For my second post on JASA's Emma: 200 years of perfection conference, I want to share (or, at least, summarise for my own edification) some of the ways the speakers had gone about researching Emma, at least as they became apparent to me via their papers. None of these are particularly mind-blowing - they are … Continue reading Emma: 200 years of perfection: Pt 2, The art of literary research
Monday musings on Australian literature: David Unaipon Award
I've mentioned the David Unaipon Award several times in passing but have never devoted a post specifically to it. Today seemed to be a good time to do it, as it would mean I've bookended this year's NAIDOC week with Monday Musings posts devoted to indigenous literature. Just to recap, David Unaipon is credited as the … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: David Unaipon Award
Sam Tranum and Lois Kapila, Love on the road 2015 (Review)
Rules, they say, are made to be broken, and so it was that I broke my rule* of not accepting overseas publications for review and said yes to a short story anthology from Ireland, Love on the road 2015: Twelve more tales of love and travel. I'm not exactly sure, in fact, why an Irish publisher … Continue reading Sam Tranum and Lois Kapila, Love on the road 2015 (Review)
Emma: 200 years of perfection: Pt 1, The capacious Emma
This year is the 200th anniversary of the publication of Jane Austen's Emma, so it was natural that the Jane Austen Society of Australia's (JASA) biennial weekend conference, held last weekend, would be devoted to the novel. It was a fascinating and inspiring conference, and one I felt well-prepared for having just re-read Emma earlier … Continue reading Emma: 200 years of perfection: Pt 1, The capacious Emma
Monday musings on Australian literature: NAIDOC Week 2015
Australians will be aware that this week, July 5 to 12, is NAIDOC Week. NAIDOC originally stood for National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee, the committee that was once responsible for organising national activities during NAIDOC Week. However, this acronym has now become the name of the week, which suggests just how significant, and well-accepted, this … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: NAIDOC Week 2015
Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey (Review)
Although I've titled this a review, as I do when I write about a book, this post on my latest read, Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey, is not really going to be a review. Like all her novels, it's been intensively written about from multiple angles, and in fact there are many themes and ideas I'd love to write about, but … Continue reading Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey (Review)
Emma Ashmere, The floating garden (Review)
I had a little chuckle when, fairly early in Emma Ashmere's novel, The floating garden, we discover that our main character, Ellis Gilbey, writes a gardening column under the name Scribbly Gum! Good name, I thought. If it hadn't been for my school song inspiration, this would have been the name for me! There's another … Continue reading Emma Ashmere, The floating garden (Review)
Monday musings on Australian literature: Black Inc’s Best 100 Poems
I've been feeling rather guilty about a book sent to me in late 2013 by Black Inc. I'm usually very conscientious about reading and reviewing books that I've accepted for review - not so much for those sent to me "on spec" - but I slipped up with Black Inc's The best 100 poems of Dorothy Porter. … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Black Inc’s Best 100 Poems
Delicious descriptions: Kate Llewellyn on Aussie authors
Since I couldn't cover everything in my review of Kate Llewellyn's letters, First things first, edited by Ruth Bacchus and Barbara Hill, I decided that a follow-up Delicious Descriptions on a specific aspect of the book, her discussion of her reading, would be in order. I'm making the assumption that, like me, you're interested in what writers think about the work … Continue reading Delicious descriptions: Kate Llewellyn on Aussie authors
Monday musings on Australian literature: The Conversation’s Writing History
This is the post I planned for last week, when Jessica White hijacked me. Like that post, this one too was inspired by another person, this time my historian brother who sent me a link to an article in a new series by The Conversation called Writing History. This series aims to "examine the links, problems and dynamics of writing, recording … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: The Conversation’s Writing History