I like Kazuo Ishiguro - and have read 5 of his 6 novels - so I was looking forward to reading Nocturnes, his first published collection of short stories. Nocturnes, as the subtitle describes, comprises five short stories, each focussing in some way on music, and on a day's end. The five stories - a … Continue reading Kazuo Ishiguro, Nocturnes: Five stories of music and nightfall
Six months old today!
I started writing this blog six months ago today - and what a fun experience it's been, not only because I've enjoyed forming my thoughts into some sort of coherent (I hope ) whole, but also because it has introduced me to a vibrant, welcoming and encouraging book blogging community. I put off starting a … Continue reading Six months old today!
Kiwis have style!
Much as I, an Aussie, hate to admit it, those New Zealanders have style! Kimbofo has just posted, on her Reading Matters blog, New Zealand Book Council's current promo - take a look here. Beautiful isn't it? It springboards from Maurice Gee's novel Going west - which reminds me that I really must read the … Continue reading Kiwis have style!
The trouble with audiobooks (for me)
Once was audiobooks were used primarily by visually impaired people and travellers, but with the rapidly increasing miniaturisation of audioplayers, audiobooks are now being "read" by people going on walks, working out in the gym, doing housework, sitting on public transport, or even working at their computers. In other words, people listen to audiobooks pretty … Continue reading The trouble with audiobooks (for me)
Can the Coens be serious?
Of course they can! In fact many of their films are comic with a dark side. This is particularly so of the first film of theirs that I saw, Fargo. It is one of those films you don't forget. I don't blog about all the films I see, and when I do blog about them, … Continue reading Can the Coens be serious?
William Trevor, The woman of the house
[WARNING: SPOILERS, if you think it matters] According to Wikipedia,William Trevor's characters "are usually marginalised members of society: children, old people, single middle-aged men and women, or the unhappily married." This is certainly the case with Trevor's short story, The woman of the house, which was published last year in The New Yorker. All four … Continue reading William Trevor, The woman of the house
Arnold Zable, Sea of many returns
He leaps through centuries, tears apart myths, and reassembles them in his own way. These words that are said of one of the characters in Arnold Zable's Sea of many returns could just as easily be said of Zable himself - not only of this book, but of his earlier ones such as Cafe Sheherazade. Zable … Continue reading Arnold Zable, Sea of many returns
Jessica Anderson, The commandant
When I first read about Sydney University Press's Australian Classics Library, the book I really wanted to read was The commandant by Jessica Anderson. It's her only historical novel, but its subject matter doesn't stray much from what she told Jennifer Ellison in an interview many years ago, "I was very much, and always have been, preoccupied with people who … Continue reading Jessica Anderson, The commandant
Markus Zusak, The book thief
In one moment, there was great kindness and great cruelty, and I saw it as the perfect story of our humans are. (Zusak on the Random House website) Zusak could hardly have chosen, for The book thief, a better setting to explore the best and worst of humanity than Germany during the Holocaust. The book … Continue reading Markus Zusak, The book thief
The magnificent River Red Gums
River Red Gums, or Eucalyptus Camaldulensis, are among our most ubiquitous of gum trees, but that doesn't mean they're a boring tree. As their name implies they grow along watercourses - including ones that are very very dry such as those you find in Central Australia. They are also a significant part of what makes … Continue reading The magnificent River Red Gums