And now for something completely different! Tonight I was way out of my comfort zone, mixing as I was with physicists and mathematicians at an event involving staff, students, alumni (pas moi, but Mr Gums) of the Research School of Physics and Engineering at the Australian National University (ANU). The event involved a reception followed … Continue reading Evening with a Nobel Laureate
ALS Gold Medal, 2009 (announced 2010)
Since many book bloggers are posting the Booker longlist, I don't think I need to do so here. I don't expect to read many of them, not so much due to a lack of interest as to the fact that I've a pretty full reading schedule in front of me without adding these to it! … Continue reading ALS Gold Medal, 2009 (announced 2010)
Introducing the Griffyn Ensemble
A painted Griffin, Knossos (Courtesy: Paginazero, via Wikipedia, using CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported) The Griffyn Ensemble is an exciting chamber music ensemble based right here in our (that is downunder's) national capital. The ensemble is named, in a fun wordplay, after Walter Burley Griffin, Canberra's designer, and the mythical beast (the griffin, gryffin, or gryphon). The … Continue reading Introducing the Griffyn Ensemble
M.J. Hyland, This is how
If you want to read a book that is quick (and seemingly simple) to read and yet satisfyingly complex, then MJ Hyland's This is how is for you. I've been wanting to read Hyland for a while and, having now done so, this won't be the last. So where to start? The novel is a … Continue reading M.J. Hyland, This is how
Inception (the movie): Great expectations or?
Last night we saw Inception. Readers of this blog will know that I occasionally review movies but that when I do it's usually an Australian one. After all, this blog's prime focus is Australian (particularly Australian literature). However, my fingers regularly tap their way onto other turf, and on this occasion I've decided to write … Continue reading Inception (the movie): Great expectations or?
Do you marginalia?
I do, but I wouldn't class myself with the likes of Sylvia Plath, Vladimir Nabokov and Mark Twain, to name just a few famous marginalians (if that's not a word, it is now!). And so, I enjoyed a recent article, titled "Marginal", which you can read online in The New Yorker. It's written by Ian Frazier, an … Continue reading Do you marginalia?
Haruki Murakami, Blind willow, sleeping woman
Granted, my fiction contains more than its share of invention, but when I'm not writing fiction I don't go out of my way to make up meaningless stories. (from "Chance traveller", 2005) This is as good a way as any to commence my review of Haruki Murakami’s recent short story collection, Blind willow, sleeping woman, … Continue reading Haruki Murakami, Blind willow, sleeping woman
Indigenous Australian stories – and digital technologies
In my recent on the literary road post, I referred briefly to Indigenous Australian stories. Rather coincidentally, I have just spent three days at a conference titled Information Technology and Indigenous Communities, hosted, primarily, by the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) with the aim of exploring "the ever-increasing use of … Continue reading Indigenous Australian stories – and digital technologies
Hilary McPhee on Australian writing
I was going to write my next post on why I like short stories - as a prelude to my next review - when I heard on the radio today that Hilary McPhee has just edited a book of Australian short fiction. To most Australians, Hilary McPhee is - and if she's not she should … Continue reading Hilary McPhee on Australian writing
On the literary (cultural) road, in the Top End
Last month, Mr Gums and I holidayed in the Top End (of Downunder). I'm not quite sure where the Top End ends as it is a loose description for the northern part of Australia's Northern Territory, but I believe it encompasses all the areas we visited. For ten days, we explored Katherine and Nitmiluk National Park … Continue reading On the literary (cultural) road, in the Top End