Ratty's crossed the Tasman, leaving Lily and the ratadilloes camping out while he takes charge of a very large dog whose owners are away. He quite likes the 'don't-mess-with-me' feeling it gives him to step out with Maximus. He carries a tennis ball in a string bag, to throw on the beach. Max ploughs up the sand, chasing the ball, which gives Ratty's tail a few minutes' break.
This week Elena Bossi interviewed Tim Jones about his Slightly Peculiar Love Story 'Said Sheree'. You can read that interview on Elena's blog, Teoría y Crítica Literaria. Yes, it's in Spanish but what do you think a dashboard translator is for?
This week I've made contact with my trans-Tasman counterpart, Really Blue Books, 'Australia's first independent digital-only trade publisher'. Well, we've exchanged emails, one each, but with excitement that we've found someone else to talk with about the journey thus far. Check out the website; I like their attitude.
Slightly Peculiar Love Stories author Coral Atkinson wrote a story for Anzac Day about returning her father's war medal collection to Ireland. It appeared here on Beattie's Book Blog.
I like Dan Blank's blog. He's a generous encourager of authors and independent publishers. Here's his latest exhortation to remember what matters on this creative ride.
Thursday, 26 April 2012
Thursday, 19 April 2012
Picks of the week
Poet and fiction writer Tim Jones has interviewed Argentinean Elena Bossi about her Slightly Peculiar Love Story 'The Ache'. I like the way he managed to keep her inflection intact when Elena asked him to 'tidy' her English. Read the three questions here.
In case you didn't receive the rat's newsletter this week, it's here.
Someone's produced a book you can eat when you've finished with it; another you can plant and grow back into a cousin of the birch tree it came from: Ten Unusual Book Designs.
And finally, if any of you haven't met Emma Neale yet, or her blog, you are in for a treat.
Elena Bossi |
In case you didn't receive the rat's newsletter this week, it's here.
Someone's produced a book you can eat when you've finished with it; another you can plant and grow back into a cousin of the birch tree it came from: Ten Unusual Book Designs.
And finally, if any of you haven't met Emma Neale yet, or her blog, you are in for a treat.
Tuesday, 10 April 2012
Mock Wedding
This week, two of our Slightly Peculiar Love Stories authors got together (virtually). Coral Atkinson asked Susannah Poole three questions about her story in the collection, 'Mock Wedding'.
Coral: My reading of 'Mock Wedding' suggests
that there are two conflicting strands in Eva's life. She wants to belong to the
student crowd, yet she longs for a subtlety and romance that the group lacks.
Was this your intention?
Susannah: It was my intention to have Eva in this conflict.
On one hand she admires her flatmates and their friends. Watching them from
the outside she thinks they're fun and effortlessly confident while she's shy and
locked away studying seriously. After the wedding she is moving towards the realisation
that the sweetness she longs for is okay. I think many people feel as though they
are the odd one out when actually everyone is covering up things that they believe
in or long for in the desire to belong.
Coral: The wedding
dress and veil seem to have been a potent symbol in many famous works of fiction
such as Great Expectations and Jane Eyre. Did you see your use of it as being in
this tradition when you wrote 'Mock Wedding'?
Suasnnah: Without intending to — you are probably right! Jane Eyre is one of my favourite novels and Miss Haversham is one of
the best, poignantly spooky, characters created. The wedding dress and veil are
such loaded symbols, aren't they? They create the images of purity, happiness, vulnerability,
beauty, and indicate a departure from one life to join another.
Coral: The fire and the firewood play an important symbolic role in the story; to me they appear to carry the idea of various types of love. Can you comment on this?
From the moment a baby is born there is the
desire to keep them warm. We hold them to our chests and we tuck them snugly within
blankets. This cosiness is associated with love, care and comfort, from those
who give it and those who receive it. Maybe this is only in cold countries like
New Zealand. I imagine in tropical places this same sentiment might be extended
by keeping someone cool.
There is a great deal of work that goes into
the chopping, splitting and stacking of firewood and so the gift of it is significant. There is the parental love given by Stig's
parents who desire to look after him because, despite the lectures he gives them
on their small-mindedness, he is still their baby. He may not realise or acknowledge
it but in their eyes he will always be young enough to need their care.
When the fire is laid in Eva's room there
are two kinds of love it may indicate.
It may be platonic love and prepared by a friend who has sensed Eva is ill at
ease and wants her to be comforted by its warmth. Or it could be, as Eva interprets it, a gesture
offering the romantic love she craves; the 'in love' love that many young people
begin to experience for the first time at this age.
Because I am someone who dislikes
being cold, I believe that creating warmth in a large cold house would be one of
the kindest and most loving things that someone could do for another.
On the night Eva agreed to be a revolutionary, the fireplace in the living room was filled with crackling flames devouring macrocarpa. The sap-scented smoke wafted into her bedroom where she sat at her desk in her sleeping bag, fully clothed and wearing a woolly hat. In front of her were highlighters and the draft of her essay ‘Indigenous Responses to Colonialism in 19th Century Art’. The happy chatter of guests arriving for the flat’s weekly video night was filling the house. Eva shuffled in tiny geisha steps to her door and listened. David was telling the tale of the firewood. Read more.
Thanks, Coral and Susannah!
Thursday, 5 April 2012
Talking with Michael
"New Zealand has never ceased to haunt me. Much as I have needed radically different places to enlarge my horizons, to challenge me as a person and as a writer, I have needed to sustain a relationship with the place that first nurtured me."
Please go and read the rich conversation with Tim Jones: Books in the Trees. Tim read Road Markings: An Anthrologist in the Antipodes, then interviewed Michael Jackson by email. It's a thought-provoking piece.You can read it here.
"I have always striven to realise the truth of Terence’s famous dictum: nothing human is alien to me."
Wednesday, 4 April 2012
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