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Joan Didion dead

Author Joan Didion, whose essays, memoirs, novels and screenplays chronicled contemporary American life, has died at the age of 87 from complications from Parkinson’s disease. “Didion was one of the country’s most trenchant writers and astute observers. Her best-selling works of fiction, commentary, and memoir … are considered modern classics,” Penguin Random House said in…

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Incomprehensible book reviews

This review by Vanessa Francesca in The Age is near unintelligible. I’ve pasted a few paras below. She must be a graduate of Melbourne University. Technical manuals for Stealth Bombers make more sense. FICTION: Intimacies, Katie Kitamura, Jonathan Cape, $32.99 “Katie Kitamura’s Intimacies is an existential thriller with a shadow text about the systems, the…

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Goodbye Georgy Girl

This blog is meant to be about writing but my beloved Labrador crossed with a Rottweiler (a Labweiler), passed away last Thursday morning. The grief has poleaxed me and all writing has stopped for a while. One morning during the scorching summer of 2008, as my wife and me pulled in to a market north…

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PC & the American Constitution

This is from The New Yorker a few years back. It’s a piss-take on political correctness on campus. “Something strange is happening at America’s colleges and universities. A movement is arising, undirected and driven largely by students, to scrub campuses clean of words, ideas, and subjects that might cause discomfort or give offense.” —the Atlantic….

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When Tu took on Rooney

There’s a scene in the film ‘Death of Stalin’, where three senior government ministers are sitting in a car planning to kill Beria. One of them has bought a yapping dog, because they’re so fearful they’ll be overheard, even though the car is parked in a forest. One of the characters says, “I’ve had nightmares…

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Running the Dream Machine

Uneasy lay my head when I ran the RMIT professional and creative writing programs. I had almost 800 students studying creative writing (including screenwriters) and I was doing my utmost to enrol more, not only from Melbourne but across Australia. Yet something didn’t sit right. I remember asking lecturers Delia Falconer and Laurie Clancy, if…

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Fiction and the news agenda

One of the more curious aspects of creative writing – and here I’m predominantly pointing to short story competitions – is how the imagination is railroaded by the news agenda. Real life is lived outside the highly constructed, framed and decontextualised news. What we see, read and hear on the news is framed to elicit…