Modern Australian
The Times

what happened when Susan Johnson took her 85-year-old mother to live on a Greek island

  • Written by Jane Messer, Honorary Associate Professor in Creative Writing and Literature, Macquarie University
what happened when Susan Johnson took her 85-year-old mother to live on a Greek island

Have you ever dreamed of fleeing your current life and spending weeks or months or even a year living on an island in the Mediterranean? This is what Susan Johnson longed for and did, taking her mother with her to the Greek island of Kythera. Reading Johnson’s new memoir Aphrodite’s Breath while taking myself off for a month of writing near Naples was my second experience of living in a synchronicity of sorts with Johnson.

Johnson is just a few years older than me; a writer, mother and divorcee who has always – from a distance as we’re yet to meet – been well ahead of me with books, success and family. For a while we had the same literary agent and I’d hear of her latest publications and wish that I too had the tenacity and grit to finish my own books with such (deceptive) ease.

Review: Aphrodite’s Breath – Susan Johnson (Allen & Unwin)

I’d devoured her first memoir, A Better Woman, upon its publication in 1999. I read this postpartum memoir following the reassuringly uneventful births of my own children; as if a birth can ever not be momentous and harrowing, even when joyous. I too had been experiencing challenges in my own marriage, which I breathed not a word of to anyone, and was relieved and fascinated to read Johnson’s acute account of her first marriage.

A Better Woman still hasn’t found its equivalent in Australian memoir writing. Poetic, intelligent, gruelling, Johnson writes so well about the shock of the violence to her body from a childbirth that went horribly wrong, while trying to get manuscripts finished on time and retain some sense of herself as a writer, woman, mother, wife and lover. It’s both memoir and philosophy, as is Aphrodite’s Breath. You could consider A Better Woman as the first instalment of Aphrodite’s Breath “secret history of women”.

I and my writer and new-mother friends were all talking about it back then, and there’ll be many of us now talking about Aphrodite’s Breath: as daughters of ageing parents, as daughters to particular mothers, and as people who well understand Johnson’s longing for one last fling towards life lived with eros, filled with the breath of Aphrodite, before we are beset by our own ageing, enfeeblements, or pension poverty.

Johnson’s memoir opens in Brisbane. Her second marriage having ended, her sons grown and living overseas, the writer is wearied of the demands of full-time employment. She had lived on Kythera briefly in her late teens with Australian and Greek friends, and fallen in love with the place then.

There are other strings of narrative that tie her to the island. There are Kytherans in Australia whom she knows, and Australian Kytherans in Kythera, expats, migrants, children of migrants. Boldly, she quits her good job with its superannuation and holiday pay, gets herself a contract to write two books (the 2021 novel From Where I Fell, and this memoir) and, unwilling to leave her 85-year-old mother Barbara behind, encourages her to accompany her and to be part of the story.

Read more: Friday essay: a fresh perspective on Leonard Cohen and the island that inspired him

‘I can’t see anything … I recognise’

This is very much the story of Kythera, and of being a daughter, a sometimes unsatisfactory daughter to a much loved but in many ways aloof mother.

Even here, I recognised something of my own relationship with my mother (is it generational?), a woman like Barbara, born in the 1930s. They don’t feel they have to like us, their daughters. Not that Barbara dislikes her daughter Susan; after all, they leave Brisbane to live on Kythera together for a year.

Mother and daughter. Effy Alexakis

But it’s one of the many truths Johnson discovers on Kythera, that even while her mother defends her as a writer, always, she doesn’t always admire her as a person.

Barbara is fully aware that she will become one of the memoir’s threads of story. But frustratingly for Johnson, she does not embrace Kytheran life, or does so unpredictably. They arrive in winter to poor heating and a “ceaseless crying wind” that Barbara, a Queenslander through and through, understandably finds unbearable. After a while, Johnson locates a new house for them to live in: warmer, prettier, and with neighbours who become close friends.

She tries in so many ways to make Barbara comfortable.

If I have given the impression I was concerned for her welfare because she was the timid, pleasing sort, let me correct that.

Barbara often refuses to go with Johnson on walks, or into churches to view icons and other “sinful acts of idolatary”, or accompany her on other adventures across the island. She is uninterested in hearing from her daughter about the island’s ancient or recent history, its place in the great myths and legends. Frequently (but not reliably) she is wary and even dislikes their visitors and new friends, Kytheran and Australian. (Johnson says nothing to her about an hilarious affair with a foolish Frenchman.)

Barbara often sees strangeness where Johnson sees the marvellous. About the night sky, Barbara says, “I can’t see anything […] I recognise”.

Johnson starts to wonder if resistance is her mother’s intention:

Could it be that Mum was giving me nothing to write about? ‘My Mother Went to Greece and Watched Netflix’ was a title unlikely to race off the shelves.

Johnson cannot dismiss the friction between them. They argue, there are silences, but then things shift again. Spring begins, with “wild yellow crocuses spilling like sunshine down the hills”. Even still, they make the decision that Barbara will return to Australia earlier and Johnson will continue on her own.

Barbara’s response to the island is antithetical to Johnson’s. Ultimately she functions as an important foil to the author’s quest; the seeker in the story must encounter obstacles of mythic proportions, and Barbara is that. Barbara resists the whole notion of travel as a celebration of mobility, or as a rite of passage, or of the capacity of the self to colonise and reinvent itself in the new place. She steadfastly does not want to remake herself.

