But the intention of
the blog was to put online material from what Jolisa Gracewood on Public
Address last year generously
called “the defunct – but dead funky – literary mag Quote Unquote”. The magazine ran for 44 issues from June 1993 to
March 1997, and when my friend Rob O’Neill observed that these days “if it’s
not online it doesn’t exist”, I thought – yes. For most people, if you can’t
Google it, it might as well never have existed. So I have been posting material
that may still be of interest. There are interviews with New Zealand and
overseas authors, articles by New Zealand writers on everything from motorbikes
to dogs, reminiscences of writers and artists, a bunch of stuff.
Because I don’t have
the original Word files any more, I have to reconstruct each piece before
posting – it takes about half an hour per original page so a major story can
take two or three hours, which is why there have been only 40 so far. Plus I
always ask the writer’s permission – photographers and illustrators too – which
takes even more time. (Coming soon: Elizabeth Knox on Marilyn Duckworth! And,
if I can find her and get her approval, Anita McNaught on Oscar Kightley and
David Fane!)
When you run a blog you
can see where readers come from and it makes it all worthwhile to see how many
people around the world have read Iain Sharp on James K Baxter, Kevin Ireland
on Frank Sargeson, Nigel Cox on Maurice Gee, Barbara Else on Annie Proulx, Tim
Wilson on Sam Hunt, Carroll du Chateau on Alan Duff, Michael King and Louise
Callan on Robin Morrison, Peter Bland on Bill Manhire and so on.
So this is the 1000th
post. What to do? How to mark the occasion? Thanks to David Thompson,
that’s
easy
– with
a video of a frog:
In between blogging
content from the magazine, I put up other stuff just to keep the thing alive –
whatever interests me and may entertain friends and others
(hence
all the music), plus the occasional comment on NZ literary matters.
I purely *love* that!
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Congrats, Stratters! (I always thought you just cut & pasted the QunQ articles).
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