My last week: 5 extraordinary reading/listening days

Happy Good Friday. A bit later in the day, I'm off to listen to some Bach, and I have hot-cross buns cooking (recipe: Nigella's one)*. Tonight, the family does a usual GF ritual. We play a board game (Settlers of Catan is the choice du jour) and watch Monty Python's Life of Brian. We've been [...]

Do check it out – Tracy Farr @ Shelf Awareness

This is a most delightful blog post about WA-NZ author Tracy Farr and her reading life. Put together by writer Maureen Eppen for her series Shelf Awareness, it's beautifully presented and fascinating. I do love peeking into other people's lives in this way, and even though I know Tracy IRL, I've never seen her house. What [...]

Chigozie Obioma and the case for ‘audacious prose’

This week, Chigozie Obioma's debut novel The Fishermen was short-listed for the Man Booker Prize. Obioma was already on my radar, first because I'd been hearing about the book, and then because I booked into a workshop he's running at the Ubud Writers and Readers Festival next month. I booked into it so fast, it was like [...]

Wuthering Heights. It’s a love-hate thing.

Thursday was Emily Brontë's birthday and she would have turned 197. Her pièce de résistance Wuthering Heights was probably the first (and only?) piece of classic literature that I connected to with such visceral, anguished, teenagery love, and now regard with no less admiration, but it's tempered with a more mature writerly and readerly respect. As a teenager I wrong-loved [...]