Melbourne Writers Festival 2019 – the last bit

I’m hopelessly late reporting on my last two 2019 Melbourne Writers Festival events, but both were fantastic and worth a mention.

Corey White – The Prettiest Horse in the Glue Factory

I think my favourite session this Festival was comedian Corey White talking with Sarah Krasnostein about his memoir, The Prettiest Horse in the Glue Factory. Continue reading

Miles Franklin 2016 Shortlist

miles-franklin-shortlist-2016

The Miles Franklin Literary Award shortlist was announced today (via Twitter).

Thoughts… Well I know who I’d like to win (Wood)… And I’m glad it wasn’t a complete repeat of the Stella shortlist…

I’ll try to read the other books before the winner is announced so that when I make loud-judgy-comments they’re at least based on informed opinion.

Reading the Stella Prize Shortlist – Hope Farm by Peggy Frew

hope-farm-peggy-frew

Okay. Clearly I don’t ‘get’ Peggy Frew.

It’s all ticker-tape parades and celebrations on Goodreads for Frew’s second novel, Hope Farm.  And then there’s my two star rating, sitting alongside the glowing four and five-star reviews. Continue reading

The Stella Prize 2016 Longlist

Stella-Prize-2016-longlist

I’m not a book-prize-tart* but I have warm-fuzzies for the Stella Prize.

The 2016 Stella Prize longlist was announced half an hour ago, so this news is fresh via Twitter. Here ’tis –

1. THE WOMEN’S PAGES by Debra Adelaide
2. THE OTHER SIDE OF THE WORLD by Stephanie Bishop
3. PANTHERS AND THE MUSEUM OF FIRE by Jen Craig
4. SIX BEDROOMS by Tegan Bennett Daylight
5. HOPE FARM by Peggy Frew
6. A FEW DAYS IN THE COUNTRY: AND OTHER STORIES by Elizabeth Harrower
7. A GUIDE TO BERLIN by Gail Jones
8. THE WORLD WITHOUT US by Mireille Juchau
9. A SHORT HISTORY OF RICHARD KLINE by Amanda Lohrey
10. ANCHOR POINT by Alice Robinson
11. THE NATURAL WAY OF THINGS by Charlotte Wood
12. SMALL ACTS OF DISAPPEARANCE: ESSAYS ON HUNGER by Fiona Wright

I’ve only read one but have another four lined up in the TBR stack. And I’m busting to read Small Acts…

It’s going to be a great reading year.

*I just made that up but it’s someone who only reads book-prize winners so that they can pontificate loudly at dinner parties.

‘House of Sticks’ by Peggy Frew

I was looking forward to House of Sticks by Peggy Frew – it was getting rave reviews, including this enticing description of Frew’s style – “Helen Garner meets Henry James”.

I love Helen Garner! I really love Henry James!

Oh dear. I didn’t love House of Sticks.

It’s the story of Bonnie, a musician who gave up performing to become a stay-at-home mum. She tells herself she has no regrets, but sometimes the isolation and the relentless demands of three small children threaten to swamp the love between Bonnie and her partner, Pete.

I won’t dwell too much, short of saying I found the characters obvious and one-dimensional. Frew’s attempt to build tension around the character of Doug, a family friend, seemed contrived. Yet, just when that part of the story is progressing, it falls away and other characters become the focus.

Peppered throughout the story are Frew’s close observations of everyday life –

“Pete passed her the cup, and she fitted it to the thermos and wound it tightly, feeling the seal take hold.”

Again, I wasn’t a fan. These little details didn’t read seamlessly with the rest of the text. Maybe if I was a Year 12 student using this book as a study text I’d look for all the nice analogies that are no doubt buried within the pages. But I’m not a Year 12 student, I’m a mum who was looking forward to a good beach read. Bummer.

Read House of Sticks with an ice-cold Vitamin Water – you’ll need the energy.

1/5 (in other words, stick to Garner and James).