One of the contributors to Charles Dickens' weekly magazine Household Words was Richard Horne. According to the notes on Contributors in Margaret Mendelawitz's five-volume set, Charles Dickens' Australia, which I reviewed last week, Horne was an English-born author who lived in Australia from 1852 to 1869. He agreed to write travel pieces for Household Words "in return", … Continue reading Delicious descriptions from Down Under: Melbourne scenes, 1850s
Author: Whispering Gums
TS Eliot’s The waste land, app-style
Hands up if you've seen Touchpress's gorgeous iPad app for TS Eliot's poem The wasteland? Now, if your hand is up, why didn't you tell me about it? Luckily, though, I have a real-life, dinky-di librarian friend who told me what my online friends didn't! This is not going to be a proper review as … Continue reading TS Eliot’s The waste land, app-style
Margaret Mendelawitz, Charles Dickens’ Australia: Selected essays from Household Words 1850-1859
It was not to be a high-brow intellectual periodical. Above all he wanted to reach and entertain the masses and, at the same time, help shape discussion and debate on the important social questions of the time. (from Introduction, by Margaret Mendelawitz) Charles Dickens' Australia is a set of five volumes containing essays, stories and … Continue reading Margaret Mendelawitz, Charles Dickens’ Australia: Selected essays from Household Words 1850-1859
Monday musings on Australian literature: What value writers’ homes?
DKS, in a recent comment on this blog, and Lisa of ANZLitlovers, in a post last week, have brought to my attention the threat to Christina Stead's home, Boongarre, in Watsons Bay, Sydney. As a lover of the "literary road", I'm concerned and so decided to explore it a little more. The facts, as I … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: What value writers’ homes?
MJ Hyland, Carry me down
If you like writers who unsettle, then MJ Hyland is a writer for you. Carry me down is my second Hyland. I read, loved and reviewed a later book of hers, This is how, nearly a year ago, and said then that I'd like to read more. I finally have, and am not disappointed. Carry … Continue reading MJ Hyland, Carry me down
Monday musings on Australian literature: Contemporary poetry and music
telegrams tremble like leaves from a wintering tree and the spider grief swings in his bitter geometry – they’re bringing them home, now, too late, too early. (from "Homecoming" by Bruce Dawe) Last night I was lucky enough to attend a private function at which a small, local, male a capella group, the Pocket Score … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Contemporary poetry and music
Delicious descriptions from Down Under: Of wine and bushrangers
Now this is something literally delicious and I couldn't resist sharing it with you. It is the description of a wine from Houghton Winery in Western Australia. The wine is The Bandit Sauvignon Blanc Pinot Gris 2010, and here is the description* from the back label: The Bandit was Western Australian Moondyne Joe who earned notoriety … Continue reading Delicious descriptions from Down Under: Of wine and bushrangers
Monday musings on Australian literature: Indigenous Australian autobiographies
When I was a child my father told me to be proud I was of "aboriginal descent". Perhaps it was the silence surrounding his words that made them resonate as they did; I'd certainly heard no such thing anywhere else in my life, certainly not in my reading or schooling. There didn't seem much in … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Indigenous Australian autobiographies
Whispering Gums on Deformed Pines
I am slowly but surely working my way through Isabella Bird's Unbeaten tracks in Japan. While we were still in Japan, and enjoying its wonderful gardens, I came across the following passage from early in Bird's travels: After running cheerily for several miles my men bowled me into a tea-house, where they ate and smoked … Continue reading Whispering Gums on Deformed Pines
Monday musings on Australian literature: Writers from our north
Queensland is the state of my birth, and that makes it special to me! It is a large state and one of our most geographically diverse, ranging from the tropical north to the arid west, from the subtropical south to the temperate inland southeast. It has one of Australia's most popular tourist destinations, the Great … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Writers from our north