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HOME. EBOOK. COLLECTION. GENERAL FICTION. You can struggle to find the place you call home. It’s not a place, it’s a feeling. You’ll know it when you find it. These short stories are sweet and relatable, they will make you homesick for places you’ve never been.
Home is where the heart is
You can struggle to find the place you call home. It’s not a place, it’s a feeling. Youโll know it when you find it.
This collection of short stories explores our search for a place we can call home.
Short, sweet and relatable, these stories will make you homesick for places you’ve never been.
Home is where the heart is,โ thatโs what people usually say.
Itโs debatable whether they mean your heart lies with the place or the people you share your living accommodation with.
After all some people loathe their families and prefer to live elsewhere.
Do you and your heart even want the same things?
And how does your heart know where it wants to be, anyway?
I imagine for most of us, thatโs an easy question to answer.
Itโs the place you grew up in.
The place your memories are; thatโs where I fell off my bike, thatโs where I had my first kiss, and thatโs where I got married.
Perhaps you can trace your family through the streets; thatโs where Aunty Pauline lives, Great Uncle Henry lives there, and hereโs the cemetery where seven generations of my family are buried.
The situation is a little harder for some of us.
My parents emigrated when I was young, and I barely remember the old country.
I visited for a couple of years, but it was literally (and figuratively) a foreign country.
I donโt know Aunty Pauline, so why would I care where she lives? Itโs not like sheโs invited me over or anything.
We moved a lot when I was a child, so youโd need a weekโs vacation to follow my life around.
My first bike crash is three suburbs away from my first kiss, and theyโre both on the other side of the country to the place I got married.
We moved so often I can barely remember most of the houses.
I do remember forgetting at least once where I lived and having to call home to get the address.
Terrifying!
And yet, now that Iโve grown up, itโs a funny dinner party story.
And thanks to my father, for whom it was also a funny story, the memory is forever linked with the old English music hall song Don’t Dilly Dally on the Way by Charles Collins and Fred W. Leigh (1919).
He used to relate the story, and then sing the song, in a ridiculous and overbearing way.
โMy old man said: “Foller the van,
And don’t dilly-dally on the way”โ.
And of course, my parentโs friends knew the song too, so they could sing along.
โOh! I’m in such a mess.
I don’t know the new address –
Don’t even know the blessed neighbourhood.
And I feel as if I might
Have to stay out here all night.โ
Thankfully, most of my friends do not know the song.
But the place your heart calls to, as it turns out, is far more coincidental and complicated than that.
It starts with the age old debate of city versus country. Inner city or outer city. North or South. East or West.
Sometimes itโs about the way the light feels; too bright and harsh, too soft and dim, or just right.
Or the sound of the wind in the trees, or the surf crashing to the beach.
The look of the house, or the smell of the garden.
Perhaps even the quirky mailbox.
These stories, all set in Australia, relate in some way to finding the place your heart wants:
Perhaps being an immigrant has made the search for my place more meaningful.
I chose it.
Or did it choose me?
Alexandria Blaelock
Melbourne, Australia
November, 2022
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