Author Archive for: ‘admin-abbw’

Women at the wheel

Women making art and history … here’s a book and some other creations I celebrated in April (on the heels of Sydney’s Art month and Women’s History month in March). Sally Morgan flies Little Bird’s Day by Sally Morgan and illustrated by Yolgnu man Johnny Warrkatja Malibirr was launched in April. It’s the simple but

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Words to wake us

#WorldPoetryDay 2019 (March 21) invites us to celebrate poetry and encourage people to read, write, and teach it. Here goes … Words to wake us Mary Oliver was one of the world’s most popular and accomplished poets. She was also an ‘indefatigable guide to the natural world,’ wrote Maxine Kumin. Oliver’s poetry won numerous awards, including

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Summer reading: Aussie’s shine

Aussie women’s words shone brightly in my summer reading. Bird in hand Bird Country (Text) gathers some of my favourite Claire Aman short stories like ‘Jap Floral’, ‘What I Didn’t Put in My Speech’ and ‘Why the Owl Gazes at the Moon’ in one volume. The latter story is unforgettable. Imagine: Beauty, terror, and grief

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‘In the present tense’ my reading highlights of 2018

A patchier reading year for me but still some good finds for you to enjoy … Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman –You’ll love how Eleanor looks at the world and applaud her impatience with society’s silly conventions. While she’s deeply wounded by what happened to her as a child, she’s also funny. The Overstory by Richard Powers –This

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‘Sorry Day’ should be on every Aussie bookshelf

Australia’s first Sorry Day was held on May 26, 1998. Almost a decade later, the word SORRY resonated across the land as the prime minister, Kevin Rudd, offered an apology on behalf of past governments for the suffering and loss inflicted on the Stolen Generations and the broader Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community. Author

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Water and time spool through my late-night reading

Squeezing reading around long working hours isn’t ideal. Here are a few books I’ve crammed into the late-night nooks and crannies of my crazy life. This Water: Five Tales by Beverley Farmer Vale Beverley Farmer. Farmer’s first books Alone, Milk and The House in the Light were magical to me: her way with words exquisite. Since 1980,

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First lines that lure

When first lines are good they set the scene and lure you to read more. Here are five recent favourites. My brother drowned ‘A woman came across the field, carrying the body of my brother, who had drowned.’ – Dying in the First Person by Nike Sulway How can we describe what gives us meaning?

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Winton’s desert odyssey is a study of solitude and survival

Before he flees to the Western Australian desert, 15-year-old Jaxie Clackton has had the tripe thumped out of him regularly by his violent father, ‘the Captain’. He’s also watched his mother Shirley die of a painful illness and prayed (despite his atheism) for relief she never receives. As his father drinks homebrew and rum outside

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How Sydney chef David Bitton transformed adversity into success

Chef, entrepreneur and author David Bitton is living proof that early adversity does not have to limit your potential. In fact, his recently published memoir shows how the grit of struggle can be transformed into a pearl of generosity and fulfilment. Despite growing up with an alcoholic mother, a father he saw infrequently, and brothers

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