Australia implemented a Public Lending Right (PLR) in 1975. It's a Federal Government program which makes payments to eligible creators and publishers, in recognition of income they lose (in other words, don't get!) through loans and other free uses of their books in public lending libraries. PLR schemes operate many countries around the world, including … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Digital Lending Right
Month: January 2023
Claire G. Coleman, Night bird (#Review)
Wirlomin-Noongar woman Claire G. Coleman's short story "Night bird" is the second First Nations Australia story in Ellen van Neerven and Rafeif Ismail's anthology Unlimited futures: Speculative, visionary Blak+Black fiction, the book I chose for Bill's (The Australian Legend) Australian Women Writers Gen 5 Week. The week finished officially a week ago, but I'm hoping … Continue reading Claire G. Coleman, Night bird (#Review)
D’Arcy Niland, The parachutist (#Review)
D'Arcy Niland has appeared in my blog before but not in his own right. He was the Australian-born husband of the New Zealand-born Australian writer Ruth Park. I have posted on their collaborative memoir, The drums go bang, and have written specifically about Ruth Park, but have never written specifically on Niland before. Niland is … Continue reading D’Arcy Niland, The parachutist (#Review)
Monday musings on Australian literature: on 1923: 2, The Platypus Series
My first post in my Monday Musings 1923 series featured an update on the 1880-established NSW Bookstall Company, which, you may remember, focused on supporting Australia's writers and readers by publishing Australian books and selling them for just one shilling each. In 1923, another publishing initiative appeared on the scene, Angus and Robertson's Platypus Series. … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: on 1923: 2, The Platypus Series
Ambelin Kwaymullina, Fifteen days on Mars (#Review)
In 2014, Ambelin Kwaymullina, whose people are the Palyku of the Pilbara region of Western Australia, described herself in a Kill Your Darlings essay as writing "speculative fiction for young adults". Three years later, in the 2017 Twelfth Planet Press anthology, Mother of invention, she said that she was "a Palyku author of Indigenous Futurisms", … Continue reading Ambelin Kwaymullina, Fifteen days on Mars (#Review)
Monday musings on Australian literature: First Nations Australia speculative fiction
This post is my first contribution to Bill's (The Australian Legend) Australian Women Writers Gen 5 Week 15-22 January. Gen 5 encompasses women who have been writing from the 1990s to now. Bill argues that two major trends characterise this era: "the rise and rise of Indigenous Lit" and "writing which in earlier days would … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: First Nations Australia speculative fiction
Sandy Gordon, Leaving Owl Creek (#BookReview)
I do enjoy receiving books from non-profit independent publisher, Finlay Lloyd. Their books are physically distinctive, being longer and narrower than the norm, and they have a stylish, minimalist, design, which makes them lovely to look at and hold. They also appeal content-wise because Finlay Lloyd consciously, it seems to me, publishes books that regardless … Continue reading Sandy Gordon, Leaving Owl Creek (#BookReview)
Monday musings on Australian literature: on 1923: 1, Bookstall Co. (update)
Last year I wrote a series of posts about 1922, drawing primarily from Trove. I enjoyed doing it, and have decided to repeat the exercise this year, and perhaps continue annually, to build up a picture of the times. My first 1922 post was about the NSW Bookstall Company which was established in 1880, but … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: on 1923: 1, Bookstall Co. (update)
Six degrees of separation, FROM Beach read TO …
A new year, and here we are again with our Six Degrees meme. Before I get stuck in, though, I would like to wish you all the best for the New Year, and hope that 2023 proves to be a healthy and peaceful one for us all. We could all do with it, particularly those … Continue reading Six degrees of separation, FROM Beach read TO …
Monday musings on Australian literature: Some New Releases in 2023
Maintaining tradition, my first Monday Musings of the year once again focuses on "new releases". As before, it is primarily drawn from the Sydney Morning Herald. Jane Sullivan and the team do a wonderful job of surveying publishers large and small, but I have added a couple of my own! Also, as this is Monday musings … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Some New Releases in 2023