My reading group has a few loose "rules" for choosing our reads, but one of the more rigid ones is that each year we like to read at least one classic. This year's first classic - yes, another is coming - was Mary McCarthy's The group. As I wrote in last week's Monday Musings, it … Continue reading Mary McCarthy, The group (#BookReview)
Literature by period
Chris Womersley, A lovely and terrible thing (#BookReview)
Described as "twenty macabre and deliciously enjoyable stories for readers of Fiona McFarlane and Lauren Groff", Chris Womersley's newest book - his debut collection of short stories - wasn't necessarily a natural fit for me. I haven't read Lauren Groff, but I have read and really liked Fiona McFarlane's clever, memorable, The night guest (my … Continue reading Chris Womersley, A lovely and terrible thing (#BookReview)
Monday musings on Australian literature: Books banned in Australia
This week, my reading group will be discussing an American classic, Mary McCarthy's The group. Published in 1963, it sat on the New York Times best-selling list for five months. It also has the honour of having been banned in Australia! I realised that I've never done a Monday Musings on banned books, so now … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Books banned in Australia
Nadine Gordimer, Harald, Claudia, and their son Duncan (#BookReview)
There are authors I read long before blogging whom I really want to document here, in some way. One of these is Nobel Laureate Nadine Gordimer who first came to my attention in 1983 with her memorable, confronting 1956 short story collection, Six feet of the country. Nadine Gordimer, as I'm sure you know, had … Continue reading Nadine Gordimer, Harald, Claudia, and their son Duncan (#BookReview)
Nigel Featherstone, Bodies of men (#BookReview)
Nigel Featherstone's latest novel, Bodies of men, is a brave book - and not because it's a World War 2 story about love between two soldiers at at time when such relationships were taboo, though there is that. No, I mean, because it's a World War 2 story that was inspired by Featherstone's three-month writer-in-residence … Continue reading Nigel Featherstone, Bodies of men (#BookReview)
Sayaka Murata, Convenience store woman (#BookReview)
Convenience store woman, which won Japan's prestigious Akutagawa Prize, is Sayaka Murata's 10th novel, but her first translated into English. Hopefully, it won't be the last. A rather unusual book, it elicited a stimulating discussion at my reading group last week. The convenience store woman of the title is 36-year-old Keiko Furukawa. She isn't "normal", and her … Continue reading Sayaka Murata, Convenience store woman (#BookReview)
Enza Gandolfo, The bridge (#Bookreview)
If there are people I admire more than any others, it's those who are able to empathise with, and forgive, someone who has done them great wrong. This complex question of forgiveness - of self and of others - is one of the issues explored in Enza Gandolfo's Stella Prize short-listed novel, The bridge. However, it's … Continue reading Enza Gandolfo, The bridge (#Bookreview)
Amanda Duthie (ed.), Kin: An extraordinary filmmaking family (#BookReview)
Kin: An extraordinary filmmaking family is the second tribute book I've reviewed in Wakefield Press's Don Dunstan Award series. The first, Margaret & David: 5 stars, was also edited by Amanda Duthie. Like that book, Kin contains short reflections and essays on the contribution made to Australia's film industry and culture by Freda Glynn, her children Erica … Continue reading Amanda Duthie (ed.), Kin: An extraordinary filmmaking family (#BookReview)
Monday musings on Australian literature: Two Aussie writers in 1965
Continuing last week's 1965 theme, this post discusses two articles on two Aussie writers who published books that year. I chose them because I think they are instructive examples of book reviewing. Thomas Keneally Thomas Keneally, born in 1935, is a prolific Australian author with a long (and still continuing) career. He was shortlisted for … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Two Aussie writers in 1965
Janet Lee, The killing of Louisa (#BookReview)
I started reading Janet Lee's historical fiction The killing of Louisa straight after reading Amor Towles' A gentleman in Moscow (my review), which is also a work of historical fiction. They couldn't be more different. Not only is one about a real historical figure in late 19th century Australia, while the other is about a … Continue reading Janet Lee, The killing of Louisa (#BookReview)