Just back from five days on a high-country
sheep station (Lake Heron, a lovely place and totally
recommended to anyone looking for a terrifying 4WD drive across river beds),
just a range away from the setting of Mona Anderson’s A River Rules My Life. Yes, that is us
above.
A Financial
Timesprofile of German chancellor Angela Merkel. Quote unquote:
She went into politics, she says, because
she was convinced that eastern Germany needed more people in parliament who had
never been politically active.
Toby Manhire in the Listenerouts
Alan Bollard, former governor of the Reserve Bank, as a novelist. The Rough Mechanical: the man who could
is available
as a download from Amazon. Stephen Franks likes it. So do I, having
read it in manuscript a few years ago: when I met Alan subsequently I badgered
him to publish it, so I hope I may claim a small degree of credit for its
e-appearance. The protagonist is closely based on the New Zealand-born
economist Bill Phillips, deviser of the Phillips curve
which traces the relationship between inflation and unemployment. Some say that
if Phillips had lived (he died at 60 in 1975) he might have won the Nobel for
economics. Be that as it may, it’s quite a feat to make economics interesting,
and even more so to make engrossing fiction out of it.
Lunch
with Les Murray. He likes Greek food, not so much the wine. And his new book is
a must-buy. I spent a couple of hours with him a few years ago as his minder.
Best job I ever had. (h/t Bill Manhire)
Ten vids of great
jazz performances: Holiday, Brubeck, Baker, Ellington, Reinhardt, Coltrane,
Davis, Monk, Evans, and Mingus with Dolphy.
Philip Matthews on hope
in Christchurch, plus a diary of the year. Quote unquote:
An official earthquake memorial, as
outlined in the blueprint, is still years away, but local artist Pete Majendie
took the initiative and presented a more spontaneous and low-budget one. He
collected 185 chairs, one for each of the dead, painted them white, and put
them in rows on the grounds of the Oxford Tce Baptist Church.
You could read it either of two ways.
Either the chairs had been recently vacated by the 185 people who lost their
lives last year or the empty chairs waited for the people to return, perhaps in
a kind of general resurrection of the dead. Or, as Majendie said, you could
simply sit in one of the chairs and contemplate.
The poor will always be with us. Let them see
trees. From the same source, why recycling paper doesn’t
work.
The soul/gospel singer Fontella
Bass died on Boxing Day. She is best known for “Rescue Me”, a 1965 hit
which she co-wrote and fought for decades to be paid for. Here she is with Lyle
Lovett – yes, Lyle Lovett, because country and soul are a natural fit –
performing a sparkling version of “Don’t Mess Up a Good Thing”:
A wonderful
piece about wood carving. David Esterly
was engaged to recreate a work by Grinling Gibbons destroyed in the 1986 fire
at Hampton Court, and wrote a book
about the process. When in London I always visit St James Picadilly which has
some of his finest work: see here for photos.
It is astonishing. (h/t Grahame Sydney)
Dear diary: a review of Ruth Winstone’s anthology of 20th-century political diaries. Quote unquote:
Beatrice Webb, a founder of the London
School of Economics and the Fabian Society, and married to a Labour MP, mused
in 1922 on whether when English children were “dying from lack of milk”, one
should extend “the charitable impulse” to Russian and Chinese children who, if
saved this year, might anyway die next. Besides, she continued, there was “the
larger question of whether those races are desirable inhabitants” and
“obviously” one wouldn’t “spend one’s available income” on “a Central African
negro”.
A brilliant crime novel, Gun Machine by Warren Ellis, published on 1 January
2013 by Mulholland (in New
Zealand, it’s Hachette). Fantastic premise: minutes after his partner is killed
beside him a New York cop finds an apartment full of guns, nothing but guns,
arranged on the walls and floor in rows and spirals. Turns out that each one is
connected to an unsolved murder – and then it gets really weird, in a First Nation way. Fast, funny and inventive, with
great characters. I hope it’s the start of a series.
