Puberty Blues

Puberty Blues

2012 • Drama
Based on Kathy Lette and Gabrielle Carey's iconic novel, Puberty Blues tells the story of two girls, Debbie and Sue, of innocence lost and experience gained against the backdrop of Australia in the 1970s.

Why you should read the novel

Reading the original novel Puberty Blues offers an unfiltered and authentic exploration of adolescence that no screen adaptation can truly replicate. Gabrielle Carey and Kathy Lette’s firsthand experience as teenagers in 1970s Australia brings a raw, observational quality to their writing, capturing the nuances of friendship, rebellion, sexuality, and the pressures faced by young women in surf culture. Through their candid prose, readers immerse themselves in a narrative that feels both deeply personal and universally resonant. Unlike the television adaptation, the book is a direct account from two teenage girls who lived through the era, allowing their unique voices and perspectives to shine. The slang, cultural references, and subtle emotions encoded in every page are details that only the written word can deliver. Readers not only witness the protagonists’ triumphs and mistakes but also gain a glimpse into an Australia rarely represented in mainstream media. Choosing to read Puberty Blues promises an experience of profound honesty, connection, and understanding. The novel remains a powerful feminist text, challenging norms and opening conversations about gender, consent, and growing up—making it a must-read for anyone interested in authentic stories that matter.

Adaptation differences

One of the major differences between the Puberty Blues novel and its television adaptation is the time period. While the book takes place squarely in the late 1970s, painting a vivid picture of that era’s slang, fashion, and social attitudes, the TV series updates some of the settings and references, making the story more accessible to modern viewers but diluting the specificity and authenticity of its era. Characterization also differs between the two mediums. The novel’s protagonists, Debbie and Sue, are based closely on the real-life experiences of Carey and Lette, their voices brimming with dry humor and sometimes painful honesty. The TV series gives these characters more dramatic expressive arcs and fleshes out secondary characters, sometimes shifting focus away from the original duo’s intimate perspective in order to broaden the show’s scope. Themes of feminism and the exploration of female sexuality are more subdued in the TV adaptation compared to the book’s raw and unapologetic approach. While the show hints at the girls’ struggle for autonomy in a male-dominated surfie subculture, the novel is far more explicit, critical, and direct—highlighting the gritty realities of exploitation, peer pressure, and the fight for self-respect with uncompromising candor. Finally, while the television series expands on storyline and adds new plot threads and characters for dramatic effect, the book remains tightly focused on the experiences of Debbie and Sue. This difference means the series can sometimes lose the intimacy and singular, grounded narrative that makes the novel stand out as an enduring and important work in Australian literature.

Puberty Blues inspired from

Puberty Blues
by Gabrielle Carey, Kathy Lette

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Puberty Blues