Last post

I'm saying goodbye and thank you for reading and commenting. If you don't already have these links, here are some super places to spend your lunchtimes (there are too many to include here so I will miss some excellent ones, for which I apologise; and I know that there are exciting new sites being set up all the time so feel free to add them):
The New York Times Book Review
The New Yorker's Book Bench
Book Covers
Harper's Wyatt Mason's Sentences
The Complete Review's Literary Saloon
New York magazine Books
Media Bistro's Galleycat
Guardian Book News
Tiggy Johnson's blog: Words in Progress
Time Out New York Books
The New York Times Paper Cuts blog
ABC Radio National's Book Show
Angela Meyer's blog: Literary Minded
Genevieve Tucker's blog: Reeling and writhing
Mark Sarvas's blog: The Elegant Variation

19-September-08

The thing I remember most about 'The Weasel, Twelve Monkeys, and the Shrub', DFW's essay on John McCain (Rolling Stone, 2000), is the way in which Wallace forced me to get inside McCain's head, especially by making me think about what it was like when his plane was shot down and he was so badly injured in Vietnam. 'Try for a moment to feel this.' And I did. DFW was a writer of incredible compassion and empathy and I can learn a lot from him. He will be missed. Personal recollections of him here.

18-September-08

Guardian Books blog: Foster Wallace is a huge loss, by Robert Potts

17-September-08

Baltimore Sun: The Life of Kings – The genius of David Foster Wallace and the ugliness of depression, with some good links to his articles

The Believer interview: Dave Eggers corresponds with DFW

'The really important kind of freedom involves attention and awareness and discipline, and being able truly to care about other people and to sacrifice for them over and over in myriad petty, unsexy ways every day.'
- Read the whole of DFW's commencement speech at Kenyon University, 2005

16-September-08

DFW: James Ley writes an obituary in the Australian

15-September-08

David Foster Wallace on Charlie Rose, which I may have linked to before

14-September-08

Black news. David Foster Wallace RIP

12-September-08

1. Guardian blog: Knut Hamsun - the Nazi novelist you should read
2. Edward Champion is demanding curry accountability for John Sutherland

11-September-08

1. Authonomy looks interesting, thanks to JNW
2. I love Robert Heinlein's Fan Mail Solution, thanks to The Book Bench

10-September-08

1. I had a bet with a friend that the Steve Toltz would be shortlisted for the Booker – if only I'd put money on it
2. I would love to have been in the creative meeting that came up with my current favourite ad

9-September-08

1. Fred Ramey's Unbridled Books blog
2. NY Times: Juliana Hatfield's memoir, When I Grow Up, is out: Juliana Hatfield Feels Her Way Beyond the Spotlight
3. Helen De Witt's The Last Samurai was such a brilliant read that I am automatically looking forward to her next one, which is co-authored, and written in Mellel – here's Jenny Turner's look at Your Name Here (as yet unpublished) in the LRB

5-September-08

David Rakoff made me one of his special Duct Tape Wallets, multi-coloured. Made only from duct tape, it is an actual, useable, wallet – but I haven't had the heart to start ruining it yet, it's a work of art. Seeing David perform was an absolute highlight of the festival for me.

3-September-08

1. Robert Drewe talked about the joys of growing up with comic books. SMH: Batman and Philosophy: The Dark Knight of the Soul
2. LRB: Michael Wood on The Dark Knight At the Movies: 'Heath Ledger, who died of a drug overdose at the beginning of this year, was until now best known as the stolid hero of a remake of The Four Feathers (2002) and as the rather more complex figure at the centre of Brokeback Mountain (2005). Nothing we have seen of his career prepares us for what he can do as the Joker. By turns authoritative and wheedling, often speaking casually, with long pauses, as if talking to himself, always acting, aware of circumstance and timing, and very rarely manic (unlike the always manic Nicholson, for example), he creates a character who is attractive and horrifying in exactly the right proportions: attractive because horrifying, perhaps.'
3. The Triple R FM Radiothon is over for the year but you can still subscribe and be in the running for the huge Readings voucher, and more...
4. The New Yorker: 'The Dinner Party' by Joshua Ferris: ' "I can predict everything that will happen from the moment they arrive to the little kiss on the cheek goodbye and I just can't goddamn do it."
"You could stick your tongue down her throat instead of the kiss goodbye," she offered casually as she continued to dice. She was game, his wife. She spoke to him in bad taste freely and he considered it one of her best qualities.'
5. The new Coen Brothers film: Burn After Reading – I never get sick of Frances McDormand

2- September-08

1. Anya Ulinich was lovely and funny
4. The new Meanjin is sensational (and a new website is on its way, but checkout the cover here)
5. Dear Henry: a little bit of mentoring on how the world works by Catherine Deveny: raises some excellent points about free versus paid work
6. The new Overland: packed full of goodies
7. Anita Heiss reminded me of the existence of Trixie Beldens
8. Which, in turn, reminded me of Sweet Valley Highs, with a world about as far from my high school in England as you could get.

