The Little Clothes by Deborah Callaghan
Thirty-eight-year-old lawyer Audrey is tired of not being seen.
Not seen by her mother, who always preferred her golden brother. By her sleazy boss, who works her to the bone, without reward or recognition. By her self-obsessed colleagues, who want her to help them fix their lives without any acknowledgement of her own. Her social life consists of late nights in the office, visits to her ageing parents, trivia nights with a group of relative strangers, and evenings at home with her pet rabbit Joni.
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One night, unable to get the attention of the bartender in her local, she walks out without paying for her wine. This small rebellion leads to another, and more. Liberated by her invisibility, Audrey wreaks havoc in the lives of her friends and workmates.
Until a painful reminder from the past pushes her into a reckoning, and things really start to spiral out of control.

My Review
I’m still a bit in shock after reading this. I was a bit nervous when I started, probably because of a review that gave it one star and said it was too disturbing. Isn’t that the whole point? I hope that same person doesn’t read Strange Sally Diamond – I found some parallels in the way the story starts out quite humorous, and then becomes very dark indeed. Yes it was hard to read at times, but life isn’t all Mills & Boon and Barbara Cartland. I actually read it in two sittings in the end.
Anyway, as I was saying, there is a lot of humour to start with. Audrey can be very sarcastic and inappropriate. ‘You’re so funny Audrey,’ everyone tells her, even if she doesn’t mean to be. But she’s not a team player they tell her.
Pros in her life: it’s quite simple really. She’s a very good lawyer, (though never made a partner, or given her own office – see team player), she owns her own house with a nice garden, and has an adorable pet rabbit called Joni (after Joni Mitchell).
Negatives in her life: well, her brother Henry died and her mother always loved him more (though her father adores her), she has a new ‘nayba’ called Greg who is very dodgy, as are his friends, and he keeps an aggressive dog he calls ‘Shit-for-brains’ or Maximus. She’s scared stiff of both. And he seems to be stalking her. Then there’s TV Tom on the pub trivia team – don’t even get me started – her boss Alec who seems to sleep with or have slept with everyone in the office including Audrey, and has more kids than Boris Johnson, and her own lack of relationships/kids.
But as she re-evaluates her life, memories come flooding back about things that happened when she was a child, and the way her family dealt – or rather didn’t deal – with it. It impacted on her whole life (one thing she did at school really upset me), and I think ultimately resulted in her lack of self-worth. Poor Audrey. I was rooting for her all the way through, though she did make some bad choices. And why is it called The Little Clothes? It’s to do with something that she collects throughout the book, but I’ll leave you to find out.
And yes, I admit it, I did take a peak at the ending to see if Joni was OK.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours
About the Author
Deborah Callaghan worked as an interstate train stewardess, a librarian, and freelance journalist before starting a thirty-five-year publishing career. She was a book publicist, a publisher, and a literary agent. She lives in Sydney with her husband, two daughters and three lovely dogs.
