Delicious descriptions: Kim Mahood’s desert

I wanted to use this Descriptions series to share a couple of Mahood's gorgeous descriptions from her memoir, Position doubtful, which I reviewed recently, but I've decided to share one about maps and relationships (and you'll probably see why), and a description. From a mapping expedition: The shortcomings of my prototype map soon become evident. … Continue reading Delicious descriptions: Kim Mahood’s desert

Monday musings on Australian literature: Guest post from Bill of The Australian Legend

It's been two years since I last published a Guest Post, for no any other reason than that the idea slipped off the radar as other busy-ness took over. However, during a recent email correspondence with (relatively new) blogger Bill, the idea re-popped into my head, and so I asked him, as he explains below. … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Guest post from Bill of The Australian Legend

Ali Cobby Eckermann, Inside my mother (#BookReview)

Ali Cobby Eckermann, a Yankunytjatjara/Kokatha woman, has featured a few times on this blog, including in my review of her verse novel, Ruby Moonlight, and my Monday Musings post on her winning the valuable Windham-Campbell Prize this year. She is now appearing again as I review her poetry collection, Inside my mother, for Lisa's ANZlitLovers Indigenous … Continue reading Ali Cobby Eckermann, Inside my mother (#BookReview)

Monday musings on Australian literature: Reading indigenous literature

Each July, as well as contributing at least one review to Lisa's ANZLitLovers Indigenous Literature Week, I try to write a Monday Musings post related in some way to NAIDOC week which, as Aussies will know, is a week, usually the first full week in July, during which activities are planned to “to celebrate the … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Reading indigenous literature

Six degrees of separation, FROM Picnic at Hanging Rock TO A few days in the country

Woo hoo, it's Six Degrees of Separation day again, and for this month our host Kate (booksaremyfavouriteandbest) has selected a special book, Joan Lindsay's Picnic at Hanging Rock, which is 50 years old this year. This meme, as you probably know by now, requires we players to create a chain of six more books, linking one from … Continue reading Six degrees of separation, FROM Picnic at Hanging Rock TO A few days in the country

Kim Mahood, Position doubtful (#BookReview)

Kim Mahood's memoir Position doubtful is a such a stimulating read. That might sound weird for a book whose subtitle is Mapping, landscapes and memories, but the thing is that it hits the spot in so many ways that are central to the issues confronting Australians right now. In other words, it's about our relationship to place. Specifically, … Continue reading Kim Mahood, Position doubtful (#BookReview)

Monday musings on Australian literature: Changing literary tastes (2)

My last Monday Musings post was on Changing literary tastes from the 1920s to 1940s, using newspaper articles I'd found in the National Library of Australia's Trove. Today's post draws on just one article from the 1950s. I'm choosing just one because it, unusually in my experience, has a by-line - for a person worth … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Changing literary tastes (2)

Emily Maguire, An isolated incident (#BookReview)

Emily Maguire's novel, An isolated incident, reminded me of Charlotte Wood's The natural way of things (my review). Sure, An isolated incident is a crime novel, albeit a genre-bending one, while The natural way of things is a dystopian novel, but both deal with the same fundamental issue, misogyny. Wood exposes the scapegoating of women for … Continue reading Emily Maguire, An isolated incident (#BookReview)

Emily Midorikawa and Emma Claire Sweeney, A secret sisterhood (Pt 1) (#Review)

Midorikawa and Sweeney's book, A secret sisterhood, published this month, is subtitled The hidden friendships of Austen, Brontë, Eliot and Woolf, by which you might guess why a copy came my way! And so, as homework for my Jane Austen group meeting this month, I've just read the first part, which is about Jane Austen and … Continue reading Emily Midorikawa and Emma Claire Sweeney, A secret sisterhood (Pt 1) (#Review)

Monday musings on Australian literature: Changing literary tastes (1)

Research can send you off on all sorts of tangents - particularly if don't have to be focused. What fascinating things you can find when you go with the flow (in the wonderful Trove)! It started with my recent post on Currawong Press, which, somewhat serendipitously, led to a post on books published in The Australian Women's … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Changing literary tastes (1)