So here is Warren
Ellis with Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds performing “The Weeping Song” at
Glastonbury in, probably, 2009. That’s Ellis on violin and beard:
The
Auckland University Press Anthology of New Zealand Literature, edited by Jane Stafford and Mark Williams (AUP, $75)
This must be one of the worst jobs in the
world: making an anthology of New Zealand literature. You will be criticised
for who is in and who is out. It would be bad enough with an anthology of
fiction or of poetry or of non-fiction or of drama, but this book covers all
four genres.
Or so it claims. The back cover says: “In
fiction and non-fiction, letters and speeches, stories and song, the editors
unearth the diverse voices of the New Zealand imagination. And for years to
come this anthology will be our guide to what’s worth reading – and why.”
This is an AUP book so it looks beautiful
and has immaculate editing and typography. It weighs two kilograms. Solid. There
are not one but two ribbon bookmarks bound in – classy, and very useful in a
reference book. The publisher has done a fantastic job. What about the contents?
For an anthology there is a huge amount of
work getting permissions –and even more work in not getting permissions. I have
no idea whether the editors or the publisher had to perform these negotiations
but clearly they were arduous – and how frustrating that they were unsuccessful
with Janet Frame, Vincent O’Sullivan and Alan Duff. In Frame’s case, the Listenertells
us that the editors wanted to use “some poems and extracts from Frame’s
novel and autobiographies [...] But the trust would only agree to their using
complete short stories, poems or non-fiction from the In Her Own Words collection”.
O’Sullivan is for me our greatest living
writer: poet, novelist, playwright, biographer, editor of Mansfield and a fine
anthologist (if you ever see a copy of the Oxford
Anthology of New Zealand Writing Since 1945 he co-edited with Mac Jackson,
grab it). But he refused permission for any of his work to be included. He told
the Listener that:
There are some wonderful things in this
anthology […] But it is also narrow and prescriptive. To be in the crowd scenes
for the spectacle of the new tablets brought down from Mt Kelburn did not much
interest me.
That last sentence is classic O’Sullivan
and shows what loss to the book he is. I don’t yet know why Alan Duff refused
permission but I bet his objection was like the Frame trust’s: that he thought
the proposed selection didn’t show him at his best.
Whatever the difficulties in the
negotiations, an anthology of New Zealand literature that doesn’t include these
three writers does not present “what’s worth reading”. Imagine a book on New
Zealand art without McCahon, Hotere and Hanly.
There are other omissions. Andrew Stone in
the Heraldcites Judith Binney, Peter Bland,
Laurence Fearnley, Charlotte Grimshaw, Bruce Jesson, Stephanie Johnson, Michael
King, Shonagh Koea, Ngaio Marsh, James McNeish, Sarah Quigley, Anne Salmond,
Tina Shaw and Chad Taylor.
Paula Green in Metro (not online) adds Kirsty Gunn, Kelly Ana Morey, Carl Nixon,
Claudia Orange, Bob Orr and Vivienne Plumb.
And I would add: Graham Billing, William Brandt, David Burton, John Cranna, Joy Cowley, Martin Edmond,
James George, AK Grant, Jack Lasenby and Jo Randerson.
Not that all of the above ought as of right to be in an anthology
of New Zealand literature, just that they are all candidates and looking at who
and what is in, one wonders why they are not. But as Steven Wright says, “You
can’t have everything. Where would you put it?”
The editors did not have infinite space and
had to make their selection. They explain in their introduction their reasoning
for their inclusions and exclusions. But the introduction is nonsense, such
nonsense as only an academic could write. For example:
For the settler, authoring place becomes
more difficult once you have unloaded your piano and your copies of Ossian and
Wordsworth on the beach and you look around.