28-August-08

1. New York Magazine: Was Hunter Thompson's Gonzo Image His Downfall?
2. Today at the festival I'm chairing at 1pm: Chekhov's Children about the short story, with Hannah Tinti, Emily Perkins and John Clanchy
3. Also at the festival to look out for today: The Common Pursuit at 7pm, with Philip Gourevitch, Julianne Schultz, Sally Warhaft and Michael Burleigh.
4. And: Historical Novels at 4pm, with Fiona Capp, Antoni Jach, Matt Condon and Simon Cleary.
5. Not to mention: The Young Americans at 4.15, with Hannah Tinti, Mark Sarvas, Anya Ulinich and Delia Falconer.
6. The book and film that have been spiralling through my subconscious so much these past few days: Kenneth Cook's Wake in Fright.

26-August-08

Click Lit: a computer program to help write a novel, thanks to DY

25-August-08

Augusten Burroughs is a real storyteller and has what's known as 'the gift of the gab'. Seeing him at both the First Tuesday Book Club screening, and then his keynote address on Friday, made me want to read his books – and his brother's.

Davids Rakoff and Sedaris with Don Watson on Friday were a real highlight – I had no idea Watson was such a wit.

So many things to go to...

22-August-08

MWF today: don't miss The Whole Shebang. Sophie Cunningham is hosting Toni Jordan, Mandy Brett, Bridie Riordan, Susan Johnson, Aviva Tuffield, David Astle, Nikki Christer, Jeremy Fisher, Joel Becker, Jenny Darling - and more... It's an intensive one-day workshop for emerging writers.

20-August second go & 21-August-08

1. Brascoe Publishing
3. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society is a great book despite its title
5. New York Review of Books: EM Forster, Middle Manager by Zadie Smith
6. Andrew O'Hagan at The Observer
7. Idlewind Press in the Nicholas Building



Thanks to Mister Nora: Melbourne hooks the books
Big whoops for all the writers and editors and publishers and readers who will benefit from this decision, and there's plenty of opportunity to celebrate over the next fortnight. I  guess the next question is, how will it really affect us all?

20-August-08

David Rakoff is coming to this year's Melbourne Writers' Festival. Look out for him at:
Beyond Your Navel masterclass on Saturday
Don't Get Too Comfortable with Max Barry on Sunday afternoon, and
What's Funny About America? with David Sedaris and Don Watson on Saturday afternoon

19-August-08

1. Jacinta Halloran's excellent Dissection is being launched by Helen Garner tonight at the Avenue Bookshop
2. World Without Books: Indigenous Literacy Day is September 3, thanks to LP

18-August-08

1. New York Times: He Blurbed, She Blurbed by Rachel Donadio
4. Australia is nowhere on this list of Top 10 literary destinations, which would have to surprise those who participated in Melbourne's bid for Unesco City of Lit. Zoe and I were interviewed about it for Stateline recently. Fingers crossed.

13-August-08

1. A few MWF picks:
Genre Jumper with Kate Atkinson and Catherine Cole – 30 August, 10am
Secrets and Lies with Hannah Tinti, Joan London and David Francis – 30 August, 4pm
Writing Love with Mark Sarvas, Kathryn Lomer and Andrew Riemer – 30 August, 10.15am (for those who can be in two places at the same time)
2. Lit Mob, thanks to KF
3. The Atlantic: My Life in Sales by Ann Patchett
4. And The Perils of Literary Success by Curtis Sittenfeld
5. The Age, from 2003: The Great Escape Artist, Andrew O'Hagan

11- August-08

1. My review of Susan Johnson's Life in Seven Mistakes for the Sydney Morning Herald
2. With John Marsden's release of Hamlet next month, he may get a giggle out of this: Hamlet (Facebook News Feed Edition) by Sarah Schmelling at McSweeney's
3. One of the books that was shortlisted for the Vic Prem's Unpublished Ms Award in 2006 is now on the Ned Kelly's shortlist: Chris Womersley's The Low Road which I reviewed for The Age

Friday afternoon

The Vic Prem's shortlists have been announced. I had the pleasure of joining Kevin Brophy and Liam Davison in judging the Unpublished Manuscript Award, so beneath the bed are boxes and boxes of bound manuscripts (what to do with them?), some of them with scrawlies all over them.

