Sunday, October 31, 2010

Character building...



Flipping through Joseph Conrad's 1896 novel An Outcast of the Islands I came across this passage: 
"Consciously or unconsciously, men are proud of their firmness, steadfastness of purpose, directness of aim. They go straight towards their desire, to the accomplishment of virtue - sometimes of crime -  in an uplifting persuasion of their firmness. They walk the road of life, the road fenced in by their tastes prejudices, disdains or enthusiasms, generally honest, invariably stupid, and are proud of never losing their way. If they do stop, it is to look for a moment over the hedges that make them safe, to look at the misty valleys, at the distant peaks, at cliffs and morasses, at the dark forests and the hazy plains where other human beings grope their days painfully away, stumbling over the bones of the wise, over the unburied remains of their predecessors who died alone, in the gloom or in sunshine, halfway from anywhere. The man of purpose does not understand, and goes on, full of contempt. He never loses his way. He knows where he is going and what he wants. Travelling on, he achieves great length without any breadth, and battered, besmirched, and weary, he touches the goal at last; he grasps the reward of his perseverance, of his virtue, of his healthy optimism: an untruthful tombstone over a dark and soon forgotten grave."
He's talking about Tom Lingard, who appears in a few of Conrad's novels and comes to reveal himself as something of a  benevolent despot. Conrad is brilliant at portraying the anti-hero in a way that illuminates the trials of the human spirit, so that the reader becomes engrossed in why his characters behave the way they do and, whether they choose to like them or not, can empathise to some extent with their motivations and the choices they make.
In any book, the characters that stand out to me are the ones you can pick apart and dissect and debate, because the writer has created such a fullness to them (even in their limitations, of which Lingard has many) that they could exist as real people, and because they highlight aspects of the human experience that resonate with people regardless of the time or place of reading.
I'm constantly thinking about character development because it's so critical to authenticity... Which characters resonate with you? And what is it about them that makes them stay with you after you finish reading a novel...?


Pictured above, Joseph Conrad's plaque on the NSW Writers Walk in Sydney. He visited Australia twice in the late 1800s in his job as First Mate on the merchant ship Torrens. (Click image to enlarge.)

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Exquisite...








Everyone online is talking about The Exquisite Book because it is - exquisite.
The brainchild of Julia Rothman, Jenny Volvovski and Matt LaMothe, it's based on the Surrealist game called the Exquisite Corpse. In book form it's played by a collaboration of 100 artists, designers, illustrators and comic artists. Each artist created one page for the book, seeing only the page that immediately preceded theirs, and using images and sometimes words to progress the story.
Among the artists who participated are Camilla Engman, Takashi Iwasaki, Emiliano Ponzi and Joe McClaren. The foreword is by Dave Eggers.
Another fabulous addition to the creative booklover's bookshelf or a conversation piece for your coffee table. You can pick one up here.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Fun for kids

Remember the last time you used a public telephone to make a call? 
No, neither do I.
Came across the blog of illustrator Max Dalton and found his great work on a new book for kids. Written by Peter Ackerman with graphics by Dalton, The Lonely Phonebooth is a story of a public phone that suffers a crippling identity crisis after being rendered redundant by the cellular generation. I won't go into the plot but this is a children's book so... all's well that ends well. Cool idea for a kid's Christmas stocking. You can get your copy here.







Monday, October 25, 2010

Touchy-feely...

Everyone knows a thing of beauty is a joy forever...and these beauties are made for keeps. Found these exquisite cloth-bound book covers by Penguin designer Coralie Bickford-Smith on-line here









Sunday, October 24, 2010

Unputdownable...






Gorgeous images of 'unputdownable' classics from a Penguin print ad campaign in Malaysia. My favourite is the The Railway Children by Edith Nesbit (top), there's also John Steinbeck's Cannery Row and Hound of the Baskervilles by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Click on the images to see them in slightly more detail. The ads were created by Saatchi & Saatchi

Friday, October 22, 2010

A bit of light reading...