That is the stupidest sentence I have read
all year. Leaving aside the
question of whether “authoring” is a word, who in the 1840s would have had a copy of Ossian? My wife’s forebears
arrived in 1841 in Wellington, and a year later my forebears arrived in
Auckland: there were wharves. No early settler could have brought a piano, not
even for ready money – those ships were tiny with little room for the
passengers let alone their possessions. Just because a piano was landed at
Karekare in a film does not
mean that this happened. The editors are specialists in early New Zealand
writing so must know better. Perhaps this is their little joke.
But what of their selections? Some of the
earliest writers never came here – looking at you, Bronte, Browning, Headley
and Seward – and EG Wakefield’s piece was written in an English prison. It’s
not a bad idea to show the fantasies people had of New Zealand but is this the
place? No. Do these fantasies say anything about New Zealand? No. Have they anything
to do with NZ literature? No. This is “distance looks our way” stuff, and
didn’t we stop caring about that decades ago? Fine to include this material in
a book about the cultural cringe, but
not here.
Other odd inclusions: the Treaty of
Waitangi, the Mazengarb report, Captain Cook’s journal – none of these was
intended as literature. Nor were the Edmonds
Cookbook of 1914 or the Yates
Gardening Guide of 1897 – each of these selections is presented as a “found
poem” which is sheer self-indulgence on the editors’ part. If these texts are
there because of their historical significance, their making a difference, isn’t
there a case for Donna Awatere’s Maori
Sovereignty?
More travesties: a poem by Wystan Curnow
and a “prose poem” by Len Lye. There is room for three poems each by Anne
French and Anna Jackson but only for two by Brian Turner and none by Peter
Bland.
Which brings us back to exclusions. Poenamo by John Logan Campbell (reissued
last month by Godwit) is lively and amusing about trading with Ngati Whatua
and is one of the best accounts of early Auckland. Its absence is baffling.
Another startling non-fiction omission is
Dick Scott, whose 1954 The Parihaka Story
(expanded in 1975 as Ask That Mountain)
was hugely influential on Pakehas’ understanding of land rights and race
relations. Contrast this with the Auckland
Star columnist Hori who presumably is included to show how beastly Pakehas
could be about Maoris. Why include this while excluding Scott and Roderick
Finlayson who was perhaps the first Pakeha to write fiction sympathetic about
Maoris? How does this fit with the claim of “Aotearoa’s major writing”? Many of
our non-academic historians are over-rated, not least by themselves, but Scott
and Michael King were serious literary writers. They should be here.
Numbers: there are 1050 pages of
selections, plus introduction and end-matter (author biographies, index etc) to
make 1164 pages in all. The last decade or so takes up 128 pages, an
eighth of the total available space. In a book that opens with material from
the 18th century, that is an odd foreshortening. The 1950s get 100 pages; the
70s get 80. The most recent piece is an extract from Hamish Clayton’s 2011
novel Wulf; the introduction quotes
Tina Makereti ’s essay “An Englishman, an Irishman and a Welshman walk into a
Pa” from Sport 40 earlier this year.
Both are outstanding and I also like the five pages from Dylan Horrocks’s graphic
novel Hicksville, published here in
2010. (Fun fact: Hamish Clayton’s MA thesis was on Hicksville; Dylan’s dad Roger edits books about Len Lye. New
Zealand: land of two degrees of separation.)
Complaints about too many VUP and AUP
authors may reflect selection bias, but their dominance is unavoidable in an
anthology that includes a lot of recent poetry.For fiction it is less clear-cut. Many distinctive voices from other
publishers are missing. A writer friend who is in the anthology so is not whingeing
observes:
If you count the last 90 entries i.e. the
21st century, 74 are writers published exclusively by AUP or VUP. There are
about 2 Huia, 3 Penguin, 1 Steele Roberts, 1 Random House.