Our shortlist is strong, and includes one ms, by Daniel Ducrou, that's already been shortlisted for the Vogel:

Daniel Ducrou, Conditions of Return
Mandy Maroney, Going Finish
Robert Power, In Search of the Blue Tiger

7-August-08

1. The New York Times: Mr Darcy Comes Courting by Maureen Dowd
3. Michael Chabon talking about The Yiddish Policemen's Union on The Book Show
4. New Yorker: Personal History – All the Answers by Charles Van Doren, will make you want to hire out Quiz Show all over again
6. Awesome Animal Farm cover
8. It is pretty astonishing that of the five shortlisted novels for the Age book of the year, two are published by Giramondo. I haven't read the Juchau or the Winton, but the Knox, the Coetzee and the London are all strong in such different ways.
9. Who'd have thought that A Fraction of the Whole would have been shortlisted – alongside another strong debut in The Low Road, which is more obviously a crime novel – for the Ned Kelly awards?
11. This clip from Synecdoche, New York (2008) lets me know it's a film that will make me nervous the way Charlie Kaufman can, which I'm already looking forward to.
13. I'm looking forward to the new Christos Tsiolkas, The Slap, due this November. It sounds quite different to his previous work: "In this remarkable novel, Tsiolkas turns his unflinching and all-seeing eye onto that which connects us all: the modern family and domestic life in the twenty-first century."
14. The Prime Minister's Literary Awards shortlisted authors are Mireille Juchau, Dorothy Porter, Malcolm Knox, Gail Jones, David Malouf, Tom Keneally and Steven Conte. Better start reading...

5-August-08

The Observer: review of James Bradley's The Resurrectionist, showing the UK cover

4-August-08

1. Guardian blog: The great chick-lit cover up
2. The Prime Minister's Literary Awards keep sending out press releases designed to make us excited about the soon-to-be-announced shortlist but with too long a lead-time between press release and announcement, it just frustrates in that kind of 'i've got a secret and i'm not going to tell you' way. Still, I'm looking forward to the announcement this Wednesday: the awards hold such massive promise.
3. Writer-editor fighting over at The Times, leaked to The Guardian: Giles Coren gets heated about the removal of "a", and the sub-editors' reply, thanks to MMW.

1-August-08

Salute: Jo Case

Jo is books editor of the Big Issue, editor of the Readings magazine, the book reviewer at Triple R FM, and a freelance reviewer.

A book Jo has strongly recommended that I still haven't read: Darkmans by Nicola Barker

What amazes me about Jo: her enthusiasm for books. She's a real book lover. She reads numerous books a month but manages to avoid becoming cynical and tired of them. She has energy and passion, not just for books but also for their authors, and enough enthusiasm left over to engage with readers, critics and writers; and she is interested in developing new reviewing talent. Her book passion is infectious.

Sample of her work: review of Emily Perkins' Novel About My WifeThe Age

31-July-08

Along with Aravind Adiga and Michelle de Kretser, Steve Toltz has been longlisted for the Man Booker. The Guardian blogs weigh in: Shock of the new and Let the arguments commence.
It's a pity Toltz isn't coming to next month's Melbourne Writers' Festival. I'll look at more events soon but for now, here are some of the events I'm involved in at this year's festival:
Chekhov's Children – with Hannah Tinti, Emily Perkins and John Clanchy, and me as chair. As you may have surmised from the title, we'll be talking about short stories, in the BMW Edge on the 28th of August from 1pm.
A Reading Life – with Robert Drewe and Anita Heiss, and me as chair. Rob and Anita will be talking about what books created them, what they love to read, in the BMW Edge on the 31st of August at 2.30pm.
Saturday Night Readings: Creative Writers. I'm MC'ing this celebration of creative writing classes at RMIT. Featuring Cathy Cole, Alexis Wright, Jeff Sparrow, Ellie Nielsen and Kevin Rabalais. 5.45pm on the 23rd of August in ACMI 2.

30-July-08

1. The Age: my review of Sofie Laguna's One Foot Wrong
2. The Small Press Underground Networking Community – SPUNC – has received Ozco and CAL funding and is about to hire staff. One of the many events worth watching out for at this year's Melbourne Writers' Festival is the Spunc Cabaret, on the 23rd of August at 6pm in the Festival Club for free. Including, amongst other things, Sleepers Almanac readings by Jo Bowers and Paul Mitchell.
3. The Internet Writing Journal: Alan Alda on Learning to write with a sledgehammer
4. Bret Easton Ellis referred to The Corrections as 'the novel of my generation'. One of my favourites of his is his first: Less Than Zero. I think he's still limbering up, and proving himself important at every turn. Apparently Jay McInerney wasn't too happy with his main character, Alison Poole, from Story of My Life, appearing in Glamorama. I'm a fan of the mixing, the playing, the meshing – other people's characters walking in and out of the wrong novels. For Ellis fans, there is a 22-year-old audio interview here.

