- Language shapes our thinking.
- Indigenous languages see the world in particular ways.
- There are three stories:
- Poppy Albert – built a dictionary of his language
- Granddaughter August – returned home for his funeral
- Reverend Ferdinand Greenleaf – defender of
- ….“the decent Natives whom I have lived amongst”
#Novella nr 1: NovNov – AusReadingMonth 2021
- Author: Amanda Lohrey
- Title: Vertigo ( pg 144)
- Genre: novella
- Published: 2019
- Monthly plan
- #AusReadingMonth2021 @Bronasbooks
- #NovNov @746Books
- #NovNov @bookishbeck
- #AWW
Introduction:
- Sometimes I search days for a good book
- …and sometimes one just falls into my lap!
- I ordered this book a year ago.
- This year for #AusReadingMonth I am determined to
- sweep through my Kindle TBR and read as many Aussie
- authors as I can.
- Also this review is ….for #NovNov @746Books
Conclusion:
- Veritigo is a stunner.
- Luke and Anna, thirty-something…. decide on a change.
- Worn down by city life they flee to a sleepy village by the coast.
- One senses that the change of living area is only nothing more than as escape
- for a couple who have difficulty communicating.
- The neighbours are strange but authentic.
- The problem is the drought.
- The book felt like a compact box of chocolates.
- I ate the first few bonbons (part 1) and
- as I continued to remove the layers (part 2) of paper
- only to come deeper (part 3) into an exquisitely crafted novella.
- Chocolate and this story are
- so addictive that one cannot stop reading/eating it.
-
“this book is unputdownable!”
- The last layer was one one the best descriptions I’ve
- ever read of a bush fire….incredible!
- #MustRead
- …absolutely a “coup de coeur”.
#Fiction The Yield
- Author: Tara June Winch (1983)
- Title: The Yield
- Published: 2020
- Genre: novel (42 chapters, pg 352)
- Winner of the Prime Minister’s Literary Award 2020
- Winner of the Miles Franklin Award 2020
- Shortlisted for the 2020 Stella Prize
- List of Challenges 2021
- Monthly plan
Quickscan:
Strong point:
- Each narrative has a distinct writing style…remarkable!
- The ways that the author uses words, sentence structure
- …and sentence arrangement all work together
- to establish mood, images.
Strong point:
- A sentence in chapter 6 struck a nerve.
- Thinking about all the people
- who have died in USA due to Covid-19.
- How the families must now cope with such grief and loss.
- …Ms Winch captures the moment for me:
- “…And just like that the home became just a house…”
- Albert: 40% of the book
- What does your this character want in the story?
- Determined to answer the call of the spirits (ancestors)
- …urging him to remember. (Prosperous Mission)
- – personal narrative about family told in the form of
- …definitions of aboriginal words.
- Rev. Greenleaf: 23% of the book
- What does your this character want in the story?
- Determined to set the record straight
- …as to what happened at the Prosperous Mission.
- Rev. Greenleaf mentions it was
- “not the sentiments that
- divided us…but the words.” (pg 148)
- Central in the book is the…
- importance of the Albert’s dictionary.
- August: 37% of the book
- What does your this character want in the story?
- Determined to honor her grandfather Albert (Poppy)
- …and save ancestral lands from a mining company.
Conclusion:
- To be honest….the book was OK.
- I enjoyed 2 narratives:
- Poppy’s dictionary and Rev. Greenblatt’s letters.
- August?
- Ms Winch writes with great insight of the
- unraveling of August…when exposed to loss.
- She has made some mistakes when her
- life seems to be careening out of control.
- But I felt the “unraveling” was a bit too lengthy.
- August keeps floundering around in their own distress
- …until chapter 33 when she finally decides to stay with her family.
- The last 9 chapters were full of action
- …and August’s new found purpose.
#Non-fiction Fallen
- Title: Fallen
- Author: Lucie Morris-Marr
- Genre: non-fiction
- Published: 2019
- #NonficNov
- #AWW2020 @AustralianWomenWriters
- Trivia: Walkley Award
Introduction:
- Lucie Morris-Marr is an award-winning freelance investigative journalist
- …who has covered the entire Pell case.