In fiction, there have been grizzles about
Charlotte Grimshaw being excluded but I can’t see it matters much about people
who started publishing in the last decade or two – yes, Grimshaw is good as
are Fearnley, Morey, Taylor and others, but it is too soon to tell who
will last. Picking so many current writers is a hostage to fortune, as thisPaleofuture article shows: it gives a
list of authors whom readers of Colophon,
a “magazine for book collectors”, thought in 1936 would be “the ten authors
whose works would be considered classics in the year 2000”.
What is at least as interesting as who is
in and who is out is what is in –
that is, the pieces chosen to represent the writer. Keith Sinclair in as a
poet, not as an historian. The two Louis Johnson poems are from the 50s but
most admirers regard his late work as his best. Authors aren’t necessarily the
best judges of what is their best work, but I know several who feel misrepresented
by early work but agreed to be in because it’s better in than out.
Strangest of all, non-fiction peters out:
there are only two examples from the 1990s (Geoff Park and Peter Wells) and one
from the 2000s (Harry Ricketts). This is odd – did we really stop writing
interesting non-fiction 20 years ago? No. Two words: Martin Edmond.
Poetry and fiction dominate the last two
decades, which is one reason for the preponderance of AUP and VUP authors,
since those two houses dominate poetry. But it is odd to have the final pages
so dominated by them.
This may be the last printed anthology of
its kind – e-books and university course packs are easier to organise with
different versions for different courses. The idea of a large hardback with
poetry, fiction and non-fiction (and a tiny bit of drama) from several
centuries is probably out-dated. Digital lets publishers and course designers
slice and dice by genre, century, decade even. The master copy of the next
anthology will have the full contents but what students see will be just a
fraction of that. This is not a bad thing – it makes it affordable for the
students, and the authors will get paid. Authors and trusts will be more
permissive about permissions with a less prescriptive selection. Digital is a disruptive
technology – three cheers for that – so a book like this is a dinosaur. We will
not see its like again.
Finally, drama. This is fiendishly
difficult to show in extracts, especially alongside works of poetry and fiction
which were written to stand alone. It is simply inadequate to have only 20
pages in total from five playwrights: Mason, Shadbolt, McGee, Grace-Smith and
Rajan. Why no Roger Hall? The opening line from Glide Time would be apt: “Wellington, I hate you!”
So here is Leo Kottke performing Ry
Cooder’s “Available Space”:
Like most people I had never heard of party
planner Pippa Middleton before her sister Kate married into the Windsors and we
saw Pippa’s
rear view as the wedding party entered the church. I’m sure that even
devoutly heterosexual women would have gone “Phwoar”, as did every even faintly
heterosexual male that I know.
Since then the media have gone
mad. First they build you up, and then they knock you down. Most recently
there was a chorus of derision aimed at her first book. This may well be
justified – I haven’t seen the thing – but she responds
with good humour in the Diary column of the Spectator’s
Christmas issue:
I have been much teased for my book, Celebrate: A Year Of British Festivities For
Families And Friends. Lots of journalists are saying that my advice is
glaringly obvious. A spoof twitter account called @pippatips offers such pearls
as: ‘Enjoy a glass of water by getting a clean glass and pouring in water from
a tap or bottle.’ It’s all good fun, I know, and I realise that authors ought
to take criticism on the chin. But in my defence, let me say this: Celebrate is meant to be a guide to
party planning and, as such, it has to cover the basics. If I were to write a
cookery book, for instance, I would be compelled to say that, to make an
omelette, you have to break at least one egg. […] Or maybe I should write a
sequel and call it Bottoms Up?
She
sounds a good sort. The next post will be about New
Zealand literature, I promise.
Lutes galore: last
time it was Anthony Rooley playing Dowland, now it is Paul O’Dette playing
Lord Herbert of Cherbury’s Lute
Book.
Lovely
music and Herbert (1583-1648) was
the very definition of a Renaissance man – composer, theologian,
diplomat, soldier, poet (born
at Eyton-on-Severn, he was a Shropshire lad and George Herbert was his
brother) and a bit of a
shagger (his autobiography is described as an “amusing
narrative, too much occupied, however, with his duels and amorous adventures”) – but the portrait on the cover makes him look like Waikato Times columnist Joshua
Drummond in a frock. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.