29-July-08

1. Writer Mattheu Roth
2. Bret Easton Ellis's Lunar Park

Teenspeak help

Does anyone know exactly what "d'urg" means and how it's pronounced?
As in:
'Hi,' I say.
'Hey.' D'urg.

28-July-08

1. The Guardian: Nick Laird on merging science with poetry

24-July-08

1. Independent publishers Wilkins Farago are bringing out a Janet Frame in September
2. New York Times: I'm YA, and I'm OK
3. The folks at the Byron Bay Writers' Festival are gearing up now, and their programme looks impressive
4. Mark Sarvas is coming to this year's Melbourne Writers' Festival (disclaimer: I am on the programming committee). He blogs at The Elegant Variation. I am currently reading an author's backlist for a review so it's no surprise that I find this blog about book reviewing interesting.
5. If you pray, pray for poet Geoff Goodfellow's speedy recovery. If you have other methods, use them. Whatever it takes. This is Grace Goodfellow at his benefit gig. She is a writer and a singer, and she is very talented.
6. Here is the Australian's Double Take on both Grace and Geoff.

23-July-08

The Dark Knight is brilliant. Has anyone seen or written the definitive personal essay on Heath Ledger?

22-July-08

1. Burned by Love site to promote Andrew Davidson's The Gargoyle
2. To celebrate their final issue, the crew at Is Not magazine are throwing a party
3. London Review of Books: Benjamin Kunkel on Joseph O'Neill's Netherland – Men in White
5. At Barnes & Noble, Jonathan Franzen answers questions, including one about Christina Stead. He also talks about Kathryn Chetkovich's Granta essay on envy. Starts here.
6. Transit Lounge independent publishers, continually producing great books
8. All three of the Winter Sleepers Salons are podcasted now here: Steven Carroll, Sophie Cunningham and Ramona Koval

21-July-08

1. Tiggy Johnson, of Page Seventeen, has a blog: Words in Progress
3. Found in the wild: one copy of The Sleepers Almanac No.4 unread in the short stories section of Carlton Secondhand Books on Swanston Street near Melbourne Uni, for $8. Coming as it does with its bookmark, chances are it's a review copy freebie which we don't send out many of so I wonder whose it could have been.

17-July-08

1. Song for Night by Chris Abani. It's pre-Aus-pub-release so I won't excerpt it here. Suffice to say, you might cry. For the time-poor, good news: it's a novella.
2. Tonight: Nam Le in conversation with Cate Kennedy for Asialink

16-July-08

1. Nick Hornby blogs
2. Paul LaFarge's 'Bleak College Days', over at Five Chapters
3. My review of Paddy O'Reilly's The End of the World at the New Haven Review
4. Shaun Tan's The Red Tree by the Australian Chamber Orchestra
5. The New ClassicsEntertainment Weekly's 100 best reads from 1983 to 2008
6. Curious Expeditions: A Compendium of Beautiful Libraries
7. The Telegraph: Nick Harkaway on being both a writer and John Le Carre's son
10. Susan Hill weighs in on the Frank O'Connor missing shortlist debate – Guardian Books: Prize fight
11. Talking Squid: on parallel imports
12. Gwen Grant: author of Private – Keep Out, Knock and Wait, and One Way Only. My copies are in tatters.
13. The Overland debate at the SWF: Peter Craven v Ken Gelder – podcasted here
14. Spend some time at Improv Everywhere. Brilliant. The suicide stunt is hilarious. The Ben Folds one, and the best game... excellent practical jokes.

14-July-08

Happy Bastille Day
2. Arts & Letters Daily fun, thanks to Literary Minded
4. New magazine: Harvest
5. Harriet the Spy by Louise Fitzhugh: 'Writers don't care what they eat. They just care what you think of them.'
6. A brilliant, thoroughly engrossing yarn: The Good Thief by Hannah Tinti

11-July-08

1. A day in the life of a book publicist
2. Guardian blog: Malcolm Knox – Bad people are best (at least in books)
3. Book reviews over at The Book Book blog, the latest review being Ayelet Waldman's Love and Other Impossible Pursuits
4. One Story magazine
5. The Guardian: Adam Thirlwell, John Burnside and Colin Thubron all received Society of Authors prizes
6. The Times: Tim Winton's Breath (JA aka Huge Winton Fan, have you read it yet?) is amongst the 100 best holiday reads, scroll down to see Emily Perkins and Steve Toltz, both great reads, and - weirdly - Two Caravans, not to mention a book called Phallic Frenzy
8. Mark Sarvas over at the Elegant Variation has some interesting things to say about the LA Times Book Review pages
9. The New York Times: Ciao, Papa by Lisa Monroy

10-July-08

1. Tonight, launch of Dennis McIntosh's Beaten by a Blow at Readings, Carlton, 6.30
2. Author interviews, book reviews: Angela Meyer's Literary Minded blog
3. A Public Space literary magazine