- The long-anticipated decision of the jury…what did they decide?
- Did Pell win the appeal?
- Did the verdict trigger a storm of feelings
- …among advocates and survivors?
Conclusion:
- I read Cardinal published by Louise Milligan in 2017.
- Ms Milligan peeled back the layers of George Pell’s life to reveal in detail:
- G. Pell’s youth
- the building of the case against…the cardinal from historical documents
- the cover-up by the Catholic Church concerning alleged child abuse by G. Pell.
- It was an impressive book and won
- ..The Walkley Book of the Year 2017.
Why is Ms Lucie Morris-Maar’s book different?
- Ms Morris-Marr continues the narrative where Cardinal ended
- …the inside story of the Pell trial.
- The “Cathedral Trial” started nearly 14 months after the cardinal
- was first charged for multiple allegations of child sexual abuse.
- A choirboy may have been a small, powerless adolescent soprano
- but his voice will resonate for years to come.
Last thoughts:
- Strong point:
- Ms Morris-Marr revealed her personal struggle (mentally and physically)
- while writing this book.
- Ms Milligan on the other hand… remained outside the narrative of Cardinal.
- Weak point: it is difficult to make a trial procedure exciting
- …only Helen Garner can do that!
- Personally, I enjoyed Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell
- more than I did Fallen.
- Ms Miligan’s book made my whole body go cold….
- Ms Morris-Marr’s book is seeking the extraordinary in the ordinary
- …a trial procedure: questioning witnesses, jury deliberation, mistrial and retrial.
- Weak point: Fallen – Ms Morris-Marr connects the dots of research.
- …but does not give me much emotion about the trial.
- Strong point: Cardinal – Ms Milligan creates with the help of
- research, observation, description and reflection
- an intense book…full blast… drama.!
- So, I don’t think Fallen will win The Walkley Award 2020
- ….my advice read Cardinal ….the winner of The Walkley 2017!
UPDATE: 10.11.2020
- Today an unprecedented report
- about Cardinal McCarrick of the United States
- who was defrocked of his red hat and
- …dismissed from the clerical state for
- sexual abuse and harassment was released
- in 2017 by Pope Francis I.
- Why so important?
- For the first time the Vatican is willing to confront
- the MISTAKE made by a pope and now saint, John Paul II
- in appointing Theodore McCarrick as Archbishop of Washington DC in
- 2000…and a cardinal the following year.
- Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa!
Timeline:
- 29 June 2017 – Victoria Police announced they were charging Pell with a series of sexual assault offences with several counts and several victims.
- 1 May 2018 – Pell was committed to stand trial on several historical sexual offence charges.
- August 2018 – The Cathedral Trial …for the allegations of misconduct in St Patrick’s Cathedral.
- 13 March 2019 – sentencing Pell to serve 6 years in jail Pell was also registered as a sex offender.
- 21 August 2019 – the Court of Appeal issued its ruling, which upheld the conviction.
- January 2020 – special leave to appeal Pell’s conviction should be overturned.
- 7 April 2020 – the High Court unanimously granted leave to appeal, quashing Pell’s convictions.
- 14 April 2020 – it was reported that Pell was under a secret investigation by Victorian police regarding a separate allegation of child sexual abuse committed in Ballarat in the 1970s.
- October 2020 – allegations that €700,000 had been transferred from Vatican accounts to a witness against Pell. (Pay-Off??).
- “Vatican categorically [denied]” interference in the trial of Pell.
- Hmmm, I wonder….
#AWW2020 Wild Sea: a history of the southern ocean
- Author: Joy McCann
- Title: Wild Sea: a history of the southern ocean (258 pg)
- Published: 2018
- Genre: non-fiction
- Rating: C+
- Trivia: 2019 Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA) longlist
- List of Challenges 2020
- Monthly plan
- #AWW2020 @AusWomenWriter
The Southern Ocean:
- Solo sailors call it ‘the South’, as if to emphasize its alien difference.
- The Southern Ocean is a place most of us have never been to
- …and never wish to visit.
- It is a realm of cold grey skies and raging winds
- …that eternally circulate round the bottom of the world.
