Archive for June, 2009

Jun 29 2009

The Collector by John Fowles

Published by mark under Book reviews

I think I am reading this because it is going to be discussed in the First Tuesday Book Club, Jennifer Byrnes’ entertaining literary discussion program on ABC 1. But I am also reading Fowles’ book because I am fascinated by the premise. Like Sebastian Faulks’ Engleby, it features the voice of obsession: a lonely misfit stalker.

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Jun 28 2009

The Kindly Ones by Jonathan Littell

Published by mark under Book reviews

There are some books, not many, that you want to carry on reading, long after the final page. It might be the setting or the theme that you love. Perhaps it’s the main character, someone you admire and long to travel further alongside. It might be the quality of the language. Usually, in a good book, all of these are present in some form, but when you reach the end, you’re glad. It’s been a great journey, but it’s time to move on.

What on earth could be the reasons to want to carry on reading The Kindly Ones, the grim and very long first-person fictional account of a senior German officer from the Second World War? Continue Reading »

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Jun 27 2009

4th Kids & Young Adult Literature Festival

Published by mark under Event management

At the NSW Writers’ Centre in Rozelle, Sydney, coordinated by me. Panels on all kinds of children’s writing from picture books to YA. More here.

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Jun 08 2009

Cutwater launch

Published by mark under Appearances,Writing

The Cutwater literary journal, edited by Dan Collins and Sam Twyfford-Moore, is launched on Saturday 11 July.

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Jun 05 2009

Finito bonito

Published by mark under Writing

There’s a line in my piece, “The Last Travel Story”, appearing in the literary journal Cutwater, published next month, that includes the phrase, “soon-to-be-extinct fish”.

So what, you say. Well, as is noted in Hari’s report below, only that we humans (collectively, not individually) are responsible for the likely imminent extinction of yet another species. Gone. Fished out and forked off. Finito bonito.

Anyway, “The Last Travel Story” is a bleak ditty, a sordid exercise in self-indulgence. And a credo of sorts. Pass me the vodka, it’s time to write that letter.

Johann Hari: Could we be the generation that runs out of fish?

The process of trawlering is an oceanic weapon of mass destruction

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