Posts Tagged ‘nonfiction’

BOOK REVIEW: Speaking Volumes: Conversations with Remarkable Writers (Ramona Koval, Scribe)


Posted: 6 October 2010 at 12:33 pm

Ramona Koval has conducted literary interviews with authors in a variety of locations, from literary festivals in Australia and overseas, to hotel rooms and authors’ own homes. In this collection of interviews she has used her skills to probe the personal views of 28 leading contemporary writers. The collection is dominated by English and American writers, with Australian contributions from David Malouf, Judith Wright and Les Murray. The range of writers and styles represented here is diverse, and it reflects the breadth of the international authorial community. From Joseph Heller to Barry Lopez, with (separate) stops at A S Byatt and Margaret Drabble, the literary sisters with a ‘complex’ relationship, Ramona Koval’s probing yet sympathetic questions elicit illuminating responses from her subjects. She is not afraid to follow evasive answers into uncharted territory, or to change tack when an unforeseen topic arises. The book is very informative, and will provide background reading material for the general reader as well as very useful insights into the work of many of our major writers. Literature students and book club members will find a mine of information in the book for study and discussion, and inveterate festival-goers may find a permanent record of some of their favourite interviews.

Chris Harrington is the co-owner of Books in Print in Melbourne. This review first appeared in the September 2010 issue of Bookseller+Publisher magazine.

BOOK REVIEW: How to Make Gravy (Paul Kelly, Hamish Hamilton)


Posted: 29 September 2010 at 12:09 pm

Paul Kelly’s story begins with the Spiegeltent in Melbourne in 2004 when he was offered an exclusive show: four nights of never-to-be repeated performances. Around that was born the idea of singing 100 of his songs in alphabetical order, each night consisting of a completely different set-list. Around the songs, storytelling was added for theatrical effect, and as the shows hit the road they were recorded with a view to a CD release and then a book. How to Make Gravy is the ‘mongrel beast’ that emerged, and what a beast it is. Part memoir, part tour diary, part song-writing manual, this sprawling book is filled with all manner of letters, lists, confessions, hymns and yarns. Kelly’s 100-plus songs begin each chapter (alphabetically) followed by a story that loosely or closely relates to the song. That Kelly is a consummate storyteller is evident in his song-writing. Here he has space to explore his storytelling skills further, which he does admirably, weaving in and out of the past and present easily and with an intimacy that invites the reader into his world. This book is full of tales that will delight Paul Kelly fans, and will appeal to anyone with an interest in popular music. How to Make Gravy is also available with an exclusive 8-CD box set entitled The A-Z Recordings and a 64-page booklet of photos for $125.

Deborah Crabtree is a Melbourne-based writer and bookseller. This review first appeared in the October 2010 issue of Bookseller+Publisher.

INTERVIEW: Kate Holden on ‘The Romantic’ (Text)


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Posted: 23 September 2010 at 9:31 am

Andrea Hanke talks to Kate Holden about her new memoir The Romantic, a follow-up to In My Skin.

I read that The Romantic originally started out as a novel. How did it evolve and how do you think this has influenced the style of the book—for example, the decision to write it in the third person?

The memoir was originally going to be the last third of a tripartite novella work, but soon took on the dimensions of a full-length book which put paid to that idea. Even after the first full draft I was considering how to fictionalise the protagonist, give ‘her’ a different character and borrow the real-life events for a narrative contrived on the themes of my real experience. But it wouldn’t work: skewing even one element threw the whole thing out of balance, particularly the emotional truth. However the third-person perspective remains and presents a critical distancing which is, I’m told, unusual in a memoir.

In The Romantic you travel to Europe to discover yourself—a rite of passage for many Australians. Do you think this experience—which can often be a lonely one, so far away from family and friends—is an effective way for people to gain a better understanding of themselves? Do you think you could have made the same discoveries about yourself living in Melbourne?

In In My Skin I was alone in Melbourne, and often fugitive—in Italy I was alone too, still looking for a safe place. I needed freedom from the humiliation I’d felt as an addict, and a chance to re-make myself. The amnesiac anonymity of overseas is attractive to many travelers.But it is frightening also. I do think solitude is clarifying, though it reminds us all the time of how much we need other people. Travel is a test as well as a solace, but one well worth taking.

