It was during July of 2019 when I finally decided to leave Sydney. My friend Yasmine - a successful and relatively famous fashion designer - had been insisting for a while that I join her overseas. The plan was simple: a direct flight to Dubai where we'd spend about a fortnight managing her newest boutique and broadening my photography portfolio. But then, a day before I was due to return to home, as the two of us were sitting on her balcony watching the glittering lights of the Burj Khalifa, Yasmine suggested I move with her to London. 'Sydney will always be waiting,' she said. 'All that baggage that you left behind. But we'll only be this young and this free once.'
After a series of tragic events, Nicole leaves Sydney and her tight-knit Lebanese immigrant family to build a new life for herself in London. Two years later though, when her visa is almost up, she heads back to her hometown, where everything is the same - but things are different.
Loved-up with a happy-go-lucky football coach and still planning on returning to London, Nicole reconnects with family, friends and more - and finds herself longing for what she once had.
Torn between continents and loyalties, Nicole has to decide what she truly wants for herself - a decision that will affect the rest of her life.
Home is where the heart is ... but what if your heart is torn in two??
PRAISE FOR SOMETHING BLUE:
'It's clear Sarkis loves the place she comes from: every suburb, street, home and hair salon is written with affection for the people and culture it represents.' - The Conversation
'Set in Sydney's diverse Western suburbs, this tender coming-of-age story about love, loyalty and what home means also functions as a visceral love letter to the glorious, foliage-filled melting pot of its location ... I rooted for Nicole and raced straight through to the end.' - Daily Mail UK
'hysterically funny ... This is the chaotic love child of My Big Fat Greek Wedding and Bridget Jones' Diary.' - Glamour