Wavelength, by AJ Betts

It’s nearing the end of his final year of school, and Oliver’s life currently revolves around the elusive 80 per cent average he needs to get into uni and begin a cashed-up life of clean-cut uniforms and company tennis courts. But a hectic home-life and a mother who’s always baking muffins push success just out of reach, so Oliver attempts to escape to his dad’s place down south.

‘Imagine’, she says, sliding her engagement ring from her finger. ‘Imagine starting off as a lump of boring black coal and ending up like this. A perfect diamond. All those years of being squashed. That huge weight, pressing and pressing, squeezing you so tight for so long that your very crystal structure changes. Can you imagine?’

Oliver can imagine. He knows it well. It’s like the crushing feeling he gets whenever he thinks of exams and eighty per cent. It’s how he suddenly feels now with the fresh reminder of study – of precious time being wasted. 

It’s nearing the end of his final year of school, and Oliver’s life currently revolves around the elusive 80 per cent average he needs to get into uni and begin a cashed-up life of clean-cut uniforms and company tennis courts. But a hectic home-life and a mother who’s always baking muffins push success just out of reach, so Oliver attempts to escape to his dad’s place down south. Instead of a constructive study environment, however, he finds a frustratingly laid-back community of seniors and pool workers who just aren’t on his wavelength. Despite his narrow and stressed-out outlook, Sunny Haven Recreation Centre proves to be calming and eye-opening in ways Oliver never anticipated.

Wavelength is a story about life and our ideas of what is and what isn’t important. Through the snapshots of lives of characters that are as funny as they are real, the events of Wavelength are a learning experience not only for Oliver, but also for the reader – a reminder that the universe is bigger than a good grade or a high-paying job. AJ Bett’s writing is a rich sensory experience, pulling the reader into the settings of the novel and refusing to let go.

A great source of perspective for students, and a fun and enlightening read for any audience.

Wavelength by AJ Betts
Fremantle Press 2010

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ShutterSpeed, by A. J. Betts

It’s the nightmare again. He wakes himself out of it and lies in the darkness. He wishes it didn’t get to him so much.
It started a couple of weeks back. At first there’d just been the car with a woman inside. Her face was hidden by hair as the car turned. As he stood and watched, the car revolved as though in slow motion, her face somehow staying out of sight.

Dustin lives with his quiet father and the shadow of his long-dead mother. All he wants is to live his life quietly, surviving until he finishes year 12 and can start his life for real. For weeks he has been disturbed by a recurring dream of a car crash, but it’s just a dream. Dreams aren’t real, are they?

Working in his father’s photo lab, Dustin’s life is changed when he finds a photo stuck in the machine. He wants to know who the woman in the photo is, and when he knows, he wants to meet her. Soon, Dustin’s innocent interest has become a dangerous fascination.

ShutterSpeed is a fast moving first novel, with the use of camera and photo imagery, flashbacks and foreshadowing taking readers on a ride almost as wild as the Ducati motorbike which features in the story. Prepare to be surprised.

Suitable for teen readers, both male and female.

ShutterSpeed, by A. J. Betts
Fremantle Press, 2008