Antartic Circumpolar Ocean Current:
Ch 1 Ocean – continental drift
- Pangaea –> current pattern of continents –> creation of oceans
- The continents don’t change or move independently
- …but are transported by the shifting tectonic plates.
Ch 2 Winds
Clipper Route…. took advantage of the Roaring Forties and Furious Fifties winds….92 days London — Sydney 1862.
Ch 3 Coast
Located in the southern Indian Ocean off the eastern coast of Africa and just north of Antarctica are the Kerguelen Islands. A French territory, this island group (known as Îles de la Desolation in French) is considered to be one of the most isolated places on Earth. (…2 little white dots!)
Ch 4 Ice
- To sail from the Southern Ocean towards the open waters of the Ross Sea you have to push through the ice a number of times….an ice barrier 100 miles wide.
- As the Southern Ocean is dominated by strong westerly winds it encourages a clockwise route.
- Antartica is only accessible for a few weeks in summer (January-February).
- By March ships risk being trapped in sea ice until the next spring.
- The ice begins to close in trapping you for the winter
- ….an experience no one is likely to survive.
Ch 5 Deep
- The ‘twilight zone is formally known as the dysphotic zone.
- Below 1000 meters lies the midnight zone…complete darkness.
Ch 6 Current
- ANIMATION of Antarctic Bottom Water
- A remarkably detailed animation of the movement of the
- …densest and coldest water in the world around Antarctica.
- The whale is the totem of the Mirning people (Ngargangurie)
Ch 7 Convergence
- The Southern Ocean is no longer simply a remote space devoid of human habitation.
- The Earth is dependent upon the ocean’s heartbeat of seasonal ice
- …its carbon-filled lungs and slow circulation of its deep currents.
- Ocean covers 80 per cent of the Southern Hemisphere.
- Australia sits at an ocean cross-roads.
- Changes in the southern oceans may also alter the
- ….climate processes that control rainfall over Australia.
- We need to understand the influence of the
- …southern oceans on climate and sea levels.
- This book is a good place to start!
- #Bravo Joy McCann
Conclusion:
- Detailing a mysterious realm that’s as vital to our existence as the air we breathe.
- Wild Sea: a history of the southern ocean
- is
- As the title says …it is a history
- …and Joy McCann uses many 19th C references.
- I must applaud the author because in her NOTES
- …she also includes many links to websites
- …(Kindle edition) with a trove of information.
- The only weak point in the book is
- ….I was always tempted to leave the text to often and explore
- the links she provided!
- PS: book contains some beautiful illustrations
- ….perfect viewing with Kindle!
- (…I never knew an albatross could be so big!! …see foto)
- Reading tips:
- Roving Mariners: Australian Aboriginal Whalers and Sealers in the Southern Oceans (2012)
- Slicing the Silence: Voyaging to Antarctica – T. Griffiths (2010)
#AWW 2019 True Stories
- Author: Helen Garner
- Title: True Stories
- Published: 1996
- Genre: essays
- Rating: A+++++
- List of Challenges 2019
- Monthly plan
- #AWW2019 @AusWomenWriter
Conclusion:
- Yet again, another Helen Garner book
- …that I did NOT want to end!
- She is a magnificent wirter and I am
- glued to the page with the vivid details she provides.
- I kept this book under my pillow (IPod audio book)
- to transport me to the ‘reading room’ between
- being awake ….and asleep.
- Some stories I had to listen to twice
- …fell asleep before the ending.
- Who does not wake up at 3 am sometimes for no reason?
- This audio book was the perfect ‘sleeping pill’.
- Helen Garner’s voice is soothing and you drift off quickly.
Last thoughts:
Favorites:
- Selections about her sisters
- Cruising on Russian ocean liner
- Five train trips in the region of Melbourne
- Stories about authors, Patrick White and Elizabeth Jolley
- The Insults of Age
- Marriage
- Death
- Labour Maternity Ward, Penrith
- These are only a few that really impressed me.
- One story I started but could not finish:
- Killing Daneil.
