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Saturday, 7 December 2024

Ten Favourite Books of 2024

December has arrived yet again! 

To my surprise I found I'd read only 49 books this year (will probably add at least three or four more by 31st December) but it's been a much busier year than I anticipated in January as I took over the presidency of The Society of Women Writers Victoria the following month.

Needless to say there is a huge pile of Waiting To Be Read books on my shelves.

If I add in the books I read to my granddaughters, then I could claim several hundred more as we get through several in a session! They thought this pile was suitable for one bedtime. 

From my reading, my favourites are the following - in no particular order. As always, I'm choosing from books published at any time.

Susan Hurley: Eight Lives. Library loan. A twisty turning mystery to uncover the issue of responsibility for the death of a scientist who is developing a new drug and dies after testing it on himself.  

Tom Rob Smith: Cold People. Library loan. Not my usual sort of choice but a page turner with huge ethical implications about the manipulation of genetics. And would you decide to escape death by living in Antarctica when the alternative is staying put and being eliminated in a month's time!

Gabbi Stroud: The Things That Matter Most. Purchase from local bookshop. Just how far do teachers' responsibilities go toward their pupils?

Alli Parker: At The Foot of The Cherry Tree. Bought at an author event. Of course I wasn't going to buy another book but Alli figuratively and literally sold it to me. The true story of her grandparents, Australian Harry and Japanese Cherry who meet in post-war Japan. Will Harry be able to bring his bride back to Australia?

Kristin Hannah: The Nightingale. On my bookshelf for some time - from a community bookshelf. Isabelle becomes a leader in the French resistance, helping allied airmen escape capture. Family issues complicate her work.

Sue Williams: That Bligh Girl. Bought at discount book shop. The story of Mary Bligh, daughter of William Bligh (yes, that one) when he was Governor of New South Wales in the early 1800s.

Kylie Orr: The Eleventh Floor. Bought at author talk. A new mother checks into a hotel alone for a decent night's sleep. She witnesses something alarming but cannot tell the police because there are serious implications for her if she does. How much responsibility does she have for what happened that night?

Annie Buist and Graeme Simsion: The Glass House. Bought at discount bookshop. Set in a psychiatric hospital we follow the lives of staff members over the course of several patient admissions. 
My daughter who is a mental health nurse vouches for its accuracy. The sequel is out soon!

Christian White: The Wife and the Widow. From my TBR pile - second-hand. Two murders in as a small Australian Island. Is there a link?

Lianne Moriarty: Here One Moment. Bought at discount bookshop. A woman on a delayed flight begins telling passengers the cause and their age at their deaths. Is she misguided but harmless or could there be some truth in her predictions? A thought-provoking read.


Friday, 25 October 2024

Flowers

I came home from the last meeting of the Society Of Women Writers Victoria with these two beauties. 

A bunch of native flowers and the ninth anthology from the society.

The stories, poems and non-fiction pieces are all by our members plus the four winning stories from our recent short story competition. The cover was designed by a member from one of her original paintings. 


Thursday, 12 September 2024

The Dickens Twist

Quite a few pieces of my writing have been inspired by people I met through my work. My piece 'A Girl Can Dream' published in Yours magazine was fiction but inspired by two real people whose names I chose to keep. The title was not of my choosing! The real Cathy would probably have laughed, and - providing she'd had a vodka and orange which she rightly maintained helped her speech become clearer - agreed the original title was better.

Another recently published flash, 'A Rose Petal Falls' was not inspired by an actual person but the fact that occasionally elderly people in our care, died with no-one to mourn them. Our unit manager would attend their funerals and often be the only mourner. 

'27th January 1995' is a part fiction / part truth flash as a tribute to a modest man who, on the 50th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, quiety mentioned he had been held there. 

There is also a piece about an actor who filmed part of an episode of a long running police drama series on the farm where I lived when I was twelve. Fifty years later we met again when he presented at my clinic with a minor voice problem. At the end of our second session, I felt he would not mind my mentioning our first meeting and described the scene he'd filmed as an undercover cop. 

'Good lord,' he said. 'I was dressed as a hippie wearing a yellow shirt, wasn't I.'  He certainly was - my twelve year old self had thought he looked rather wonderful (I didn't tell him that bit.) I was amazed that he could remember part of a single episode when he'd filmed goodness knows how many in his long career.

The latest piece soon to be published is from two separate and very different patients both of whom stood out in my memory. I spotted a callout for pieces about working life for an anthology and dusted off a piece my writing group had read, spruced it up and sent it off, with no real expectation of it being selected. To my delight it was and this time the editor's suggested title, 'The Dickens Twist' is much better than mine! Is This Working will be launched in Brisbane on September 21st 2024.

 

Wednesday, 29 May 2024

It's been rather a long time....

 

Yes, it's been ages since I posted here. I've been pretty busy. 

At the beginning of the year the committee of the Society of Women Writers Victoria began its work as usual after the Christmas break ready for the first meeting of the year in February. Then our president stepped down which left rather a gap. And I stepped up! So here I am, the Interim President until the AGM later this year. I felt a bit like a politician who takes over mid-term. But one thing I can promise, I'll do a better job than the UK Prime Minister who was in the role for a mere 44 days. To be fair she didn't set the bar very high so I'm not promising the impossible.

As well as undertaking lots of governance issues, which thankfully another committee member (also called Lindsay) understands far better than I do, we have just run a short story competition, have undertaken a member survey and are planning not only our regular monthly meetings but some additional ones too. So there's a fair bit going on as well as the admin that goes with changes of office. 

Needless to say I haven't done as much writing as I'd like, but was pleased to have two acceptances to Australian anthologies, Older (Bequem Publishing) and Is This Working (Tiny Owl Workshop) to be published later this year. A small prompted piece was showcased in the most recent Furious Fiction competition - 55 hours to write up to 500 words. Mine was done in less than five hours as inevitably the timing coincided with others matters requiring attention. Yes, there have been rejections too, but there's no point dwelling too much on those. 

I have been focusing on a family story. It started out as a single short story but the members of my writing group (within SWWV) suggested I expand it so the episodes keep coming. This means lots of research as it's set in the early years of the 19th century and is set in England and Australia. 

I've attended some good local author events too - including Alice Pung and Kylie Orr - there's never a shortage of bookish events here in Melbourne. And of course there are plenty of great books to read. 

So that's my 2024 so far. Hopefully it won't be six months before my next post.