What richer fodder could an occupation provide for a writer than the life of a lighthouse keeper? 
Think To the Lighthouse, Virginia Woolf; By the Seaside: The Lighthouse, Longfellow; the recent Australian film South Solitary; the children's story The Lighthouse Keeper's Daughter, Arielle North Olson...
But what if you really were a lighthouse keeper, and you lived in a spiral tower on some godforsaken rocky outcrop battered by tempests with only passing seagulls, the odd shipwrecked sailor and thousands of miles of oceans for company...?
That's what it must have been like in the 1800s....and then someone came up with a brilliant idea. 
In 1876, the Light-House Establishment in America started distributing portable libraries to lighthouse keepers in remote off-shore stations. A system was set up for distribution via light vessels, exchange and updating of texts, so that once a box-load of books had been read by one lighthouse keeper and his family (if he had one) they were shipped off to the next recipient and replaced with a new delivery.
The books were largely fiction but technical volumes were included when requested. All books remained the property of the The Light-House Establishment and were marked in the front with an official bookplate.
Check out these crazy titles from a typical lighthouse library:
Lamont, James. SEASONS WITH THE SEA-HORSES; OR, SPORTING ADVENTURES IN THE NORTHERN SEAS. New York. 1861. 282p. Describes sailing and sporting adventures in the northern latitudes. Illustrated.
Taylor, Bayard. AT HOME AND ABROAD - A SKETCHBOOK OF LIFE, SCENERY AND MEN. New York. 1893. 500p. Decorated cloth. With black and white engravings, etc.
Torpelius, Z. THE SURGEON'S STORIES - TIMES OF CHARLES VII. Chicago. 1884. 349p. Third in a series of six Swedish historical romances, translated from the Swedish.
Chaillu, Paul Du. MY APINGI KINGDOM: WITH LIFE IN THE GREAT SAHARA, AND SKETCHES OF THE CHASE OF THE OSTRICH, HYENA &c. New York. 1879. 254p. Beautiful brown decorated cloth. With black and white engravings, etc.



Images courtesy of the Michigan Lighthouse Conservancy.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Classic cover



How beautiful is this! The original cover art for E.B White's 1952 classic Charlotte's Web sold at auction to a New York collector for US$155,000. The graphite and ink illustration by Garth Williams features farmgirl Fern Arable holding the saved-from-slaughter pig Wilbur, with Charlotte spinning her web above them. If you look closely you can still see the production notes around the edges. The same cover art has been used for over 58 years and in 2000, Publisher's Weekly named Charlotte's Web the best selling children's book ever. 
Williams first teamed with White for the cover of the mousecapade Stuart Little.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Why why why...?

Who knows whether my book will ever be published, 
but this is why I write...




Click image to enlarge.
Wondermark, from the pen of David Malki !

Monday, October 18, 2010

Happy birthday blog!


It's your very first birthday - whoop whoop! To celebrate, Blog, you get.... a facelift! I know * sigh * they start so young these days.
Did a little digging around to see what other auspicious literary occasions occurred on 18 October and this is what I found:
1831William Blake's wife Catherine died at their house in Fitzroy Square, four years after his death. She reportedly 'called continuously to her William, as if he were in the next room, to say she was coming to him and would not be long now'...
1855: Franz Liszt's Prometheus premiered. Yes it's music but he composed it as a 'symphonic poem' - a piece of orchestral music in which the content of a poem is evoked - based on the Greek myth Prometheus.
1859Henri Bergson was born, French philosopher and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature (1927) for The Creative Evolution. Bergson must have had an eye for literary genes, he married a cousin of Marcel Proust.
1869: Henrik Ibsen's De Ungers Forbund (The League of Youth) premiered in Christiania, the city now known as Oslo. The story of a young political idealist who mounts an election campaign in a small Norwegian town became one of Norway's most popular comedic 19th century plays.
1910E.M. Forster published Howard's End, the classic tale of class conflicts in Edwardian England, considered along with Passage to India to be his finest work.
1967: Walt Disney releases the animated film based on Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book.
So for a birthday wish, a few lines from Blake, who believed that a bigger force than himself worked through him. He held the pen, the graver or the brush. He was its agent, never its master, the possessed rather than the possessor... 