- Garner is known for her true crime books
- …and this story was just too distressing (child abuse)
- So, you are warned….you can just skip it…as I did.
- Helen Garner delves deeply into a crime
- so vivdly it is impossible to read….and I imagine
- just as hard to put on paper.
- It is an extraordinary way of writing.
- She has to take care that
- ..she is not “drawn into the darkness”
- …of the subject she is writing about.
- Her books, for example This House of Grief
- have taken an emotional an
- physical toll on Helen Garner.
#MustMustRead
- A book to read leisurely….
- that stays with you for a lifetime.
#AWW 2019 Drylands
- Author: Thea Astley (1925-2004)
- Title: Drylands
- Published: 1999
- Genre: novel
- Setting: Drylands and nearby town of Red Plains
- Trivia: 2000 winner Miles Franklin Literary Award
- List of Challenges 2019
- Monthly plan
- #AWW2019
- @AusWomenWriter
Introduction:
- Helen Garner once said in an interview: ‘
- Not being able to read after cataract surgery for 10 days
- …..was unbearable”
- I know how she felt.
- Desperate to quench my reading thirst
- ….I’m listening to Drylands by Thea Astley. (7 hrs 17 minutes)
- Perhaps when I can enjoy better vision
- ….I will re-read the paperback version.
- Astely’s prose is worth savoring again.
Conclusion:
- In her flat above Drylands’ newsagency,
- Janet Deakin (voice of the author herself…)
- is writing a book for the world’s last reader.
- She describes a cast of oddball characters
- in the small bush town of Drylands.
- ...desperate housewife’s ‘Walk to Canossa”
- …unnerving bar noise ‘seeping in like conscience’
- …staring at the closed bar ‘the Legless Lizard’ with
- its door bolt ‘hanging like a limp hand’
- But the town is being outmaneuvered by drought
- and begins to empty
- “…pouring itself out like water into sand.”
- As Janet decides to sell her store
- “it wasn’t dust she wanted to shake off her feet
- ….it was memories”
- Last scrawled message on her desk: ‘Get a life…‘
- Her response: ‘Too late.‘
- These are just a few tidbits
- I remembered while listening
- to Thea Astley’s last masterpiece.
- #Bravo
#AWW 2019 Victorian Literary Best YA Novel
- Author Ambelin & Ezekiel Kwaymullina
- Title: Catching Teller Crow
- Genre: ghost story (speculative fiction)
- Reading time: 2 hrs 40 min
- Published: 2019
- List of Challenges 2019
- Monthly plan
- #AWW2019
- @AusWomenWriters
- Trivia: 2019 Winner Aurealis Award Best Young Adults Novel
- Trivia: 2019 Winner Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards
- Best Writing for Young Adults.
Introduction:
- A ghost girl who is staying with her father while he grieves.
- In doing so, she begins to help him with a murder mystery.
Hook:
- The hook is the concept that Officer Teller’s
- assistant while investigating a series of murders
- …is his daughter’s…ghost!
- Another hook is the witness’s statement that
- “This thing didn’t start with the fire…It started at sunset” (pg 24)
- And who is Tansy Webster and her angels? Wings flapping? (pg 94)
- Now readers are turning pages
- ….curious….tension!
Themes
- Loss of a loved one and the stages of mourning or
- …grief are overriding themes.
- Injustice towards the Aboriginal people
- …is also a strong theme.
Parallels: Mike Teller vs Derek Bell
- Both Officer Michael Teller (Beth’s Dad) and
- Officer Derek Bell grew up in small town and
- their fathers were also cops!
- Gerry Bell and Officer Teller sr.
Parallels: Father and daughter –> epiphany moments (pg 132)
- Both Beth (daughter) and Mike Teller (father) have
- epiphany moments:
- Beth realizes she does not belong here (with the living). (pg 130)
- Mike Teller realizes he is blaming himself
- …for an accident he could not prevent.
- He feels he failed his daughter.
- He was holding on to a burden
- …something that was not his to bear. (pg 133)
Contrasts: Father vs son (pg 132)
- Officer Michael teller does not want to be like his
- racist father. He was a police officer who did not do
- enough to protect the Aboriginals.