Read more: COVID changed travel writing. Maybe that's not a bad thing

A new grief

The book has many chambers, many beating hearts. There is the story of a writer hard at work researching, note-taking, editing, writing; that is, earning a living. And through it all, the warm big heart of the island itself.

The first chapters are in places dense with historical minutiae, difficult to appreciate unless one is familiar with Kythera (which I am not). There is also the tragic story of Rosa Kasimati, the mother of a famous Kytheran, Lafcadio Hearn, who was separated from him when he was a young child. Johnson aims to give Kasimati a key place in the memoir, but Kasimati and Hearn both remain peripheral.

Once the memoir settles into its rhythms, the island shimmers under Johnson’s prose. Johnson lives there through all the seasons, through deftly shared stories about new friendships, and the harvesting of olives, of parties and meals, of watching the fishing boats and ferries, of walks between villages, of dancing “down in the hidden cool of the springs” and feeling part of “a long line of dancers stretching into the limits of knowable time”. The memoir doesn’t end on Kythera. Like other Kytheran Australians and expats, Johnson returns to Australia during the pandemic. The frequent flashes of humour are forgone. Soon there is a new grief to face with Barbara’s death, and acknowledgement that away from Kythera, Johnson now “could not comprehend the passage of time, or that a human life span had an ending”. Johnson herself becomes seriously ill, and the gift of their shared time on Kythera is that she now understands “the sheer density of being — of the physical world and our bodies moving through it […] of the song of the world being recited by ordinary people.” Reading this I paused, thinking about my own aged parents, reminded of the beauty and terror of our shared mortality. Aphrodite’s Breath is one of those sublime books that both pleases and pursues you with its imagery and thoughts, long after you’ve put the book down. Authors: Jane Messer, Honorary Associate Professor in Creative Writing and Literature, Macquarie University

Read more https://theconversation.com/eros-beauty-and-friction-what-happened-when-susan-johnson-took-her-85-year-old-mother-to-live-on-a-greek-island-202351

Why Retail CX Breaks During Peak Sales Events and How to Prevent It

Retail customer experience has become one of the most important drivers of revenue growth, especially during high-intensity sales periods. However, ev...

15 South Indian Dishes Everyone Should Try

If your only experience of "Indian food" is butter chicken and garlic naan, South Indian cuisine is going to feel like discovering an entirely new c...

What Every Homeowner Should Know About Roof and Drainage Maintenance

A home's roof and drainage system work together every day to protect the property from water damage. While many homeowners focus on visible areas such...

From Plans to Priced Quote: The Estimating Workflow Most Builders Skip

For a small one-off job, an experienced builder can size up the materials in their head. The problem is that most jobs are not small one-off jobs, and...

Organisational Experts Share Their Tips for Achieving a Clutter-Free Kitchen

They say the kitchen is the heart of a house which means a clutter-free kitchen not only makes your home in general look nicer, it also makes cookin...

10 Creative Ways AI Image Extenders Are Transforming Digital Content Creation in 2026

Introduction Artificial intelligence continues to reshape the digital landscape, and one of the most exciting innovations in 2026 is the rise of AI i...

What to Do When You're Arrested in Victoria

Most people have thought about this in the abstract. A knock at the door, a hand on the shoulder, a car pulled over on the Hume. In the abstract, th...

Common Financial Disputes During Separation

Separation hits on many levels, not just emotionally. When a partnership ends, untangling the financial side — assets, debts, and everything built t...

Why Posting More Content is Killing Your Brand

More content. More often. More platforms.Most brands have been running this playbook for three years. Most brands have nothing to show for it.Not be...

Garden Clean-Up vs. Regular Maintenance: Which Do You Really Need?

Most people ring a gardener and ask for a "tidy up." What they mean by that, and what the garden actually needs, are often two completely different ...

Solar Panel Maintenance Tips for Melbourne Homes

Three years in and the panels are still on the roof. The inverter is still blinking. The electricity bills are still lower than they used to be, rou...

Cost Effective Kitchen Renovations – From the Ground Up

Even in times of uncertainty, it seems renovations continue to be on the to-do list for many Australian property owners. As a result, demand on materi...

Why Bathroom Product Selection Matters More Than Most Homeowners Realise

Most homeowners think wrong when it comes to a bathroom renovation. They think hard about the layout. Spend hours choosing tiles. Agonise over pain...

How An Asbestos Removalist Ensures Safe And Compliant Property Environments in Melbourne

Maintaining a safe environment within residential and commercial properties requires careful management of hazardous materials, which is why engaging ...

Why Protein Bars Are A Convenient Option For Daily Nutrition And Energy

Maintaining balanced nutrition throughout the day can be challenging, especially for individuals with busy schedules, which is why protein bars hav...

Property Settlements After Separation: Key Considerations

Dividing assets after a separation is one of the more complex and emotionally charged aspects of the process. Understanding how property settlements...

Why Dust Control Matters During Bathroom Demolition

People usually expect bathroom demolition to be noisy.  No one thinks of dust — but it turns up everywhere. Inside cupboards. On couches. Along...

Why Roller Shutters And Outdoor Blinds Are Popular For Modern Properties

Many homeowners and businesses now install roller shutters to improve security, privacy, insulation, and weather protection across residential and ...