"A slightly shambolic dandy" is how journalist Elizabeth Grice described novelist Alexander McCall Smith in Britain's Telegraph newspaper. Shambolic works to some degree, but dandy? That's not quite how I would describe him after tonight's literary event in which he "conversed" with Colin Steele, retired university librarian, long-term bibliophile, and reviewer for The Canberra Times. … Continue reading Conversing with “a slightly shambolic dandy”
Martin Boyd, A difficult young man
Difficult but handsome (Courtesy: Sydney University Press) I'm not sure what I was expecting, but I certainly wasn't expecting the delightful sly wit I found in Martin Boyd's A difficult young man, which, I understand, is the second book in the "Langton Quartet". This novel though can clearly stand on its own - otherwise, why … Continue reading Martin Boyd, A difficult young man
ABR’s Favourite Australian Novel poll
Back in October I wrote about the Australian Book Review's poll to find our favourite Australian novel (not Australia's favourite novel!). Well, the result has just lobbed into my email inbox: it's an interesting list. No great surprises, and it's certainly pretty acceptable even though one can always find something to argue about when the … Continue reading ABR’s Favourite Australian Novel poll
Bran Nue Dae
You could hardly get two more different films than Warwick Thornton's Samson and Delilah and Rachel Perkins' Bran Nue Dae. Both are directed by indigenous Australians and both address indigenous Australian issues but, wow, how differently they do it. While Samson and Delilah is spare and almost without dialogue, Bran Nue Dae is exuberant and … Continue reading Bran Nue Dae
Geoff Page, The scarring
Geoff Page (born 1940) is a Canberra-based poet who has been active in the Australian poetry scene for many decades now. He was also, for nearly three decades, an English teacher. Page has published several volumes of poetry and at least three verse novels, of which The scarring is his first. The scarring, which I … Continue reading Geoff Page, The scarring
John Muir, A wind-storm in the forests
Being rather partial to trees, I could not resist reading "A wind-storm in the forests" by Scottish-born American naturalist/enviromentalist John Muir (1838-1914) when it lobbed in by email today as this week's Library of America story of the week. Anyone who has been to the stunning Yosemite - or visited the peaceful Muir Woods north of San … Continue reading John Muir, A wind-storm in the forests
Vale Kate McGarrigle
Last week I read on Cat Politics' blog that Kate McGarrigle - one part of the Kate and Anna McGarrigle duo - had died just shy of her 64th birthday. How very sad. Like Cat Politics I discovered the McGarrigles in the 1970s, and over the years have acquired a few of their albums: Kate … Continue reading Vale Kate McGarrigle
Australia Post’s new set of Living Legends
Does the choice of writers for Australia Post's Australian Legends of the Written Word look a little one-sided to you? Here is the list: Peter Carey David Malouf Colleen McCullough Bryce Courtenay Thomas Keneally Tim Winton The Guardian books blog - Australian writers' stamps send the wrong message - suggests so, and has a bit … Continue reading Australia Post’s new set of Living Legends
Don DeLillo, Midnight in Dostoevsky
Do reading synchronicities affect our comprehension? Well of course they do, since everything we do affects our comprehension to some degree doesn't it? Anyhow, I have just read Don DeLillo's short story, "Midnight in Dostoevsky" (you can read it here), and, as I read it, I couldn't help bringing to mind Salman Rushdie's The enchantress … Continue reading Don DeLillo, Midnight in Dostoevsky
Leslie Geddes-Brown, Books do furnish a room
There was no resisting this book - Books do furnish a room - when I saw it on a table in the National Library of Australia's bookshop. It's rare for me to buy a coffee-table book but ... this is one gorgeous book. It is lavishly illustrated with images of books in pretty well every room … Continue reading Leslie Geddes-Brown, Books do furnish a room