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Archive for September, 2015

The excellence of WA Writing…

amandacurtin's avatarlooking up/looking down

Just out, the final issue in the special WA volume of Review of Australian Fiction, guest edited by Laurie Steed. And what a finale, with tense, intriguing stories from David Whish-Wilson and Sam Carmody.

Established author David Whish-Wilson has published three crime novels, two of which (Line of Sight and Zero at the Bone) are set in 1970s Perth. His next, Old Scores, is forthcoming from Fremantle Press in 2016. He is also the author of Perth, in NewSouth Books’ city series. David coordinates the creative writing program at Curtin University.

David is paired with emerging writer Sam Carmody, whose debut novel, The Windy Season, was shortlisted for the 2014 Vogel Award and will be published by Allen & Unwin in 2016. His short fiction and non-fiction have been published widely, including in Griffith Review and ABC’s The Drum. Sam currently lectures…

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Sounds like another good read from WA Writer, Rachael Johns.

writenote1's avatarWrite Note Reviews

THE PATTERSON GIRLS

Author: Rachael Johns
Harlequin MIRA Australia RRP $29.99
Review: Monique Mulligan

The seed of the book that became The Patterson Girls, Rachael Johns’ first foray into contemporary fiction, came from a weed. As Johns tells it, the paddocks around the town where she then lived were covered in what appeared to be a beautiful purple flower. She soon discovered that the flower was an invasive weed known as Paterson’s curse or Salvation Jane … and the word curse stuck with her. The result was The Patterson Girls, a warm and engaging tale about a four sisters and a family curse.

Four sisters return to Meadow Brook in rural South Australia to share Christmas with their bereaved father. Their mother died six months earlier, and after the funeral they all went back to their separate lives: Madeleine in the USA, Lucinda in Perth, Charlie in Melbourne, and…

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World Rhino Day 2015

Well done, let’s celebrate the continuing survival of rhinos.

Tisha Wardlow's avatarFight for Rhinos

Back stateside, after 2 weeks in the bush… we learned so much, met fantastic people with great minds and passion for wildlife, and were able to re-focus as we looked into both current and new strategies in our part in the poaching war.

Starting off in the Hoedspruit Endangered Species Centre (HESC) , Fight for Rhinos sponsored the dehorning of one of  two poaching survivors, and personally sponsored the other. They are well cared for and coming along nicely in their rehabilitation.

DSCF8213 Lions Den & Dingle Dell, poaching survivors at HESC before the dehorning. Photo: Fight for Rhinos

We left HESC feeling satisfied and productive after meeting with such professional and experienced people. As we arrived at the airport, a chopper flew low overhead. A moment later we heard of a possible poaching.

A feeling of dread set in, mind racing, as we wondered about the rhinos we had just seen, both in the Centre and in the bush. Was…

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The Bluebird © Australian Ballet’s “The Sleeping Beauty” 2015 (from Facebook page) Photo: Kate Longley

Page Liked · September 20 ·

“The magic of the Bluebird … The Bluebird Pas de deux is one of the definitive moments of The Sleeping Beauty – there can be no Beauty without Bluebirds! Principal Artists Ako Kondo and Chengwu Guo dance this sensational pas de deux in The Sleeping Beauty!” Photography Kate Longley
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  • Sue Forde Coughlan Always a favourite: of many favourites… may I share my ballet poem? The Prima Ballerina

    She lives in a world of fairy tales,
    all fantasy, happiness and woe.

    Floating across the stage in tulle,
    fine silk or organza.,

    softly pirouettes through the mist,
    or dies upon the snow.

    This is the world of Ballet
    of the Prima Ballerina.

    So lithe and slim, so beautiful,
    so graceful and serene.

    On stage, supremely untouchable
    yet so frail behind the scenes.

    She’s the Queen of the ‘Corps de Ballet’,
    the star with the golden feet,

    dancing her way through ‘Petruska’,
    ‘Swan Lake’ or the ‘Nutcracker Suite’.

    The audience, transfixed with awe,
    watch silently, as in a dream,

    for gripped by suspense and beauty
    – such as they’ve never seen!

    They observe the scenery so real,
    the superbly made costumes,

    but their eyes are fixed on the ‘Bluebird’
    and all it’s fine blue plumes.

    And when the ballet is done,
    And encore after encore taken.

    And baskets and bouquets
    of flowers dispensed….

    There’s a feeling of despair and longing
    at the end of such unforgettable enchantment.

    Frances Macaulay Forde © 1968

#FrancesMForde  #FrancesMacForde  #AustralianBallet   #AB:SleepingBeauty   #TheBluebird  #Ballet  #Beauty  #POEM:ThePrimaBallerina

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“Your life belongs to you, not the web. So be careful about what you decide to share.” Sage advice.

Carly Watters's avatarCarly Watters, Literary Agent

There are many ways to think about internet safety, but with the fall publishing season book launches coming up I wanted to take the time to share my thoughts about staying safe when you’re used to interacting on the web. I consider safety physical or intellectual.

I definitely think everyone clearly knows how dangerous the web can be, but sometimes we all think we’re immune to it and take risks when we don’t know we’re doing so. It’s the thing that happens to *someone else* not us.