- Mike did not want to be one of those
- people who didn’t pay attention.
- Officer Teller took any injustice
- ….personally (wife was Aboriginal)
- when Aboriginals are not treated right.
Contrasts: Beth in “Catching Teller Crow” vs Else in “The Endsister”
- Narrator Beth is just about the same age as Else in The Endsister
- One is dead….one is still alive
- …one is cheerful….and one is confused, isolated.
- Beth shows no signs of ‘the teenage brain’ as did Else.
- It seems once you’ve died…all your problems disappear!
- ….mood swings, erratic behavior, ill-tempered….
- I will try to find a moment in Beth’s
- narration that shows her in a bad mood!
- Yes, she does cry….she had to make an important decision
- …about the colours.
Strong point: Beth’s ghost is Detective M. Teller’s assistant
- This is a great plot device.
- Beth can linger in places once
- her father has left to eavesdrop
- on suspects conversations and actions!
- #Clever
Strong point: Role reversal literary device (pg 11)
- “He and I were the reverse of each other:
- I couldn’t remember my death;
- Dad couldn’t remember my life…” (pg 11)
- Another role reversal….
- Dad was looking after Beth when his wife died.
- That had kept Dad going.
- Now Beth was looking after her Dad
- ….to keep him going. (pg 13)
Strong point: Writing style varies… for certain effects!
- Chapters about CATCHING...
- Isobel speaks in staccato sentences.
- Staccato sentences are short and often emphatic to
- focus the reader or listener on content.
- This technique borrowed from poetry intensifies
- Catching’s aboriginal storytelling…
- with base emotions….earthy!
- This conveys certain kinds of emotions in particular,
- namely fear, anxiety, anger, confusion and stress.
Strong point: Izzy’s storytelling
- These chapters are fun to read.
- You can lose yourself in them…
- let you imagination soar.
- I’m sure YA readers can find something
- in these tellings to hold on to.
- I enjoyed these next few lines:
- — Courage eats fear.
- — Joy eats sadness.
- — Choose the opposite of grey.
#NoWeakPoints !!
Conclusion:
- This was absolutely a stunning novel!
- I’ve never been so entertained reading YA fiction.
- I think the storytelling (Aboriginal influences) was spot on.
- But the most important part of the book for me
- ….was how people dealt with grief. (Officer Mike Teller)
- They say time is a healer.
- But grief is always in the hollow of your heart.
- It’s just waiting for something to shake it out.
- Beth was there to shake it out of her Dad.
- Because loss never really leaves you.
- Loss alters you.
- #MustRead….worthy winner
- Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards
- Best Young Adults Novel 2019
Brett Whiteley Australian Artist
- Author: Ashleigh Wilson
- Title: Brett Whiteley: Art, Life and the Other Thing
- Genre: biography
- Reading time: 13 hours 25 min (audio book)
- Published: 2017
- List of Challenges 2019
- Monthly plan
- Trivia: #ABIA 2017 short list (Australian Book Industry Awards)
- @ashleighbwilson
- @artgalleryofNSW
- @ABIAs_Awards
Introduction:
- Of all the Australian painters who emerged during the mid
- 20th century Brett Whiteley was the (Wikipedia link for more info)
- most mercurial, the most ambitious
- to make an impact on the world at large.
- I had NEVER heard of Brett Whiteley
- …and realize it was my loss.
- Delighted to discover this brilliant
- biography by Ashleigh Wilson.
Brett Whitely:
- Born in Australia, Whiteley moved to Europe in 1960 determined to make an impression.
- Before long he was the youngest artist to have work acquired by the Tate.
- With his wife, Wendy (1941), and daughter, Arkie (1964-2001), Whiteley
- then immersed himself in bohemian New York.
- Despite many affairs…Brett proclaims that
- he and his wife Wendy “We’re lifers.”
- His art depended on his relationship to Wendy.
- It had been that way since his early abstractions.
Ashleigh Wilson:
- He has been a journalist for almost two decades.
- He received a Walkley Award for his reports on unethical behavior
- in the Aboriginal art industry, a series that led to a Senate inquiry.
