Helen Garner

The following posts include reviews of novels, narrative non-fiction, essays, short stories and journals by by Helen Garner. The children’s Bach Cosmo cosmolino Cosmo cosmolino (2) Everywhere I look The last days of chez nous & Two friends One day I’ll remember this: Diaries, Volume 2, 1987-1995 Postcards from Surfers This house of grief: The … Continue reading Helen Garner

Consider Helen Garner’s Cosmo cosmolino

Commenting on my post on Helen Garner’s One day I’ll remember this, Bill (The Australian Legend) wrote that he’d hoped I’d mention Cosmo cosmolino (1992). It’s one of the novels Garner was writing during the period covered by these diaries, and Bill had struggled with it. I don’t blame him because, while I loved reading … Continue reading Consider Helen Garner’s Cosmo cosmolino

Helen Garner, One day I’ll remember this: Diaries, Volume 2, 1987-1995 (#BookReview)

I loved volume 1 of Helen Garner’s diaries, Yellow notebook (my review), last year, and equally enjoyed this second volume, One day I’ll remember this. As with my first volume post, I plan to focus on a couple of threads that particularly interested me. First though, it’s worth situating these diaries in terms of Garner’s … Continue reading Helen Garner, One day I’ll remember this: Diaries, Volume 2, 1987-1995 (#BookReview)

Helen Garner, Yellow notebook: Diaries, Volume 1, 1978-1987 (#BookReview)

The opening session of last November’s inaugural Broadside Festival featured Helen Garner in conversation with Sarah Krasnostein about her recently published Yellow notebook, the first volume of her edited diaries. It was an excellent, intelligent conversation. Garner came across as the forthright writer she is, one who fearlessly exposes difficult and unpleasant things, alongside joys and triumphs. … Continue reading Helen Garner, Yellow notebook: Diaries, Volume 1, 1978-1987 (#BookReview)

Monday musings on Australian literature: My reading group does Garner

You are never too old to try something new – and so it was that my 30-year-old reading group tried something new for our April meeting. The idea was that we would all read Garner, but our individual choice of Garner. We’ve discussed five Garners over the years, and many had read other Garners besides … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: My reading group does Garner

Helen Garner, The last days of chez nous, and Two friends (#BookReview)

Helen Garner must have loved prize-winning book designer WH Chong’s cheeky cypress-dominated cover for the Text Classics edition of her two screenplays, The last days of chez nous and Two friends. You’d only realise this, though, after reading her Preface, in which she explains that she had incorporated cypresses into her screenplay for their “freight of … Continue reading Helen Garner, The last days of chez nous, and Two friends (#BookReview)

Bernadette Brennan, A writing life: Helen Garner and her work (#BookReview)

Enough of the filler posts for a while! It’s time for a review, and it’s a special one because it’s for a book about one of my favourite writers, Helen Garner. The book is Bernadette Brennan’s A writing life: Helen Garner and her work. Described as a “literary portrait” rather than as a biography, it … Continue reading Bernadette Brennan, A writing life: Helen Garner and her work (#BookReview)

Helen Garner, Why she broke: The woman, her children and the lake (#Review)

Three years ago I reviewed Helen Garner’s This house of grief about Robert Farquharson who drove his car into a dam in Victoria, resulting in the deaths of his three sons. It’s a grim grim story, so you might wonder why I am now writing about her essay “Why she broke: The woman, her children and … Continue reading Helen Garner, Why she broke: The woman, her children and the lake (#Review)

Helen Garner on writers and writing (in Everywhere I look)

As I promised in my main review of Helen Garner’s engaging book of essays and jottings, Everywhere I look, I am here doing a little follow-up post on her discussions of other writers. I enjoyed reading her thoughts about specific writers, but even more I liked that in talking about these writers she gave away her own writing preferences. So, what did I know … Continue reading Helen Garner on writers and writing (in Everywhere I look)