Today I bought copies of Maxine Alterio’s Lives
We Leave Behind and Bianca Zander’s
The
Girl Below to give to family members on the 25th.Epic fail with X and
Y.
It is titled Civilisation and his publisher, Awa Press, calls
him a “scavenger and social lodestone”. I don’t know about that but I look
forward to reading the book.Steve received a $35,000 grant
from CLL (now CLNZ) in 2010 to write Civilisation, which then had the working
title New Zealand: The Biography:
‘The book aims to show’, says Braunias
‘that New Zealanders are a passionate people with a sense of profound – and
sometimes profoundly troubled – sense of belonging to where they live.’
Yes. I had been expecting a novel after he was
awarded a $20,000 Sargeson fellowship in 2009 to write one but we must be
grateful for what we receive. No doubt the novel is still a work in progress.
So here is John Mayall in 1970 with “The Laws Must
Change” from Turning
Point. Mayall had previously fronted loud electric blues bands – he
launched the careers of guitar heroes Eric Clapton, Peter Green and Mick Taylor
– so the album’s title reflects the nature of this new music: quiet. There was
no drummer: apart from Mayall’s vocals and harmonica there was simply a bass
(Steve Thompson), flute/sax(Johnny
Almond) and acoustic guitar (Jon Mark). And Jon Mark, you may recall, lives in
New Zealand now. When Steve Braunias lived in Eastbourne he inherited Jon
Mark’s PO box and received his mail and opened it. He wrote a Listener column about this in 2003. One
reader was unhappy.
That is Paul McCartney (Beatle: guitar and
vocals) with Dave Grohl, Krist Novolesic and Pat Smear (Nirvana: drums, bass,
guitar) at the Hurricane Sandy benefit concert on 12.12.12, performing “Cut Me
Some Slack”. Readers who think of McCartney as the cuddly composer/singer of
“Yesterday” and “Mull of Kintyre” may be surprised by his raw vocal but as David Hepworth observes:
McCartney, whether you like him or not, has
worked in more musical idioms over a longer period of time than anyone else and
therefore he’s the last person about whom you should ever say “but I never
realised he could do that”. Every shade of pop and rock and roll, dance music,
sound collages, show tunes, classical, film scores, kids songs and “Give
Ireland Back To The Irish”. He’s done the lot. Nobody would claim it’s all been
uniformly brilliant but he’s always been equal to the job and very often he’s
shown mastery.
Plus, if one living performer could be said
to have invented the art of screaming in front of a rock band it was Paul
McCartney. He did that with “I’m Down”, “She’s A Woman”, “Helter Skelter” and
plenty of other recordings and he did it long before anybody even thought of
putting up the discredited polytechnic that is indie rock.
No, not my review – not yet – but Mark Broatch tells me (and his other
followers on Twitter) that an anthology of New Zealand literature is being planned
that will include all the people left out of the AUP one.
That will be quite a substantial volume.
In other bookworld news, Danyl McLauchlan of the
Dim-Post blog has a novel
coming from VUP in July. It is called Unspeakable
Secrets of the Aro Valley and it is really good.
A moving interview with Peter Bland in
Mount Eden’s free monthly mag The Garden,
on the occasion of his forthcoming Collected
Poems 1956-2011. How amazing that an older poet could be on a magazine
cover and have six pages inside devoted to him. Great photos, too. The magazine
is not online but you can download the PDF here.
Chris Bourke on the late Dave Brubeck’s “Maori Blues”.
The composer Jonathan
Harvey has died. His music is lovely, refined – he was the nearest to an
English Boulez, only kinder, gentler and a lot more Buddhist. The Guardian obit is here.
There are good
samples on YouTube.
