Ahh, the sound of Bells at Angelus, always make me think of Ireland.
Isla Fisher has always been a favorite comedy actress since I first saw her in Wedding Crashers – the way she delivered the line “I’ll find you” is forever engraved on my memory.
So huge congratulations: ‘The 2016 recipient of the AACTA Trailblazer Award is Australian actress Isla Fisher. The Award will be presented to Isla at the 6th AACTA Awards presented by Foxtel in Sydney on Wednesday 7 December 2016, televised on Channel 7 at 8.30pm, with encore screenings on Foxtel.’ : 6th AACTA Awards Presented by Foxtel
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Where does the rarest of all rhinos live?
…Ujung Kulon National Park, in the western tip of Indonesia. It is also one of the most densely populated areas on Earth AND one of most volcanically active as well.
Java’s volcanoes have left their mark on the Javan rhinoceros’ fate in many ways.
They gave the island its immense fertility, rich enough to feed the fast-growing population; that is until man began to poach them. Man drove the rhino to the corners of Java ‑ out of its natural habitat, toward higher grounds and isolated peninsulas, as far as possible from civilization without actually dropping into the Indian Ocean.
Then in 1883, there was a massive volcanic eruption. Afterwards, as the land began to recover, Javan rhinos — under heavy threat elsewhere on the island — re-colonized. Humans never returned in large numbers, so to this day Ujung Kulon remains a safe haven…
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Yes, so do I – even wrote poems trying to capture that special quality…
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Succinct and applicable advice for writing short stories – naturally Writing.ie is also an excellent resource:
Writing Winning Short Stories by Vanessa Fox O’Loughlin
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Another very favourite West Australian writer – I have some but not all of her books… hint – hint! 🙂
Would you like to win a bundle of books for yourself or your friends? Summer is such a great time for reading so I hope you’ll like this competition. I’ll be giving away a bundle of four of my books to each of two winners. You can see which books in the photo. With Christmas and the holiday season looming, you could tick some presents off your list, or line up your summer reading – all in one fell swoop!
To enter the competition all you need to do is opt to follow my blog. That means you will receive my latest blog postings directly into your email inbox. To do that you need to go to my website www.lizbyrski.com and enter your email in the “Follow blog by email” field at the foot of any webpage, and click the “follow me” button.
If you already follow my blog, then…
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Congratulations on the newest tale, Norm… another for my grandson’s library.
The Smuggler’s Curseis a story set in Broome, a wild and lawless town in the north-west of Australia in 1896 and is about a boy who is sold by his mother as a cabin boy to a sea captain. Captain Black Bowen turns out to be the most notorious smuggler to ever sail the wild Western Australian coast. Before too long, they are at sea and involved in out-running customs patrols, being chased by murderous pirates, nearly killed in a cyclone and entangled in smuggling guns to guerrillas fighting the colonial Dutch in Sumatra.
Red, the narrator, is the son of Mary Read, owner of The Smuggler’s Curse Hotel which sits high on the cliff overlooking Roebuck Bay in Broome. I borrowed her name from a famous 18th century female pirate of the Caribbean, as well as Red’s name from the pirate, Red Rackham. The other main character, as…
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Great to see the Short Story advance through a new local festival and West Australian writers. Thanks, Amanda.
Two years ago, looking up/looking down presented a series on Western Australian women writers to watch out for. As I wrote then:
There’s so much creative energy among writers on the western edge—some of it being nurtured in university writing programs, some finding inspiration and support through writers centres, some brewing entirely independently. This four-part series features eight WA women who are part of that creative flurry. All of them have a manuscript ready, or nearly ready, to submit to agents and publishers, and I hope we’ll be hearing a lot more from them in the future.
It’s a true pleasure to observe the evolution of a creative life, and I’m delighted to present an update on what some of them have been doing. Here’s how Michelle Michau-Crawford and Emily Paull responded to an invitation to review their last two years of writing…
Michelle Michau-Crawford

When I was invited in…
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Congratulations, Niall, very well written.
You can listen to my short story “The Two of Hearts” on Soundcloud.
The story was originally broadcast on RTÉ Radio, read by actress Catriona Ni Mhurchú.
Click on the picture to listen:
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