9-July-08

1. Having read this and this within cooeee of each other, I'm feeling slightly unsettled
2. Wyatt Mason addresses this, asking 'how does one best write about horrible things?'
3. The Guardian: Jhumpa Lahiri wins the Frank O'Connor award, no shortlist given
4. And Nicholas Lezard has something to say about it
7. Maud Newton on Iris Murdoch's The Black Prince. I have adored Iris Murdoch since The Sea, The Sea.
8. James Wood in the New Yorker on Rivka Galchen's Atmospheric Disturbances
10. On Tuesday the 22nd of July, you can catch Russell McGilton's 'Bombay to Beijing by Bicycle' before it goes to the Edinburgh festival. It's cheap at just $12 and it's on here at Glitch in North Fitzroy. Bookings 9486 6965.
11. I've just discovered I've lost, mislaid or lent out Joan Aiken's Black Hearts in Battersea and I can no longer put my hands on it with ease. I'm not excited about that.
12. The New Yorker: 'Animal Tales' by Simon Rich

8-July-08

1. Tonight: Bare Knuckle (Smackdown) playwright wrestling, 7.30, Courthouse Hotel, North Melbourne. Put on by Melbourne Dramatists, of which Ross Mueller is one of the founding members.
3. And the Guardian writers' rooms – the order of Andrew O'Hagan, the sheer redness of AL Kennedy!
5. I'm looking forward to Andrew Davidson's The Gargoyle
6. And Joseph O'Neill's Netherland

7-June-08

1. Open Letters monthly arts and literature review
2. The Age: 'Driven by distraction' by Damon Young – finally some good news for/from writer-parents

4-July-08

1. Wired music-book news: Juliana Hatfield is releasing a memoir, When I Grow Up, in September, and Jonathan Lethem is in a band – I'm Not Jim.
3. 'Compulsory Reading' cartoon by Alison Bechdel at Dykes to watch out for
4. 'For an unoriginal literature' by the Poetic Research Bureau
5. 'The Lady Vanishes' – review of Rivka Galchen's Atmospheric Disturbances at Bookforum: 'The uncanny reigns supreme here'. It passes the cover and title test, and it sounds interesting as well.
6. Radar: Cruel Intentions. Should Juicy Campus be banned?
7. The New York Review of Books: 'Blood Relations' by Claire Messud
8. You're invited to preview the 2008 Melbourne Writers' Festival program, July 16 @ 12.30
9. Washington Post'Turning the Page on the Disposable Book' makes a couple of good points: 'Publishers will be forced to invest in works of quality to maintain their niche. These books will be the one product that only they can deliver better than anyone else. Those same corporate executives who dictate annual returns may begin to proclaim the virtues of research and development, the great engine of growth for business. For publishers, R&D means giving authors the resources to write the best books - works that will last, because the lasting books will, ultimately, be where the money is.' Authors do need time to produce works; it's an endless equation, though, made tricky because publishers need to make money to pay for that R&D phase.
10. Washington PostBookslut's Jessa Crispin's reply
11. Get yourself to Bernard Caleo's Miracleman
12. Last but not least: two out of the three Winter Sleepers Salons (the Sophie Cunningham one coming soon) are podcasted here for anyone who couldn't make it to hear and see Steven Carroll and Ramona Koval.

2-July-08

Scribe: Small Publishers of the Year winners

30-June-08

1. Penguin design award: 2008 shortlist and winner, thanks to JNW

27-June-08

26-June-08

2. New Yorker: 'Deep-Holes' by Alice Munro (and the cartoon)
3. Times Online: Burning is too good for them... this is scathing
4. Guardian blog: A rock'n'roll book club

25-June-08

1. 'Every generation thinks it's special...' – from Shakespeare's birthday, April 23, 1972: 'An 18-Year-Old Looks Back on Life' by Joyce Maynard
3. Wyatt Mason: The Baby is Beautiful, where F Scott Fitzgerald explains how he'd like the reviewer to respond to The Beautiful and the Damned
5. Geoff Dyer on blurbs

23-June-08

2. Guardian blog: The great American pause
3. And reminding me why I enjoyed A Month in the Country: Guardian blog
4. Given how quickly I devoured anything I could find by Adam Thirlwell after loving Politics so much, I am surprised I haven't read his hefty new book yet.