What
publishers want. The Aussies, anyway, but probably it’s much the same here.
Having sex in a library – Nadia Cho recommends
the religion section. As always, the commenters at David Thompson’s blog
are as funny and snarky as he is. Quote unquote:
When you hear them, get round there with
your mobile and film them. Put it straight on YouTube. Then we’ll see just how
transgressive they really are.
Cactus Kate queriesMetro’s award of #1 Aucklander We Love to Wendyl Nissen, the
citation of which ends “Wendyl is the Aunt Daisy of our times.” I’m sure they
meant well but what those of us of a certain age remember about Aunt Daisy is
hearing her one morning on the wireless saying what a lovely morning it was in
Wellington: “The sun is shining right up my back passage.”
Speaking of Wellington, Denis Welch has
been awarded
the Creative NZ Randell Cottage
writer in residence fellowship. He is working on a biography of Norman Kirk – a
great project and surprising that no one thought of it before. I was on the
panel that selected him – it was a close-run thing as there were many other
fine writers and projects. I had to declare an interest: “I used to work with
him. But even so…”
The latest issue of the Author, the NZ Society of Author’s
magazine, has a six-page section on the Frankfurt Book Fair and how successful
NZSA’s stand was. Good to hear – but normally one thanks one’s sponsors.
Creative NZ requires it; the Sargeson Trust has always been punctilious about
acknowledging Buddle Findlay. But there is no mention anywhere in the Author that Copyright Licensing NZ kicked in $10,000
to enable NZSA’s attendance plus the cost of designing the stand. So NZSA
members will have no idea that all this was made possible by CLNZ. If I was one
of the CLNZ directors who voted to grant NZSA that $10,000 I’d be miffed that
the grant was not acknowledged. Oh that’s right – I am.
Another brief obituary,
with more recent information, and a terrific 10-minute video interview, from
last year I think, uploaded on 5 September 2011 at NZ On Screen. It is more about her work
in TV than in magazines, and really captures her wit, warmth and sharpness. The promo reads:
Marcia Russell is an award-winning
journalist and TV writer/producer with a long career in New Zealand media. Her
first television role was as host of the 1970s talk show Speakeasy. Russell moved on to news and current affairs roles with
TVNZ, and helped set up the fledgling TV3 News department in the late 1980s.
She has been involved with some of the most notable documentary series produced
in New Zealand such as Landmarks and The New Zealand Wars. Russell produced
the four- part documentary series Revolution,
which chronicled the rise of the Lange Government and its impact on the New
Zealand economy and society. Russell was awarded an OBE for services to
journalism in 1996 and was a recipient of the Academy of Film and Television’s
Lifetime Achievement Award in 2003.
Fun fact: Denis Glover’s long-forgotten
novel Men of God, published in
October 1978 by the Dunsmore Press (“Take one plausible but endearing old lag
just out of prison and three gentlemen of the cloth faced with the problem of a
collapsed steeple…”), was dedicated to Marcia. I asked her about that once and she got
a bit cagey. I had the strong impression that the old goat was besotted with
her, understandably, and that she was less than thrilled by this – equally understandably.
I am not sure what language this website is in – Polish,
at a guess – but here is its page on the distinguished English journalist and
author Francis Wheen, who has been mentioned here before. This particular page is in English, Jim, but not as we know it. I will
quote the whole thing because it is a bit special, because it shows why we
need editors and proofreaders, and because I can:
FRANCIS WHEEN
Astonishing scientific advances in comrade
wheen save. Hignfy se gordon ramsey francis decade that finds the . Seen more
than any sex or violence in idiot proof. bahamas hair braiding, Nation of jun
been astonishing. ratings and passing frenzies . Explains how obscure, by
newspapers, and karl marx, argues that. Ranging discussion with the stones to
that mar se. Eye, explains how mao, anthony holdenWith new statesman, trade in
idiot proof. Mass francis , pp se gordon ramsey francis wheen . Francis wheens
trauma in it hitchens outside . Seen more scandal since works. Drawn in a short
history of transformed. Expert predictions fail apr statesman, trade in . Seems
that of a highly francis wheen. pp, visit francis been lost his expansionist
genocidal. Into an army family have. Jumbo diary francis how obscure . s films,
francis eric hobsbawm who has part seventies. But arguably sep several books.
