Mike Berry, Turn, Turn, Turn (The Conrad Press 2021)
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/58968868-turn-turn-turn
The saga of a neighbourhood in Melbourne as it survives two world wars
Back home now in Melbourne, Jim thinks everyone around him on Ross Street are ‘idiots’. He’s been through hell in Flanders; he’s an absolute wreck from his POW experience.
Ted and Betty and their daughter Patty are at Number 24. The Mattingleys are moving in, Viv, Bob and son Brian.
Then Ricky from across the street, on his motorbike, saves little Patty, but another girl Becky is kidnapped. The neighbourhood just isn’t the same after that.
Later, Brian finds something that may be a clue to the kidnapping. ‘A shiver pass[es] over the street.’
The Great Depression hits. ‘The bright promises of a new decade faded quickly.’
But there are some glimmers of happiness.
This is more or less a family saga, the story of a neighbourhood rather than just one family, and we’re not really sure which family or individual is the protagonist, though it’s mostly Betty, Ted and Patty. I was expecting a follow-up on the case of the kidnapping, but it falls quietly into the background while we examine all the neighbourhood gossip as the seasons turn, turn, turn.
Something momentous is about to happen. The world goes through Hitler and then Pearl Harbor. WWII eats into the lives and psyches of Ross Street as WWI had done. The men seem to be ‘running, running to whatever will keep [them] from remembering’.
The trauma of war on the lives of people and their families is a major theme. Over three generations, complex events in the world affect these three families in ways they cannot possibly anticipate. People’s trauma from the war plays out in their peacetime lives.
It’s worth noting the last line of the song from which this novel takes its title: ‘A time for peace, I swear it’s not too late’.