- He has been The Australian’s Arts Editor since 2011.
- Wilson follows the chronological order of Whiteley’s paintings:
- Early works
Abstraction
Bathroom series (sensual sketches of Wendy)
John Christie (serial killer) & London Zoo
Lavender Bay, Australia
Portraits
Birds
Landscapes
The studio & late works
Conclusion:
- Brett Whiteley (1939 – 1992)
- died from a drug overdose.
- He was an heroin addict.
- The deeper problem was that his
- dependency was entwined with his art.
- Like many addicts he found it hard to imagine life sober.
- Heroin provided stability...
- …and to live without it was like to peering into darkness.
- It was one thing to be clean for his health
- …but what would it mean for his art?
- He was found dead at the Beach Motel, Thirroul Australia.
- This expansive biography
- Wilson gave the essential details about the death. (ch 22)
- Chapters 1-21 concentrate on the
- …richness and variety of Whiteley’s work
- …and the many exhibitions he held and prizes won.
- #ExcellentBiography
- Worth your reading time!
Strong point:
- Ashleigh Wilson Wilson takes the reader through a
- virtual art gallery describing and assortiment
- …of Brett Whiteley’s paintings.
Portrait of Patrick White (Brett Whiteley)
- Photo in frame….Emmanuel George “Manoly” Lascaris
- Look at White’s eyes and
- ….Centennial Park in the backround.
Portrait Vincent van Gogh
- On the table….a candle, a pipe, a letter to Theo and a razor.
- Two arrows:
- towards the right = good, light and sanity
- towards the left = evil, darkness and madness
Portrait of Gauguin
- Gaughin on the eve of his attempted suicide
- We see ‘The Tree of Knowledge, photograph of Van Gogh and a woman’s body.
- Brett had extended the right side to an ear shape with a bottle with a white substance
- labled ‘Arsenic’.
Portrait Wendy (wife)
- Brett Whiteley was a master draughtsman.
- This sketch reveals his command of line.
- The way Brett could capture the essence of his
- subject with only a few simple sweeps.
Henri’s Armchair
- This is Brett Whiteley’s debt to Matisse.
- He painted the interior of Lavender Bay where the
- …water can be seen through the window
- …frame at the end of the room beyond the arches.
- It is a domestic workmanlike scene.
- Two legs on the couch and used matches
- …are scattered on the coffee table.
- There is a vase and notebook on which is written the title of the painting.
- As in the works of his historical model, Matisse,
- ….there are notes of domesticity:
- bed, open fire, and several works of Whiteley in the room
- …a sculpture, a nude drawing and an erotic drawing.
- There is a deep red brown color in the house
- …but the blue is all around.
My Armchair
- This was the most expensive painting in Brett’s
- September 1976 Australian Galleries exhibition.
- This painting’s was priced for 10.000 dollars.
- This was a companion piece for “Henri’s Armchair”.
- The blue soaked canvas inside Brett’s studio including
- pictures (B/W = ‘Inside an Avocado Tree’), sculptures
- …a view out to the Sydney Harbour and the chair in which
- …he sat to reflect on the art around him.
Another way of Looking….Vincent
- Whiteley pays homage to Vincent van Gogh and
- …the profound influence this Dutch post-impressionist
- painter had on Whiteley throughout his career.
Birds:
- I had to include some of the most beautiful sketches/paintings of birds!
- Whiteley first came to notice the captivating beauty of birds
- …in July 1969 during a blissful five-month stay in a small cottage
- in the village of Navutulevu, about eighty kilometres from Suva in Fiji.
- The couple, with their five year-old daughter Arkie,
- lived simply and happily and enjoyed their
- island paradise after the turmoil and bustle of New York.
- Wendy Whiteley summed the period up well: ‘We really did live in Paradise there.”
Kookaburra
Cormorant
The sunrise, Japanese: Good morning
Bookcover: (self-portrait)
#AWW 2019 Nine Lives: Women Writers
- Author: Susan Sheridan
- Title: Nine Lives: Postwar Women Writers Making Their Mark
- Published: 2011
- Genre: non-fiction
- Rating: A
- Trivia: This book has been sitting on my TBR for two years!