Birth to an what about. Long after may archive in praises francis wheen writer.
Gordon ramsey francis wheen presens. Mischief and karl marxs . nd january into
an imprint of a great. Biography of review by feb fine mixture of thinking .
Search engine that finds the according to aug compared to chairman. Impressive
private book about francis wheens dissection of jul were. Extracted, painted a
great selection of francis wheen writer. Marx and reviews of detail, francis
wheen. Jaw droppingly brilliant account of may ignorance . influence on ja aug
year for karl marx and working. February twentieth some with crystal balls up
with the . Site aug pick, no matter how mumbo jumbo conquered. People, a sep
shop . Tweets following painted a genial and karl. Site aug book, the s vs the
world. Listeners sep books tom driberg his archive in essex francis violence.
Jesus autor mar brittilinen kirjailija. Tammikuuta r part barnes noble francis
wheen, author this. Connections drawn in a british journalist writer. Hahs and
was named columnist francis key personalities . Outside the seventies
hilariously reveals the golden days indeed the author section. Watch later
francis to navigation, marx gaps in idiot proof. During his archive in there
have. Cold karl later francis marx, whose influence on millions . Year for karl
se gordon ramsey. Tom driberg his life and journalist, was born january into.
Imprint of several national newspapers, and journalist and feb . English, royal
in store did you know that. Reveals the offices of may morgan. Se dermot morgan
francis autor. Her friends were appalled but others, such as being an author. .
Lurched from among years ago into . Discussion with essex francis there. At our
would be spies us a e book about. Argues that of the story of a highly francis
wheen winner. Predictions fail apr golden days indeed the s was killed. Apr
francis, and shop for . By francis wheens brilliantly comic portrait of das
kapital is organized common. Stycznia through this would be bad as colin
wilson. Title karl marx and broadcaster, and generous soul . Mladic claims he
is advocated by eye deputy. Paranoia francis obsession francis wheen
brilliantly comic portrait of britains. Web section web section web section .
of modern is but, jul cold. Prize, evokes the first comprehensive. Vote jul now
francis . , pp jaw droppingly brilliant and broadcaster . Should vote jul
genocidal drive results . Arguably sep gordon ramsey francis winner. Non
fiction book collections has written . Which this stunning book, the author who
has shop new lower. rubens baroque art, visit francis wheen, author who received. Paul
foots distinctive online shop new statesman, trade in store. Thought it francis
mladic claims he . To most peoples way of born on millions . Nick hornby did
you can trade . Paul foots distinctive online shop for how essex francis
friends were. Governments lurched from a major. Scandal since few years.
Written for all francis late spring . On pick, no matter how columnist of books
m, people, a . Bad as one of several national newspapers, and . Antics of karl
have been. Hobsbawm influence on millions of . Antics of may biography of the
most brilliant. Can hear paul foots distinctive. Educated at our friend fiona
gruber. Crystal balls up to that of books. Account of francis wheen say why
expert predictions fail. Pp, , pp lurched from crisis vs . Were appalled but
others, such as colin wilson, thought it francis discussion. prices on a wide
ranging discussion. Se dermot morgan francis nation . Hornby did you can trade
in idiot proof, columnist of thinking. For the world, karl marx, from
wikipedia, the oct . historic pubs square tattoo denis pietton dwayne arnold
edward libbey braun brewers usda shirt mr t facepalm bank windhoek pls
financial who saved who surfing wales mapa zaragoza excited bored tyson coleman
Francis comments on Facebook: “It’s
official: I am H C Earwicker.”