Most of the sexual encounters you describe in In My Skin were in the context of your profession as a sex worker. Was it harder to write about personal encounters and relationships in The Romantic?

I was terribly, terribly conflicted about portraying my personal relationships, not for my own sake but for that of the privacy of my ex-partners. Fortunately they gave me permission—or at least forgiveness. I am a compulsive over-sharer and already used to having exposed my sexuality in writing but there were moments when I wondered if I should just skip over something truly intimate—and then realised that that instinct meant I should probably share it, because that’s where the good—and empathetic—material is. Everyone’s had relationships so I try to present mine as candidly as possible in the hope that others can relate.

Through your Age column and various public speaking events, you’ve developed a public profile—particularly in Melbourne. How does it feel to encounter strangers who know such intimate details about your life?

Just today I was recognised by my postman! I never know what to say when strangers say they’ve read my work, but I suspect I am more disconcerted than they are, and I try to remember why I chose to be revealing in the first place. Readers seem to be able to separate my writing persona from my real one. And I am always amazed how warmly people respond to my written character. Those who don’t like me don’t bother to say hello. But I am humbled by the sweetness of readers, and how my candour seems to invite their own.

What are you working on now?

I’ve got my Age column to write, and I’m prodding away at a draft of a novel, and making notes on a possible non-fiction book. I’d also like to do more short stories. But right now I’m preparing to do promotion for The Romantic, and I know I’ll have little concentration for writing while that’s on. I feel lucky, excited, and anxious all at the same time!

Andrea Hanke’s review of The Romantic appears in the current issue of Bookseller+Publisher magazine.

Top picks from the current issue


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Posted: 17 September 2010 at 2:45 pm

Which books got good reviews in the October issue of Bookseller+Publisher you ask?

Well…

The proof copy of Caroline Overington’s novel I Came to Say Goodbye came covered in glowing quotes from Random House staff who’ve read the book and our reviewer Scott Whitmont has joined the chorus. He calls the novel ‘a gripping blockbuster that booksellers can recommend unreservedly’ and predicts Overington’s following ‘is destined to grow in leaps and bounds’.

Toni Whitmont was impressed with That Deadman Dance by Miles Franklin winner Kim Scott (Picador, October), suggesting it will ‘surely attract consideration for a raft of major prizes’. ‘While the story is compelling,’ writes Whitmont, ‘what makes this an extraordinary book is the writing. Scott’s prose shimmers.’

Andrew Wilkins was equally taken with a collection of work by the late Dorothy Porter. Love Poems (Black Inc., October) ‘brings together poems and song lyrics from across Porter’s career, gathered into sections that suggest love in its various phases’ and is ‘simply an essential collection of Australian poetry,’ says Wilkins.

Other eagerly awaited books being reviewed in this issue include Tim Flannery’s Here On Earth (Text, October), which Eliza Metcalf says is ‘an important read’. ‘Flannery traces our species’ evolution and expansion out of Africa and across the globe, noting the trail of destruction we left in our wake,’ she writes. ’The picture he paints is a fairly devastating one, but also quite awe-inspiring.’

Paul Landymore assures readers that When Colts Ran, the new novel by Roger McDonald (Vintage, November), lives up to expectations raised by the author’s Miles Franklin win in 2006. ‘If you’re a fan of Australian literature then I’m sure you will find this book, as I did, a deeply satisfying read,’ writes Landymore.

Deborah Crabtree, our regular music book columnist, was taken with Paul Kelly’s How to Make Gravy (Hamish Hamilton, October), a book that grew out of series of performances Kelly put on in 2004. ‘Part memoir, part tour diary, part song-writing manual, this sprawling book is filled with all manner of letters, lists, confessions, hymns and yarns,’ writes Crabtree, adding that the book gives Kelly ‘space to explore his storytelling skills further, which he does admirably, weaving in and out of the past and present easily and with an intimacy that invites the reader into his world’.

