www.trybooking.com/events/landing/1347314

Copied from the Festival Social Media account:

Image of books with book covers for the festival
Image from the Greek Festival of Sydney: https://www.instagram.com/p/DIN9IB4NY3i/

Calling all bookworms! The much anticipated “Greek-Australian Writers’ Festival” is coming to Sydney on April 27th! 🎉

Prepare for a day filled with incredible authors, exciting book launches, and thought-provoking discussions, all centered around the power of Greek storytelling.

So many incredible authors, so little time! 🤔 Entry tickets are selling fast! Secure your entry spot (https://www.trybooking.com/CYRBU) & check out the parallel sessions and book launches scheduled for 2025!

10:00 AM: THE MOTHER MUST DIE by Koraly Dimitriadis & DELPHI by Karen Martin

11:00 AM: MATIA by EmilyTsokos Purtill & WE COULD BE SOMETHING by Will Kostakis

12:00 PM: book launch of “PATRIMONIES: ESSAYS ON GENERATIONAL THINKING” by George Kouvaros.

2:00 PM: JOHN BERGER AND ME by Nikos Papastergiadis

3:00 PM: book launch of “HYDRA IN WINTER” by Shelley Dark.

4:00 PM: THE DOPAMINE BRAIN by Dr Anastasia Hronis & PHOTOGRAPHY books (THE HEART OF GIVING by Effy Alexakis, GLIMPSES OF THE SILK ROAD by Marios Kalyvas & Aretha Zygouri, ART ON THE WALL by Eirini Alligiannis)

Director & Founder Dr Helen Vatsikopoulos and Deputy Director Dr Vassiliki Veros, will be engaging with acclaimed authors and esteemed academics to present, discuss, and offer unique insights into the rich tapestry of Greek narratives.

Don’t miss this opportunity to immerse yourself in the world of Greek-Australian literature!

➡️ Parallel sessions, book launches, author talks & book signings!

🗓️ Sunday, April 27, 9 AM – 6 PM

📍 Prince Henry Centre, Little Bay

🎟️ $15 + booking fee

🔗 Book your spot now: https://www.trybooking.com/CYRBU