- List of Challenges 2019
- Monthly plan
- #AWW2019 @AusWomenWriters
NOTE:
- Trying to get back to books with
- …’one’ very good eye after cataract surgery
- …the the other eye ready for correction in 2 weeks.
- #NeedCoffee
Introduction:
- Why did I wait so long to read this wonderful book?
- I think the bland bookcover did not catch my eye.
- Ms Sheridan should have used thumbnail photos of te
- …talented Australian writers she was about to introduce to this reader!
- This books contains
- nine condensed, compact biographies of Australian Women writers
- Sheridan highlights a generation of women writers
- overlooked in the Australian contemporary literary scene.
- These women writers who were born between 1915-1930:
- Judith Wright
Thea Astley
Dorothy Hewett
Rosemary Dobson
Dorothy Aucherlonie Green
Gwen Harwood
Jessica Anderson
Amy Witting
Elizabeth Jolley
- All had children...
- J. Wright and D. Green were the sole support of their families.
- The nine women were versatile writers
- poet, playwright, novelist, short stories,
- non-fiction (autobiography), literary critic and editor.
- T. Astely won Miles Franklin Award 4x, Jessica Anderson 2x and E. Jolley 1x.
- All shared a sense of urgency…
- their vocation, their ‘need’ to be a writer
- that would not let them rest.
- Judith Wright – was an important name in the emerging postwar literature.
- She was one of the few Australian poets to achieve international recognition.
- Ms Wright is the author of of several collections of poetry,
- including The Moving Image, Woman to
- Man, The Gateway, The Two Fires, Birds,
- The Other Half, Magpies, Shadow, Hunting Snake, among others.
- Her work is noted for a keen focus on the Australian environment.
- Thea Astley – I am a huge fan of this writer.
- I did learn more tidbits of info about this woman.
- Critics were not always kind to Thea Astely.
- The ending of The Slow Natives
- …was “…too sentimental and melodramatic.
- I didn’t think so!
- Even Patrick White was harsh.
- Criticism should be like rain
- …gentle enough to nourish growth without
- …destroying the roots.
- White’s fault finding ended their friendship.
- Thea Astley won Miles Franklin Award four times!
- Dorothy Hewett – After reading Ms Hewett’s short biography in this book the
- only thing that suited this woman is the song: Born to be Wild !!
- Once I read about the tumultuous life of Dorothy Hewett I knew
- I had to read her books.
- I ordered Baker’s Dozen ( 13 short stories)…
- …cannot wait to read it!
- Rosemary Dobson – She was fully established as a poet by the age of 35.
- She published 14 collections of poems.
- The Judges of the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards in 1996
- described her significance as follows:
- “The level of originality and strength of
- Rosemary’s poetry cannot be underestimated…”
- Dorothy Auchterlonie Green – She saw herself primarily as a scholar.
- Ms Green felt overworked and
- under-recognized, trapped by circumstances of her life and unsure of her capacity as a poet.
- She won widespread admiration for her poetry, literary scholarship
- her reviews and social criticism and inspirational teaching.
- Gwen Harwood – She was sick of the way poetry
- editors (Meanjin) treated her…no accepting her work.
- Ms Harwoon created several nom de plume: Geyer , Lehmann and Stone.
- Geyer and Lehmann were regularly invited to meet editors for lunch next time they were in Sydney
- or Melbourne. Geyer was evern invited to read at the Adelaide Festival.
- ….he respectively declined.
- Awards
- Jessica Anderson – She was in a male-dominated and
- Anglocentric publishing world.
- How did she survive?
- She cultivated the qualities of character and
- strategies of survival necessary to
- sustain enough belief in herself to go on writing.
- She won the Miles Franklin Award twice…1978 and 1980.
- Amy Witting – For many years Amy Witting was invisible in the literary world.
- She won the Patrick White Award 1993
- for writers who have not received adequate recognition.
- I am waiting for her book of short stories to arrive…Marriages
- …I’m sure Amy Witting will have much to tell about this institution!
- Elizabeth Jolley – In a single year she received 39 rejection slips
- …yet she persisted.
