Bravo, Billy Lynn, bravo

Ben Fountain’s debut novel, Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk, has been described by author and Vietnam veteran Karl Marlantes as the Catch 22 of the Iraq War — and it won America’s National Critics Circle award for fiction in March this year. This prestigious award is judged — as the prize name suggests — solely

Continue Reading

Josephine Rowe: On crafting words to ‘knock your breath out’

Josephine Rowe is a Melbourne-based writer of fiction, poetry and nonfiction. Her most recent short story collection, Tarcutta Wake (University of Queensland Press, 2012), was longlisted for the 2013 Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award. She talked with ABBW about killer opening lines and closing lines … and what all the best writing does in between. You seem to

Continue Reading

‘The dove descending breaks the air’

It is 1941, at the end of the Blitz in London during World War II, and the poet, T.S. Eliot, is fire-watching with a young woman called Iris. They are on the roof of the publishing house Faber and Faber in Bloomsbury when Jim, an Australian from Essendon, flies into their view a Wellington with a

Continue Reading

Book bites to whet your appetite #1

Today’s post contains my taster reviews of Boy Lost: A Family Memoir, The Examined Life: How We Lose and Find Ourselves, Alone in the Classroom and The Blue Book … all worth a look. Boy Lost: A Family Memoir As she boarded a train to escape her violent marriage, Kristina Olsson’s mother, Yvonne, had her

Continue Reading

It’s a bigger blogging world!

So you’ve read every review and interview on A Bigger Brighter World, you’ve gone on to read some of the recommendations and wonder what else is out there in literary blogworld … but you shudder in trepidation at the blogjam that awaits. There are a great many book blogs out there. Here are some, mostly

Continue Reading

‘Questions of Travel’ wins ALS Gold Medal

Questions of Travel by Michelle de Kretser, winner of the 2013 Miles Franklin Literary Award, has won the 2013 Australian Literary Society Gold Medal. The ALS Gold Medal is awarded annually for an outstanding literary work in the preceding calendar year. The Medal was inaugurated by the Australian Literature Society, which was founded in Melbourne

Continue Reading

WA Premier’s Book Awards shortlist

Culture and the Arts Minister John Day has announced the shortlist for this year’s Western Australian Premier’s Book Awards. The awards recognise and support excellence in writing across Australia in 2012. Mr Day said more than 500 entries were received from fiction and non-fiction writers. “From Sue Smith’s script for the televised biopic Mabo to

Continue Reading

Taut Icelandic tale has tidal pull

Hannah Kent is a rising star in Australia’s literary firmament and the release of Burial Rites last month in Australia, and in the next few months in Britain and the US, is the major reason for her ascent. Literary critic Stephen Romei said Kent’s book was “the most talked about Australian debut novel in years”.

Continue Reading

Stedman lights oceans worldwide

Four years after finding a dead man and a baby washed up on Janus Island off Western Australia Tom Sherbourne sits brooding in prison. A memory flares from his time as the island’s lighthouse keeper and he recalls, “The woomph of the oil vapour igniting into brilliance at the touch of his match. The rainbows

Continue Reading