20-June-08

1. Steven Carroll wins the Miles Franklin
2. Five Dials: new lit mag from Hamish Hamilton
3. Guardian: The Incredible Hulk review, thanks to JK

19-June-08

1. Tonight, Ramona Koval at the Sleepers Salon. Melbourne bookish fun.
3. Emily Perkins: Novel About My Wife
5. Dash Shaw: comic book author with terrific name

18-June-08

1. Guardian blog: The government should do more to encourage reading for pleasure - 'schools are places that talk about the world in the kinds of ways that you find in books' - I think I went to a different kind of school.
2. The University of Florida's literary magazine Subtropics, edited by David Leavitt
4. Jacinta Halloran's Dissection
5. The latest Paris Review has a piece by Tim Winton, & on the site you can read a 1996 story, 'The Famous Torn and Restored Lit Cigarette Trick' by Elizabeth Gilbert, whose Stern Men (way before Eat Pray Love) was terrific.
6. Ian McEwan and Steven Pinker (whose The Language Instinct is a useful writing tool), thanks to BB
7. The San Francisco Chronicle: Nam Le's long, literary journey
8. Read Alert: arguments over YA classifications, thanks to JNW

17-June-08

1. Tin House: Helen Shulman's 'Parents Night' – 'We were at a cocktail party for incoming parents at our daughter's school when I spied my ex-husband amid a sea of ophthalmologic surgeons and hedge fund guys. He was wearing handmade Italian loafers. How could this be? My ex was a bum.
Mike and I, we'd met in a bar in rural Oregon but spent most of our time together fighting, having sex, and doing drugs. None of that has anything to do with who I am now – it's ancient history! I work in a Chelsea art gallery. I wear good boots and short skirts. I am married to an arbitrageur of French descent. Armand. His name sounds like what he is, jewelry you can wear.'
2. Writer Anna Krien
5. Zoetrope All-Story: 'Notes on Design' by Mike Mills (not of REM fame)
6. Toni Jordan's Addition: also picked for the Richard and Judy list
7. The new Cutwater anthology for all writers

16-June-08

2. Susan Johnson, whose new book sounds interesting, on literary fashion
3. Take a look at Lookybook! How easy it is to turn the pages.
5. James Hamilton-Paterson's Rancid Pansies
6. You need to buy The Believer for the whole of this interview with Julie Hecht, and it's well worth it.
7. Smack-bang into the first month of writing school, one of the first things that occurred to me was that I was in a non-Tom-Waits-listening minority group. It's not that I don't like some of his songs, but I am no diehard. But this song makes a lot of sense to me.
9. Paper Cuts: Screen Writers
10. McCain Blogette: A children's book about her father's life... ah, sheesh.

13-June-08

1. Last week I was helping a friend edit & one of the little things we did was change his font to Times and spacing to 1.5. I just found out that he's been writing so much quicker! Here's to on-screen readability.
2. James Bradley's The Resurrectionist has been chosen as one of Richard & Judy's Summer Reads
3. Tara June Winch: Rolex protégé

12-June-08

1. Tonight, I'm chuffed to be speaking to the excellent Sophie Cunningham, who has recently taken over the reins at Meanjin, and - as if that wasn't already enough - also just released her second novel, Bird. Sophie's at tonight's Sleepers Salon. She's been an editor and a writer and an observer for long enough to know what's going on. Melburnians: it'll be a treat.
2. Ah Steve, I still love  you

11-June-08

2. New York Times: David Sedaris
3. Last night I spent warm hours in good company, reading Almanac submissions by lamplight in the comfy chair, attempting to ward off the small lions I keep. And what's happened? The quality is through the roof! Like people are sending their grade-a quality. It's such a treat, such an honour. Maybe it's because I am a writer or maybe that has nothing to do with it, but I know how hard it is to let your work be seen by others' eyes, and I never forget how lucky we are that we can. Eyes drooping, I eventually had to go to bed, but I was reeling happy.

10-June-08

1. Time Out: Shelf esteem
3. Youtube: Book Launch, thanks to CK

6-June-08

should i be numbering these things for readability? i'll give it a burl...
1. The new Quarterly Conversation is online now, including Why I joined the POD people
2. A seventeen-year-old's call to arms
3. Jincy Willett's David Sedaris story

5-June-08

Tonight, I'm lucky enough to be talking to three-time Miles Franklin shortlister Steve Carroll at the Sleepers Salon
Rose Tremain won the Orange Prize
Toltz and de Kretser make it on to the Hay Festival's 21 list
Lee Child: '... while watching the Britney Spears Pepsi commercial during the Super Bowl a few years ago, he saw instantly how "Pepsi Cola" is an anagram for "Episcopal" and "Britney Spears" an anagram for "Presbyterians".'
Donna Tartt: 'Literature today seems to be divided into two camps: extremely literary work, with lots of emphasis on technique and style and so forth and then these sort of popular blockbusters and I know at heart I'm a manic stylist. I love a beautiful sentence, a well-constructed paragraph, some gorgeous turn of phrase that'll just make you sit back in your chair and say oh-oh. But unfortunately I think a lot of books that are well-constructed are really very self-involved and don't take the reader very much into consideration.'