Yes, yes, the book reviews I promised are
in the works. But gainful employment calls, and tomorrow I go to Auckland for
two days of meetings with, in order: a book designer; my legal advisers; lunch
with the poets; three women friends from the publishing industry (Soul Bar, I’m
saying); my favourite magazine publisher (dinner); and Creative New Zealand.
Also, there is a big party being held by a big publisher to fit in somewhere. So,
reviews will be posted later this week when I recover.
In other news, Home Paddock reminds
us that it was on this day in 1910 that neon lighting was first publicly
demonstrated, at the Paris Motor Show. So here is Alex Chilton with the Box
Tops performing “Neon Rainbow” at the 2009 Hoboken Spring Arts & Music
Festival. He died less than a year later, on 17 March 2010, aged 59. When he
was 16 he and the original Box Tops had an international hit with “The Letter”;
“Neon Rainbow” followed in 1967. Both sounded fantastic on my cheap little
transistor radio. Later he was with Big Star, a band then and now revered by
musicians (such as REM) and critics but not so much by record buyers – even Chilton
thought they were overrated. An intermittent but always interesting solo career
followed and he died unexpectedly just before he was due to perform at a Big
Star reunion. The New York Times
obituary is here,
the LA Times one here.
For the Observer,
Kitty Empire reviews the second Rolling Stones’ 50th anniversary concert at O2. She considers that not
only is Eric Clapton “the smuggest of all guitar heroes”, but also:
The privilege of new forms such as rock is
that their originators are still here to be witnessed, and there is a deep
satisfaction to be had in watching the 20th century's equivalents of Chaucer or
Palestrina or Thespis run through their material.
Yes, the Stones are likened to Chaucer,
Palestrina and Thespis.
You know, the first actor and first playwright, sixth century BC Greek guy. That
Thespis.
Terrible
news from the Herald – Marcia Russell
died this morning. There will be obituaries elsewhere from people who knew her
better than I did. All I can say is that she was hugely important in New
Zealand journalism, not only for being the editor of Thursday but that would be enough. Her work elsewhere was
outstanding – I hope she gets the credit she deserves for TV3 news. She was also a
wonderful colleague for me at the Listener
and Cue, and ever after was fantastic
company.
If you have a manuscript in your bottom
drawer, or even on your desk, here’s your chance to donate to a good cause and
maybe win some excellent professional advice. I’m a bit late in passing on this
email from my Northland colleague Lesley Marshall, a vastly experienced book
editor and manuscript assessor, but there are still two weeks to go:
As I’ve been doing for some years now, I’m
offering a Christmas raffle for a critique in memory of my son, with funds to
go to Te Puna Women’s Refuge.
To enter, simply send a cheque (made out to
Te Puna) to me (Editline, 20 Beverley Cres, RD 9 Whangarei 0179), and I’ll put
you in the draw. Alternatively, you can direct debit money into Te Puna’s
account (Account: 123101 0056429 00; name: Te Puna o Te Aroha Women’s Refuge)
and let me know what you’ve paid them so I know how many chances to give you.
If an overseas writer wants to enter they can donate to their local refuge
equivalent.
I’ll do the draw on 16 December so that
gives you over a month to get your entries in. The critique is for a novel or
any similar piece of work, and the winner can send it any time in the next
year, either on paper or by email. The costs for entries are as follows:
I hope the refuge makes lots of money – I
know they get very short of food during the festive season, though one year
they used the money to create a children’s playground for the families there,
and another year they bought clothes for the children. Whatever they use it
for, rest assured you’re creating a lot of joy with your entries.
A heartfelt thank you from both me and the
refuge.
I thoroughly recommend this as both a cause
and a chance – any writer would benefit from a critique from Lesley. My
colleagues and I at Write Right charge
$800 for an assessment of a standard-length manuscript, so getting one from
Lesley for $20 is a Very Good Deal.