Author Archive for: ‘admin-abbw’

The Son questions the founding fathers

The Son is a breathtaking epic equal in scope and intensity to Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian but I think it’s a more consistently engaging read. The story spans 160-odd years of Texan history from the mid-1800s and details the violent land grabbing, slaughter and empire building that lie at its heart. This blood- and oil-soaked

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‘Danny Boy’ eSingle on sale … Mine to come

“He reached behind and undid the sports bra” is a pivotal line in Marian Matta’s prize-winning story, “Danny Boy”. It’s the line I asked the author about on Thursday August 22 in an online Spineless Wonders Book Club meeting via Facebook. As the book club’s lively discussion highlighted, it’s a very intriguing story. Marian Matta

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‘Roaming and homing’: Book bites to whet your appetite # 2

Samos Island was bliss. I swam in the Aegean, danced Zumba in the town square and drank Ouzo. I also read some great books! So today’s post contains reviews of Tenth of December, Shooting the Fox and The Old Ways: A Journey on Foot. The first two are for short story enthusiasts and the third

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All the Birds, Singing: Menace is bass line in sad tale

All the Birds, Singing gathers pace as it steams towards its well-executed denouement. Hints are dropped like scat through the first half of the novel about why Jake Whyte is such a cagey, jittery character and carries such horrific scars on her back. The last half takes us more fully into the early experiences that

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Bravo, Billy Lynn, bravo

Ben Fountain’s debut novel, Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk, has been described by author and Vietnam veteran Karl Marlantes as the Catch 22 of the Iraq War — and it won America’s National Critics Circle award for fiction in March this year. This prestigious award is judged — as the prize name suggests — solely

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Josephine Rowe: On crafting words to ‘knock your breath out’

Josephine Rowe is a Melbourne-based writer of fiction, poetry and nonfiction. Her most recent short story collection, Tarcutta Wake (University of Queensland Press, 2012), was longlisted for the 2013 Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award. She talked with ABBW about killer opening lines and closing lines … and what all the best writing does in between. You seem to

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‘The dove descending breaks the air’

It is 1941, at the end of the Blitz in London during World War II, and the poet, T.S. Eliot, is fire-watching with a young woman called Iris. They are on the roof of the publishing house Faber and Faber in Bloomsbury when Jim, an Australian from Essendon, flies into their view a Wellington with a

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Book bites to whet your appetite #1

Today’s post contains my taster reviews of Boy Lost: A Family Memoir, The Examined Life: How We Lose and Find Ourselves, Alone in the Classroom and The Blue Book … all worth a look. Boy Lost: A Family Memoir As she boarded a train to escape her violent marriage, Kristina Olsson’s mother, Yvonne, had her

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It’s a bigger blogging world!

So you’ve read every review and interview on A Bigger Brighter World, you’ve gone on to read some of the recommendations and wonder what else is out there in literary blogworld … but you shudder in trepidation at the blogjam that awaits. There are a great many book blogs out there. Here are some, mostly

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Don’t forget there’s also A Bigger Brighter World on Facebook

In those rare moments I’m not reading or writing stories, poems, reviews and interviews, I attempt to entertain my followers and fans with all manner of bookish propaganda over on Facebook. Recent posts include links to news and videos about Hannah Kent on ABC TV’s Australian Story, National Bookshop Day, a record breaking book domino

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