And that’s not to mention Lloyd Jones’ Hand Me Down World (Text, October), Kate Holden’s The Romantic (Text, October), Things Bogans Like (E C McSween et al, Hachette, November), Toni Jordan’s Fall Girl (Text, October), and many, many more…

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BOOK REVIEW: The Happiest Refugee (Anh Do, A&U)


Posted: 14 September 2010 at 12:46 pm

The Happiest Refugee is Anh Do’s debut in the book world and a bruisingly honest depiction of his life to date. The story starts with Do’s parents meeting and falling in love in war-torn Vietnam, and tracks a young Anh as he and his family journey from their homeland to a refugee camp in Malaysia and finally Australia. Do takes us through the pleasures and pitfalls of growing up in Australia as an outsider. One of the things that particularly stands out about his attitude to life is just how unconditionally grateful he is to have experienced everything—even the bad. This book is about war, escape, pirates, love, courage, racism, alcoholism, comedy, tragedy, and, above all, hope. The way Do approaches his story is witty, charming and heart-warming, and just when you think you’re about to die from laughter, he wrenches your heartstrings so hard that within an instant you’re on the brink of crying. This book will appeal to readers young and old, and should be mandatory reading in Australian schools, with its themes of outsiders and acceptance.

B Owen Baxter is a writer, musician and bookseller. He is currently studying Writing and Philosophy at the University of Newcastle. This review first appeared in the September issue of Bookseller+Publisher.

And the election titles begin…


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Posted: 8 September 2010 at 3:03 pm

Black Inc. tells us they’re sending Mungo MacCallum’s 2010 election book Punch & Judy: The Double Disillusion Election of 2010 to print today, with delivery to bookstores scheduled for next Wednesday 15 September.

They think it might be the fastest turn-around of an election book ever to be published (though admittedly most elections don’t take two and a half weeks to be decided!).

Let the election analysis begin. Or rather, continue…

Most mentioned books this week


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Posted: 6 September 2010 at 4:55 pm

The release of Tony Blair’s memoir A Journey: My Political Life (Hutchinson) has been eagerly awaited both by reviewers and book buyers. Sales of the autobiography have been predictably high and the buzz is expected to continue in the weeks to come. In the book, Blair addresses two of the most controversial issues of his career in detail: his professional relationship with Gordon Brown and his true sentiments on the British invasion of Iraq. D B C Pierre’s new book Lights out in Wonderland (Faber) is receiving favourable reviews. Appearing for the second week in the most mentioned chart were Freedom (Jonathan Franzen, Fourth Estate) and Bereft (Chris Womersley, Scribe). Vintage and the Gleaning (Jeremy Chambers, Text) also gained a spot in the chart a month after its release—Media Extra.

Father’s Day


Posted: 24 August 2010 at 6:39 pm

In the August issue of Bookseller+Publisher Andrea Hanke rounded up some of the picture books that might appeal to fathers of little ones this Father’s Day. Here are her picks:

My Aussie Dad (Yvonne Morrison, illus by Gus Gordon, Scholastic, August) celebrates Aussie fathers in all their guises; My Dad Thinks He’s Funny (Katrina Germein, illus by Tom Jellett, Black Dog Books) explores that sense of humour that’s unique to fathers; and Me and My Dad (Sally Morgan & Ezekiel Kwaymullina, illus by Matt Ottley, Little Hare) introduces a father who isn’t afraid of stinging jellyfish or hungry sharks, but cowers at the sight of a seagull.

Because You Are With Me (Kylie Dunstan, Hachette Children’s Books) is a thankyou to dads for their help and encouragement; Me and My Dad (Alison Ritche, illus by Alison Edgson, Koala Books) is a sweet story about a father and son bear; and there are kisses aplenty with Daddy Kiss (Margaret Allum & Jonathan Bentley, Little Hare) and from the ‘My Little Library’ series Kisses for Daddy (Fraces Watts & David Legge, Little Hare).

Grandfathers also have a choice of Adventures with Grandpa (Rosemary Mastnak, Hardie Grant Egmont) and Grandad and Billy (Julie Kingston, Lothian Children’s Books).

