Australian Times News
  • About us
  • Write for Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
Saturday, December 7, 2019
  • News
  • Expat Life
  • Culture
  • ListFeed
  • Video
  • Travel
    • Inspiration
    • Running of the Bulls
    • Oktoberfest
    • Anzac Day
    • Ski & snowboard
    • Travel tips & advice
    • Best Deals
    • Find a tour
  • Sport
  • Move to Australia
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Expat Life
  • Culture
  • ListFeed
  • Video
  • Travel
    • Inspiration
    • Running of the Bulls
    • Oktoberfest
    • Anzac Day
    • Ski & snowboard
    • Travel tips & advice
    • Best Deals
    • Find a tour
  • Sport
  • Move to Australia
No Result
View All Result
Australian Times News
No Result
View All Result
Home Culture

It’s London, but not as you know it

REVIEW | Endless culture, socialising in the hippest bars, and keeping up with the latest trends from high street. These are just a handful of the many fragments creating the London ideal luring so many Australians across the globe. For some, however, the London dream is very far from reality. Australian author Ralph Grayden spoke to ERIN SOMERVILLE about his unexpected experiences with London, and how it inspired his latest novel PAGE THREE.

Erin Somerville by Erin Somerville
2012-09-20 12:51
in Culture
Ralph Grayden

Ralph Grayden

IT is 2004. Ralph Grayden and his partner have decided to leave their comfortable Australian life in exchange for new adventures on the other side of the world. But while many Australians are busy splashing around their cash and soaking up the economic boom in London, the newly-arrived couple are greeted by a very different face of the city.

“We were living in south-east London in a pretty tough place,” Ralph tells Australian Times.

RelatedPosts

An unlikely television star, Clive James shone a light on absurdity but let us make up our own minds about it. Alan Porritt/AAP/The Conversation

Vale Clive James – a marvellous low voice whose gracious good humour let others shine

November 28, 2019
The Cat Empire (Courtesy: Ellie Pinney_Bristol Sounds)

The Cat Empire to rule Britannia

November 6, 2019

Halloween history: tricking and treating goes back thousands of years

October 31, 2019

“We weren’t earning much money, and we had a feeling of dislocation from our friends in west London.”

Ralph’s struggle to shake off his lawyer suit in the rough and tumble suburb of Camberwell and pursue his dream of becoming a writer has sparked his novel, PAGE THREE.

PAGE THREE follows the plight of a successful middle-class married couple, Paul and Sarah, who have packed up their cushy Sydney life to answer the call of the Motherland. Paul is eager to make the shift from lawyer to writer following the sudden death of his father, while Sarah is enthusiastic about embracing life in a chic new city. However, the battle to find work, and dealing with a less-than-ideal part of England, begins to take its toll on the couple. When Sarah finds instant success after baring more than just her soul for work, Paul’s London dream soon becomes the thing of nightmares.

While there are some undeniable comparisons between the author and his lead character, the book is far from autobiographical. Ralph does admit, however, that his early experiences living in Camberwell were a strong influence in shaping the storyline, characters and settings of his book.

The author says he was compelled to share the less-than-glamorous London experience that often goes untold by many expats. He has also used the novel as a chance to reflect upon how the Australian status is changing in England.

“There are a lot of works out there from the past, being that Australians are looked down upon by the English, with the British having the stiff upper lip and we being the colonials.

“I think now the traditional backpacker who spends all their money in the pub they are working at is a thing of the past, and those who are moving over tend to be older and more established in their career, and searching for a bigger professional playing field.”

Any Australian who has made the move to London will no doubt laugh, empathise and see glimpses of their own story in Ralph Grayden’s PAGE THREE.

Grab your copy on Amazon or iTunes.

Tags: Arts and LiteratureAustralians in LondonbooksLondonRalph Grayden

SUBSCRIBE to our NEWSLETTER

Terms and Conditions

CURRENCY ZONE

Australian Forex

Copyright © Blue Sky Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
australiantimes.co.uk is a division of Blue Sky Publications Ltd. Reproduction without permission prohibited.

  • About us
  • Write for Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Expat Life
  • Culture
  • ListFeed
  • Video
  • Travel
    • Inspiration
    • Running of the Bulls
    • Oktoberfest
    • Anzac Day
    • Ski & snowboard
    • Travel tips & advice
    • Best Deals
    • Find a tour
  • Sport
  • Move to Australia

Copyright © Blue Sky Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
australiantimes.co.uk is a division of Blue Sky Publications Ltd. Reproduction without permission prohibited.