5 Steps to Internet (and IRL) Safety and Privacy for Writers:

Tweet or post when you’re leaving somewhere, not when you’re getting there. DM the people you’re meeting up with at the book launch instead of broadcasting it to the world. Instead of tweeting on the way to an event, why not tweet after you’ve gathered your thoughts and maybe taken a picture or…

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What were they thinking?

nickearls's avatarNick Earls

Some schools no longer have teacher-librarians and, the more I see of teacher-librarians, the less sense that makes to me. What’s next? No teachers? Kids turning up to the classroom each morning and inventing the day ahead? Maybe there’s a note on the door about what the curriculum has in mind, maybe there isn’t …

Each time I’m told that a school no longer has a teacher-librarian, I’m told that the school still has a library, as though the building does the job all by itself. I imagine, as usual, classroom teachers are expected to take up the slack and add the library to their already overcrowded list of duties. And kids are taught how to check books out, as if they’ve suddenly been up-skilled, and as if that’s what it is that teacher-librarians do (along with putting them back in the right place, and stopping things getting too noisy).

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030620JuneIrelandORIG (10)

Senses

hear

tender words
questions answers
your current reality

see

furtive glance
visual dance
clever hands and fingers

touch

tentative press
to shy flesh
still clothed in other loves

smell

breathe you in
where’ve you been
through all my loves and life

Frances Macaulay Forde © 2007

From my book “Hidden Capacity ~ a poet’s journey” published in Cork, Ireland, 2003

 

@FrancesMForde  #FrancesMacForde  #POEM:Senses  #Poem  #Ireland  #Romance  #Love  #ExploringPossibilities #HiddenCapacity  #Poetry  #Touch  #Sight  #Sound  #Smells  #Sensory  #SketchingInIreland  #WAWriter

 

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An excellent interview! Love her or hate her writing, you have to respect 30 books and half a billion sales – including 1 million bootlegged in China. Rest in Peace, Jackie.

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James Doogue a writer I admire, posted this onto Facebook 12 hrs ago but I’ve only just read it and I QUOTE: 
Terrorist attacks are unfortunately a fact of life, particularly when perpetrated by young Muslim men. We all have to be a bit more security aware. So how ridiculous is it when we have a teacher in the US who is ridiculed and shamed for thinking a homemade electronic device with a timer on it looked like a bomb. Meanwhile the US President tweets to the boy who made it that it was a ‘cool’ looking clock and invites him to the Whitehouse! How would Obama’s security staff have reacted if that boy had tried to carry that ‘clock’ into the white house on a tour, or walked up to Obama in a public venue with that device in his bag? This President is getting more stupid every day!

Why the hell would you want to make a clock in a briefcase anyway? I would have panicked when I saw this. I don’t believe a 14 year old Muslim boy could be so naive that he couldn’t see that it might look like a bomb. I’m not saying he was making a bomb, but I don’t think it was an accident it looked the way it did. I wouldn’t be surprised if this was a bit of a gag gone wrong. But the PC media are too busy being up-in-arms about possible racial profiling. I would love to see what happened to this kid if that ‘clock’ had gone through airport security. I reckon it is highly unlikely he wouldn’t have been charged with something.

The boy, Ahmed already knew it was dodgy as he admitted that when he had shown his engineering teacher, the engineering teacher had congratulated him but advised him “not to show any other teachers”.

James Doogue's photo.
James Doogue's photo.
    • Surface Tension

       

      A Muslim science teacher in a US school,

      OK’s a student making a clock in a briefcase,

      ‘But don’t show it to the other teachers…’

       

      A ‘gag’, lesson or unconscious irony; perhaps

      deliberate indoctrination of the young – coolness.

      I don’t trust it – I remember recent past mistakes

       

      a belief that no-one could be so cruel, so calculated

      as to murder indiscriminately young, old and us. Two

      planes, three planes, a fourth commandeered, using

       

      our own to kill thousands more.  Some would argue

      retribution for drones strikes targeting terrorists but

      inadvertently innocent civilians encircled in their wake.

       

      Death always starts with an individual; a single thought,

      maybe a child trying to make a father proud, receiving

      a prize from a President for making a briefcase clock.

       

      Frances Macaulay Forde © 2015

       

      @FrancesMForde  #FrancesMacForde  #POEM:SurfaceTension   #Terrorism  #Individual  #Death  #BriefcaseClock  #ObamaPrize  #ShortMemories

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Art - Sue - Sun Rise2WEB

‘City Scape’ FMF © 2003

 

Boxes

 

so much time

spent in boxes

hemming minds

hearts horizons

 

so many boxes

to spend time in

we choose

others dictate

 

boxes to play

or earn a living

sky-high mine deep

beach view asleep

 

boxed we’re born

returned again

bush delivery or

crispy clean

 

symbolic boxes

that drive insane

chasing a dream

others ideals

 

boxing all pleasure

imprisoning pain

impossible striving

material gain

 

in every life

the very last box

delivers a eulogy

all gather to see

 

illustrating a life

lived in boxes

 

Frances Macaulay Forde © 2009

 

@FrancesMForde  #FrancesMacForde  #POEM:Boxes  #Poem  #ART:CityScape  #Trapped #CityBoxes #BoxLikeHouses  #Poetry  #CitySkyscrapers  #Boxes  #Limited  #Existance  #LivingInBoxes

 

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