Eternity
He who binds to himself a joy
Does the winged life destroy;
But he who kisses the joy as it flies
Lives in eternity's sun rise.
  - William Blake

Picture courtesy of artist Madeleine Stamer at Little Birdsville.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Mooove over desk chair

My cowch arrived back from its revamp this weekend.
Favourite chair for writing.
Love love love!









Friday, October 15, 2010

Tasting plate


Howard Jacobson is all over the internet thanks to his surprise win in the 2010 Man Booker Prize with The Finkler Question, sold out now at a bookstore near you.
So is Nobel Prize in Literature winner Mario Vargas Llosa. He sounds like an interesting dude (among others he wrote The Bad Girl, based on Madame Bovary, and Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter). Bookforum.com has compiled a swag of interviews and info about him from NPR, LRBParis Review and The Guardian.
America is abuzz with the announcement of finalists in the National Book Award and the name causing most of the commotion is Jonathan Franzen, whose mega-selling Freedom didn't make the list. Peter Carey did - go figure.
Berkelouw has a flash new website.
And, it's Friday! Which means tomorrow is Saturday - when my favourite writing chair will arrive fresh from being restored after an unfortunate * ahem * reclining incident...
Happy weekend :)

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Miner gets his comeuppance



Amazing story of the rescue of 33 Chilean miners trapped in a sweaty subterranean chamber deep underground for 69 days. Hollywood loves this stuff. For the writer, the individual human stories behind the collective heroics spawn myriad tales...
No doubt a certain Yoni Barrios - he whose affair was exposed when two women appeared in a panic holeside when the disaster occurred - is being courted by storytellers the world over after being lifted from the vault overnight.
Reports dispute the identity of the person who met Barrios upon his retrieval, the 'unnamed' woman rumoured to be his sister or perhaps his girlfriend. His wife chose to stay away. 
In stories of human frailty we often find some temporary solace for our own tendency to err. 
And so the juiciness begins. Start talking Senor... your underground prison may turn out to have been paradise compared to this...

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Farewell La Stupenda




A small note on the passing of a monumental talent. 
Dame Joan Sutherland has died. 
Pavarotti once called Dame Joan 'the voice of the century' and Montserrat Caballé described her voice as being 'like heaven'.
As the SMH reports today: 'Her influence extended well beyond the opera world and reached into popular culture.'
I never heard her sing on stage, but even to a kid like me growing up in 1970s'/80s' Australia, Joan Sutherland was larger than life. 
In fourth class at school we were required to write a poem about what we wanted to be when we grew up. I distinctly remember my first verse. 
With apologies to Dame Joan, who shall be lauded in far worthier encomiums than this, herewith the tribute from my then-nine-year-old self...:


I'd like to sing the opera
Performing every night
Dressing up and singing songs
For everyone's delight.
Like Joan Sutherland, 
she has a lovely voice
Only I would be thinner, 
if I had a choice.


Vale La Stupenda.

Monday, October 11, 2010

The world at large




Does size matter...? In this case I would say YES. The biggest book at the 2010 Frankfurt Book Fair hails from our very own Northern Beaches. Millennium House Australia has printed 31 copies of Earth (top) - a massive atlas measuring 1.8m x 2.75m and weighing in at 120kgs - featuring exquisite mapping detail that smaller tomes just cannot match. Publisher Gordon Cheers says the state-of-the-art cartography, geography and oceanography was overseen by the world's finest in their discipline.
The Klenke Atlas (above) is considered by those in the know to be 'the last great atlas' and was produced in 1660 by John Klenke as a gift for King Charles II of England. Only one copy was made and it's preserved today in the Map Room at the British Library. 
According to The Manly Daily 'the atlas was bound by hand in Milan by the Vatican's printers and the foreword was written by the head of maps for the British Library.'
Two have already been sold to museums in the Middle East. You can pick one up too if you have a spare $100,000. And a very large room.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Wearable words

Cool idea for the literary minded aesthete. These pieces were part of a jewellery exhibition in San Diego in September - Letters + Words - at Taboo Studio. Love the vintage paper bracelet, and the necklace made from paper, cultured pearls and sterling silver. And you can't wear them but you can sit on one - high back chairs made from recycled aluminium highway signs.