- She won Miles Franklin Award 1986.
#AUSReadingMonth 2019 Clementine Ford
- Author: Clementine Ford
- Title: Boys Will Be Boys
- Published: 2018
- Genre: non-fiction
- Rating: A+++
- Trivia: 2019 Australian Book Industry Awards shortlist
- Trivia: 2019 Australian Indie Book Awards longlist
- List of Challenges 2019
- Monthly plan
- #AWW2019 @AusWomenWriters
- #AUSReadingMonth @BronasBooks
- #NonFicNov
Introduction:
- I read Sue’s excellent post @ Whispering Gums
- about a disussion that took place during the
- Sydney Writers Festival 2019.
- Boys to Men: The masculinity crisis
- Panel: Clementine Ford, Adam Liaw, Janice Petersen (Convenor).
- I knew I had to read Ford’s book.
- Please take the time to read Sue’s summation of the
- panel discussion....it will enrich your reading of
- Boys Will Be Boys as only the author herself can do!
Ms Ford highlights what is meant as…..
- Fog of toxic masculinity
- ….no inside voice,
- preferring to roar wherever they go
- …boisterous, barrelling through the world
- …with an admiral lack of restraint.
- They (men) have each other’s back
- …close ranks against anyone else who threatens them.
- Boys are currently conditioned to be
- …entitled, domineering, sexist, privileged.
Title:
- Boys Will Be Boys
- Ms Ford uses this common sentiment that is bandied about
- without thought and expose just how damaging it is for everyone
- ….including boys.
Notes:
- Gender INEQUALITY is first learned at home
- Filtered down through pop culture
- A launching pad into even more damaging practices later.
Ch 1 – It’s a Boy –> gender stereotyping
- People frequently assign sex based on
- arbitrary indicators (color of clothes (pink/blue),
- messages on t-shirts (“brave & strong” –“happy & peace”),
- toys (dolls vs active toys, trucks, cars etc).
Ch 2 – A Woman’s Place –> domestic dynamics
- Ponder this:
- “…women who choose to live romantically with men are acting against
- their own economic interest.”
- Ch 3 – Girls on Film –> female roles in films
- Ch 4 – Not All Men –> “..stop making me (men) feel bad.”
- Ch 5 – We Know What Boys Are Like –> teach men healthy intimacy
- Ch 6 – Mass Debate –> Alt-right phenomenon Milos Yiannopoulos
- Ch 7 – The Manosphere –> most bone-chilling chapter
- Ch 8 – Your Honor, I Object –> the heart of the MRA agenda (Men’s Rights Activists)
- Ch 9 – The King of the Hill –> power and privileged white men
- Ch 10 – It’s Just a Joke –> Why do comics make rape a side-splitting topic?
- Ch 11 – Asking For It –> Jane Doe vs players Ulster rugby team… but she consented!
- Ch 12 – Witch Hunt –> #MeToo…list of shame!
- Epilogue – ….a letter to her toddler son….it is a thing of beauty and love to read!
Conclusion:
- This book may seem like small comfort
- finally confronting the problem of toxic masculinity
- that we see playing out in the
- workplace, home, schools, governments.
- But in a time like this, when it’s hard to understand how
- our culture became so “toxic” with
- male dominance, power, privilege, misogyny
- …reading is probably the best possible option to try to
- think about how society has gotten where we are now
- …and how we can and should change it.
- #EyeOpener
- #MustRead
- The book left me drained
- ….so much to process.
Last Thoughts:
- I’ve tried to read more poetry this year
- …and once in a while a ‘flash’ of recognition
- goes off in my mind.
- NSW Literary Award 2019 for poetry was won by
- Kate Lilley, daughter of the famous poet, feminist Dorothy Hewett.
- Her book of poems TILT (autobiographical and
- some confessional poems) will touch your heart.
- Unknown to me was Kate Lilley’s back round and her immersion
- in the Bohemian life of her parents in 1970s.
- She was abused by friends of parents
- ….male entitled predators.
- Lilley has suffered for years trying to put her life together
- after living with a mother whose motto was:
- …guess what?
- ”Boys Will Be Boys”.