4-June-08

Simple, old-fashioned covers: Faber Finds - restoring to print a wealth of lost classics
If you've been wondering what Wil Wheaton's been up to since Stand By Me (and Star Trek, of course): he's started a publishing company
Tonight: the launch of Sophie Cunningham's Bird at Brunswick Street Books

3-June-08

After the initial frustrations of each writing class, a few weeks in, maybe after we all go for a drink or after someone brings a piece in for its second workshopping when it was caned the first time, and it's much, much better, comes that moment of realisation that I love all of them in their own way. This is one of the many delights that Jincy Willett's The Writing Class is reminding me of. And, egads, it's funny.
I'm enjoying these Five Chapters, even though the site colours make me feel slightly seasick!

2-June-08

Today, I am celebrating Elizabeth Hardwick, one of the founders of the New York Review of Books. In the Guardianher writing in the NYRB, and Joan Didion celebrates her life here.

30-May-08

Wayne Macauley's essay on publishing is one of the many excellent pieces in the upbeat new Meanjin
I just heard that one bookshop in Broome has been filing the Sleepers Almanac under "Australiana", so this piece on whether America is still the home of the short story interested me.
Hanif Kureishi on writing courses – 'new mental hospitals'
Murakami, talking about the influence of some classic American novels on his own fiction, makes a terrific point about the importance of rhythm.

29-May-08

28-May-08

'First, Jon calls himself a strong believer in the gestational process. He points out that most mistakes that cause a book to fail come from deadline pressure. He also says that the few authors he chooses (or "gets") to work with he likes to acquire years in advance, and collaborate with on many slow edits.' - Editorial Ass: Less is more
Executive Director of the ASA Jeremy Fisher's 'Into the Light' is one of many excellent pieces in the new Overland

27-May-08

For anyone willing to brave the cold tonight, I'm talking with the perennially busy Jeff Sparrow about unpublished manuscripts, at the Trades Hall, for Overland
On the weekend, my book group found our second unanimously-loved novel in On Chesil Beach (the first being Motherless Brooklyn) and while, probably thanks to my unruly family, I don't at all mind not sharing book-related opinions with the people I love, it was nice to all agree.

23-May-08

Jeanette Winterson: SWF opening address
Will Elder, MAD illustrator
Nicholas Negroponte imagines the laptop reader

22-May-08

Anne Enright's Taking Pictures
David Musgrave, publisher at Puncher & Wattman, winner of the Josephine Ulrick Poetry Prize

21-May-08

Michelle de Kretser wins the NSW Prems lit prize
Debra Adelaide in the SMH: 'I've heard publishers say that in Australia we cannot produce a book that captures the literary and the commercial reader and as a reader I find that profoundly insulting. Why can't something be beautifully written and a bestseller? It should happen more often.'
From Michael Chabon's Maps and Legends: 'Lunch counters, muffler shops, dinner theaters, they aim to please; but writers? No self-respecting literary genius, even an occasional maker of avowed entertainments like Graham Greene, would ever describe him- or herself as primarily an "entertainer." An entertainer is a man in a sequined dinner jacket, singing "She's a lady" to a hall filled with women rubber-banding their underpants up onto the stage.
Yet entertainment – as I define it, pleasure and all – remains the only sure means we have of bridging, or at least of feeling as if we have bridged, the gulf of consciousness that separates each of us from everybody else. The best response to those who would cheapen and exploit it is not to disparage or repudiate but to reclaim entertainment as a job fit for artists and for audiences, a two-way exchange of attention, experience, and the universal hunger for connection.'

20-May-08

On Amy Hempel's The Dog of the Marriage, in the SMH
Sleepers Almanac author Karen Hitchcock has signed a two-book deal with Picador: a book of short stories, then a novel! 
The Pilcrow Lit Fest small press festival

19-May-08

Bookslam: Podcasts
Jessa Crispin at the Smart Set: Fully Booked
Guardian blog: on prize judging
Better World Books: cheap priceless books, thanks to BM

16-May-08

If you're in Melbourne in June: Thursdays 5, 12 and 19, quiet Salons with Steve Carroll, Sophie Cunningham & Ramona Koval
New York Times: Michiko Kakutani reviews Nam Le's The Boat

15-May-08

Bookslut: 'The book today is Sex Detox. It has a hot pink cover, which I'm naturally drawn to because I'm a woman and my X chromosomes condition me to believe all books with pink covers are meant to enhance my life without putting too much pressure on me to think about stuff, like character development, or language, or plot, or stuff other than shopping and rich men. And high-heeled shoes.'
Book Critics Circle blog: 'Slacking is underrated. I visited the offices of Google not long ago, the New York offices, and the executives that were taking me around explained to me that there's mandated downtime if you're an employee. They want you to take a certain chunk of your week and drift, float around, dream, come up with cool ideas. Maybe you play foosball, flip through magazines, or maybe you just daydream, but you're supposed to take time away from your day-to-day labor.' Jeff Gordinier on How Generation X is Saving the World