You can check out Andrea’s Father’s Day recommendations in the realms of fiction, biography, sport, military, food and wine and much more in the article from page 22 of the magazine, now online here.

BOOK REVIEW: The Finger (Angus Trumble, MUP)


Posted: 20 August 2010 at 9:20 am

In the words of author Angus Trumble, The Finger ‘contains a lot of information that may be useful for future inquirers about fingers and finger lore,’ as well as being interesting for the rest of us too. And, hey, I may just be a future-finger-lore-enquirer, because I found this book truly fascinating. Trumble fuses the worlds of medicine and history, sociology and economics, and throws in a bit of sport and combat for good measure. But the focus here is mainly on art and art history. Trumble, from the Yale Center for British Art and former Curator of European Art at the Art Gallery of South Australia, is incredibly knowledgeable and passionate about art, and he speaks with reverence of sculptures and paintings both ancient and modern. Yet his wisdom knows no bounds, and he asks and answers many questions that I, for one, would never have thought about—yet am suddenly fascinated by. Why do we point? Why is the middle finger rude? Why do we wear gloves? What’s the deal with nail polish? How do fingers work? You could say we know our fingers pretty much like the backs of our hands … but how well do we really know them?

Hannah Cartmel is a bookseller and former publishing assistant. This review first appeared in the May/June issue of Bookseller+Publisher magazine.

INTERVIEW: Charlie Pickering on ‘Impractical Jokes’ (A&U)


Posted: 18 August 2010 at 4:09 pm

Not every good or even funny idea translates into the written word. What made you sure this one would?

I think because it’s a story. It’s not a joke or an idea or a comedic premise; it’s a good old-fashioned yarn. And it’s my family’s favorite story. It had been told thousands of times around the dinner table before I put pen to paper. I’d heard it told in different ways and different voices and every time it just got funnier.

The delivery of a story is critical to a writer and a stand-up comedian for very different reasons. Did your method of storytelling have to change to put it on paper? Was it harder or easier than writing for stand-up?

 

It was different. Not harder or easier, just different. If anything, working the story into a written work allowed me to ‘finish’ the stories. I could take the time to flesh out every scene and find every element of humor. I could also keep the more sincere moments of the story because there wasn’t a live audience saying ‘we need a laugh every 30 seconds or we’ll get bored’. And I think by virtue of taking the time to write it down, it has become the best possible version of this story.

Now you’ve written the story down, have you robbed yourself of a standup routine?

Not really. The book began its life as a stand-up routine. I performed it for 30 nights in a row at the Melbourne Comedy Festival and then at other festivals here and overseas. I feel that it has lived a full life as a routine. That said, having written the book and found new angles on the story, I could definitely stage it again and it would still be a new and challenging thing to try.

Your account of your family in the book is always warm and respectful. Were you ever concerned about how your family would respond to being treated as comic material?

I learned very early in my stand-up career that I had to be careful about how I portrayed my family. I decided to be a comedian, not them. If I was going to share their life, I had to do it respectfully. The first time I really did an autobiographical show, I actually sat at a table and performed it for my parents. It was after that they said ‘Okay, we trust you. We know you’re not out to make us look bad’. The other thing I’ve discovered is that audiences and readers would much prefer to hear a comedian tell funny, happy stories about their family than to use the opportunity as some kind of depressing therapy session.

Have the exploits of your father (your early training) and his goodhumoured nemesis motivated you to stage your own practical jokes? Or did they warn you off?

My father is a practical joking genius of a level I could never aspire to. If anything he has warned me off. I learned from him that if you’re going to be a practical joker it is a career choice and will take a lifetime of dedication. I have instead opted for the non-practical variety of jokes. It’s a little easier to control and there is less retaliation.

There are so many funny stories in this book. Will we be seeing more of the Pickering family in the future?

There are definitely more stories to tell and I plan to write another book soon, but I’ve only just finished this one. For now my agenda is just a cup of tea and a lie down.

This interview first appeared in the August issue of Bookseller+Publisher.