Bookish (and not so bookish) Thoughts

1. I never knew there was a word for my problem:

tsundoko2. So many Sunday nights growing up spent patiently by my tape deck, finger poised over the ‘record’ button as I made Top 40 mix tapes. Keep spinning the hits Casey Kasem.

“Mr. Kasem…. didn’t invent Top 40 radio, the countdown show, the on-air dedication or the brief performer bio. But the weekly show he introduced on July 4, 1970 …. brought those elements together in a design that was as much psychological as musical.” Continue reading

‘Everything Changes But You’ by Maggie Alderson

Strap in, this is a long post.

Usually when I have the opportunity to go to an author talk, I make sure I’ve READ THE BOOK before I front up to the talk. Usually. But not this time – a few days in Byron Bay and a bunch of nights out got in the way. So, when I trotted down to Readings in Hawthorn to hear all about Everything Changes But You, I didn’t know what to expect (except of course the fact that Maggie always does brilliant, really entertaining talks… that often include handbag discussions as well – yay!).

THE MEETING MAGGIE BIT

I took my Mum with me to the talk. She’s a huge Maggie fan (having read her columns religiously and also because Maggie has “such good hair” – this is high praise indeed from my Mum) but also because on hearing I was going said “I never get to do anything good…” (this is from a woman who has just returned from seven weeks abroad). So, with our best handbags (mine a neon yellow Electra clutch from Mimco) and our newly acquired but yet to be read copies of Everything Changes But You, we hit Readings. Continue reading

‘The GoMo’ by Maggie Alderson

Ready for a short, sweet treat? You need The GoMo by Maggie Alderson – ditch the newspaper or your magazine lunch time reading tomorrow and instead devour this short story.

Jess is having her ‘Golden Moment’ –

“…I’ve finally reached my full potential as a woman. Self-confidence and self-esteem from life experience and professional achievement, perfectly balanced with grown-up sexual allure…. The woman completed. I’m having my Golden Moment.”

When drop-dead gorgeous Adam walks in to Jess’s cafe, it’s love at first sight, but her friend Trina has been reading The Rules and warns her to play it cool. Continue reading

‘Shall We Dance?’ by Maggie Alderson

Readers may be most familiar with Maggie Alderson through her (now discontinued) column in The Age newspaper’s Good Weekend magazine – it ran for her over a decade and was an unrivalled combination of humour, fashion and modern etiquette. I was very cross when it was canned (and made sure I told The Age) – the weekend newspaper is not the same without Maggie. Thankfully for her fans, Alderson keeps a blog, writes novels and is also what I consider Twitter gold – she tweets in the way one should (i.e. heavy on original and funny thoughts and light on links to random stuff).

Apparently Maggie has a new book on the way – in the meantime, I’ve just finished her last one, Shall We Dance?. It’s about Loulou Landers, London’s undisputed Queen of Vintage Fashion, her tempestuous daughter, Theo, and her ‘romance’ with a man who’s barely half her age – Loulou’s just not ready to ‘go cougar’. Meanwhile, Theo is on the verge of her own spectacularly unsuitable affair. Continue reading

Enforced down-time = reading bonanza

I have a little hospital stay coming up. If it weren’t for the pain I’m likely going to experience, I’d be bloody excited about the prospect of four days lying in bed with nothing to do but read.

Pain or not, it’s best to be prepared. So I turned to my reading pile to decide what I’ll take along.

As well as the TBR list I published earlier in the week and also the titles I haven’t yet tackled from a list earlier this year (The Snow Child of course, The Freudian Slip by Marion von Adlerstein and 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami), I’m also adding these six books – Continue reading

Authors that tweet

I recently came across an interesting article in the New York Times about why, or why not, authors tweet.

I unashamedly love Twitter. It’s my only foray into social media and I enjoy the pithiness, punchiness and bite-sized style of information. I follow a handful of authors – Jonathan Tropper, Judy Blume, Bret Easton Ellis, children’s author Oliver Jeffers, Jennifer Weiner, Maggie Alderson and a few more.

What do I expect out of following authors? Honestly, not that much! I like their insights and commentary on everyday and topical stuff – Maggie Alderson’s thoughts on ‘denim on denim’, Jennifer Weiner’s blow-by-blow descriptions of The Bachelor, Easton Ellis’s bizarre rantings and Judy Blume’s little snippets about life in Key West.

So I was interested to read why Jeffrey Eugenides, author of the recently released The Marriage Plot, was not a fan of social media –

“In “A Note From Jeffrey Eugenides to Readers,” he described his joy at meeting them, but concluded by saying he doesn’t know when or if he’ll post on the (Facebook) page again: “It’s better, I think, for readers not to communicate too directly with an author because the author is, strangely enough, beside the point.””

In contrast, author Mat Johnson’s take on Twitter is this –

“Twitter lets me hijack the promotion plane, sidestep the literary establishment and connect directly to my current and potential audience. . . . It’s a meritocracy; if you’re interesting, you get followed.”

Nice. I ought to start following you Mr Johnson.

Looking for authors to follow? Find lists of Twitter handles here, here and here.