14-May-08

Readings mag editor and Big Issue books editor Jo Case: Read All Over
The Independent: Doris Lessing on winning the Nobel - 'a bloody disaster'
Publishers Weekly: on Two Dollar Radio
Sports Night: Dana Loves the Theatre, thanks to LB
Devastations: Take You Home

13-May-08

The real Top Gun, thanks to FE
Strictly for geeks: Booker Prize quiz
Carey, Coetzee: the Best of the Bookers shortlist of 6
Karen Heller: On book covers

12-May-08

David Sedaris, Augusten Burroughs: MWF
'I think a lot of the world's problems are to do with not being able to fully imagine another person's reality' - Bibliophile: Andrew O'Hagan audio interview
Former Sleepers intern Adam Tucker now Text Editorial Assistant

9-May-08

The Independent: Tim Winton profile

8-May-08

Great cover: Stefan Laszczuk's I Dream of Magda
Nam Le's The Boat: longlisted for the 2008 Frank O'Connor short story prize. The other Australians - John Clancy, Susan Midalia and Kathryn Lomer - are published by UQP, UWA Press, and UQP, respectively
'Women are busy people': Amy Sedaris
Bulletin: back soon?

7-May-08

Sleepers Almanac author Patrick Cullen has signed up with Scribe
Mess+Noise: an Australian music magazine
Jess Winfield: My Name is Will looks interesting
Nam Le's site
TZU have a new album: Youtube fun
Improv Everywhere, thanks to JW

5-May-08

The new Granta blog
What The Age's Caroline Wilson has to put up with
NY Times: review of Michelle de Kretser's The Lost Dog

2-May-08

John Burnside's The Devil's Footprints: on the John Tait Black Novel shortlist
The Rise of the Bestseller Lists: not dissimilar to recent discussions about Nielsen Bookscan
One Great Dame: Muriel Spark
Jonathan Franzen and James Wood: were at an event together

1-May-08

Nam Le's 'Tehran Calling' (from forthcoming The Boat) in Five Chapters
Granta eds talking about Granta, with a snazzy new look
Jen Statsky - funny - at McSweeney's

30-May-08

The new Curtis Sittenfeld looks interesting
'All the practice you get makes you better. Whatever stops you from practicing makes you worse.' Salon: Writing is in my blood, but how do I know if I'm any good?

29-April-08

Guardian: On Virago

28-April-08

Guardian blog: the Nabokov decision has been made
Two of my favourite writers: Victoria Wood and Dawn French in conversation
Perfect images: Sticklebacks and Snowglobes by BA Goodjohn

24-April-08

The Ten-Year Nap: could be good, in the line of Edna O'Brien or Mary McCarthy, but could be bad - if you've read it, let me know
David Hajdu's The Ten-Cent Plague
Nathaniel Rich's The Mayor's Tongue
The Elegant Variation's Mark Sarvas's debut, Harry, Revised
Margaret Atwood on Anne of Green Gables
Omnivoracious: Book-Beer Pairings

23-April-08

'Just because they're imaginary, it doesn't mean they're not real': South Park
New York Times: Isabel Fonseca's novel
New York Magazine: five first novels that sound interesting
March music news roundup: Open by Rob

22-April-08

'When faced with booksellers telling me they couldn't sell my book to boys because of the flowery cover, I confronted my publishers who said that given a choice, they'll always go for female readers, even if it means losing male.' Meg Rosoff commenting on Pink doesn't stink: Guardian blog
MUP's Louise Adler on literary prizes

21-April-08

'Coming Into the Country was his first best-seller. That was very exciting. That's probably the peak of excitement on a certain scale - when a company has published twelve books and the thirteenth becomes a best-seller. And then all the books thereafter sell better.' Q&A with editor Pat Strachan

18-April-08

It's time: Steven Carroll - Miles Franklin
Paper Cuts: My Generation
Time Out: Shelf Esteem
Sophie Cunningham: Meanjin covers from way back
Telegraph's 110 Best Books
Siri Hustvedt on the RN Book Show

17-April-08

Blood on paper: at the V&A
Narrative magazine
I-am-you-are etc: 'The United States and Australia are the only two countries in the industrialised world that don't have paid statutory maternity leave': Bringing in baby

16-April-08

Serialised stories: Five Chapters
New York Times on Girls Write Now mentorships
Jordan Crane's cover, Michael Chabon's words: Maps and Legends is on order

15-April-08

Titlepage TV, with thanks to MES

14-April-08

Opera Australia's My Fair Lady
Imagine a dedicated words venue: Bennetts for books