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Plastic Budgie
Paperback

Plastic Budgie

$32.99
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Olivia De Zilva's Plastic Budgie is a brutally funny and inventive debut about family and self, full of itchy Y2K nostalgia, curses and glimpses of birds.

‘There was no use googling am I cursed because the search engine algorithm would always say yes.’

Olivia was named after a lycra-clad singer her parents saw on Rage. As a child, she lost the ability to speak and spent a year barking like a dog. Her Gong Gong bought her a yellow bird in a shoebox from the Adelaide Central Markets. Her heart was broken by a guitar teacher after a school disco. She started university and learnt to run and travelled to Guangzhou for her cousin’s wedding. 

In her brutally funny, genre-defying debut, Olivia De Zilva collects stories on shelves: neat coming-of-age anecdotes and sitcom characters trapped behind glass. 

Then she breaks it all apart. 

Plastic Budgie questions how our memories and families form us, in a way that is both unapologetically sentimental and eternally surprising. It is full of itchy Y2K nostalgia, curses and glimpses of birds.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Pink Shorts Press
Country
Australia
Date
29 July 2025
Pages
240
ISBN
9781763554146

Olivia De Zilva's Plastic Budgie is a brutally funny and inventive debut about family and self, full of itchy Y2K nostalgia, curses and glimpses of birds.

‘There was no use googling am I cursed because the search engine algorithm would always say yes.’

Olivia was named after a lycra-clad singer her parents saw on Rage. As a child, she lost the ability to speak and spent a year barking like a dog. Her Gong Gong bought her a yellow bird in a shoebox from the Adelaide Central Markets. Her heart was broken by a guitar teacher after a school disco. She started university and learnt to run and travelled to Guangzhou for her cousin’s wedding. 

In her brutally funny, genre-defying debut, Olivia De Zilva collects stories on shelves: neat coming-of-age anecdotes and sitcom characters trapped behind glass. 

Then she breaks it all apart. 

Plastic Budgie questions how our memories and families form us, in a way that is both unapologetically sentimental and eternally surprising. It is full of itchy Y2K nostalgia, curses and glimpses of birds.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Pink Shorts Press
Country
Australia
Date
29 July 2025
Pages
240
ISBN
9781763554146
 
Book Review

Plastic Budgie
by Olivia De Zilva

by Grace Gooda, Jul 2025

Yes, as the blurb states, Olivia De Zilva’s debut novel is funny, Y2K-reference-packed, and a charming account of being an embarrassed teenager. But it is so much more than that.

De Zilva, an Adelaide-based writer and winner of the AAWP Novella Award (amongst many others in her impressive bio), is so in touch with what it feels like to be a child on the outer that this memoir-meets-fiction work is full of the eerily wise observations we have as young people, even in primary school.

The Olivia in Plastic Budgie has a life which I imagine is almost a mirror image of the author’s, yet maybe the beauty of this book is we don’t really know where fiction starts or ends. Somehow, in 150 pages, you feel like you live her entire life in detail. The family leaps off the page, from the moment her mother gives birth (even though she believes her womb to be cursed) and her father misses the umbilical cord because he has one eye on the television. Throughout, Olivia appears not only as protagonist, but also as a fly on the wall, who is able to analyse her family and society astutely, even in the words of her childhood or teenage self.

Every experience is delivered by this beautifully blended voice, which is childlike, but never simplifies the darkness being faced by Olivia at that moment. This voice is everywhere, from Coles tantrums to sleeping among spirits in Hong Kong.

My highlights were Poh Poh and Gong Gong, Olivia’s grandparents. Through their relationship, De Zilva conveys the push and pull of identity: to be dropped at your Adelaide private school by your Cantonese grandparents and worry about what they will bring to Grandparents’ Day. To make food together, and their obsession with the Western capitalist god that is McDonald’s. There is a lot of joy and sadness to be found in their generational gap.

The end of Plastic Budgie is where De Zilva proves herself as a literary force and pushes the boundaries of fiction and memoir. She bravely puts forward a novel form which explores the good and bad parts within us. This is the kind of voice we need in literature and I urge you to pick it up, for the exploration of cultural identity, for your inner lonely child, and especially for the ABC Kids references.

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