Saturday, 23 May 2009

Fremantle Press at Sydney Writers' Festival

Fremantle Press sessions for Sunday 24 May

Participants: Chris Pash, Margot O’Neill, Nicola Markus, Marian Wilkinson (facilitator)
When: Sunday, May 24 2009, 13:00 - 14:00
Where: Sydney Theatre, Richard Wherrett Studio22 Hickson Road Walsh Bay
Name: Dangerous Ideas
Sometimes the world shifts and dangerous ideas enter into the mainstream, such as the concepts that humanity may not have free reign with the world's resources, that mandatory detention of asylum-seekers might not be appropriate policy, that our environmental issues are not being solved by those tasked with their solution. Chris Pash, Margot O’Neill and Nicola Markus discuss their books of activism and social change with Marian Wilkinson.
Participants: Steven Conte, Alice Nelson, Tash Aw, Kevin Rabalais (facilitator) When: Sunday, May 24 2009, 10:00 - 11:00
Where: Bangarra MezzaninePier 4/5, Hickson Road Walsh Bay
Name: Changing Worlds
From Berlin to Hong Kong to Indonesia, Steven Conte, Alice Nelson and Tash Aw’s novels are set against a background of nations in turmoil. They discuss the ‘character’ of nation in their books.

Friday, 22 May 2009

Fremantle Press at the Sydney Writers' Festival

Fremantle Press sessions for Saturday 23 May

Participants: Steven Conte, Siew Siang Tay, Alice Nelson, Margaret Barbalet (facilitator) When:: Saturday, May 23 200913:30 - 14:30
Where: Sydney Dance Company, Studio 1Pier 4/5, Hickson Road Walsh Bay
Cost: Free
Name: On Marriage
Alice Nelson, Steven Conte and Siew Siang Tay discuss the vagaries of romantic love in their novels, with chair Margaret Barbalet.

Thursday, 21 May 2009

Fremantle Press at the Sydney Writers Festival

Fremantle Press author events for Friday 22 May:

Participants: Chris Pash, Jonny Lewis
When: 15:00 - 16:00
Where: Bangarra MezzaninePier 4/5, Hickson Road Walsh Bay
Cost: Free
Name: The Last Whale
Thirty years after the last whale was captured and slaughtered in Australia, Chris Pash has written the very human story of the characters and events that brought whaling to an end, revealing the fears, motives and actions of the whalers and the anti-whaling activists who risked their lives to stop them in a campaign that was Greenpeace's first direct action in Australia. Join Chris in conversation with the major character of the book, Jonny Lewis.

Participants: Nava Semel, Alice Nelson, Steven Gale (facilitator)
When: 17:30 - 18:30
Where: Sydney Dance Company, Studio 2/3Pier 4/5, Hickson Road Walsh Bay
Cost: Free
Name: Fictionalising the Jewish Experience
As the memory of the trauma and exile of Holocaust shifts into the future generations, Navel Semel and Alice Nelson discuss writing Jewish experience with Steven Gale.

Wednesday, 20 May 2009

Perth writer joins best young Australian novelist list

Fremantle Press author Alice Nelson was named best young Australian novelist by the Sydney Morning Herald for her first novel The Last Sky on Saturday 16 May.

Nelson, who is appearing at this week’s Sydney Writers’ Festival, was honoured alongside Nam Le, Ken Rabalais and Steve Toltz.


The award is given to a published fiction writer under the age of 35. Previous winners of the include Markus Zusak, Sonya Hartnett, Chloe Hooper and Christos Tsiolkas as well as Fremantle Press author Craig Silvey for Rhubarb.

Read more

Saturday, 16 May 2009

More pictures from the launch of The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street

Here are some more photographs from the launch of Marlish Glorie's The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street. Photos are courtesy of Lindsay Pow.

Glorie's family and friends watching on

Marlish Glorie and Fremantle Press Poetry and Fiction Publisher, Georgia Richter

Marlish signing her books

The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street

Marlish and Dawn Murray




Friday, 15 May 2009

Fertile Soil to visit Albany in 2010

Artworks from the City of Fremantle art collection are heading to Albany in 2010 in an exhibition called Fertile Soil.

The works of 21 contemporary artists are currently touring WA to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the City of Fremantle art collection . The exhibition is curated by the Fremantle Art Centre's Andre Lipscombe.
The book that accompanies the exhibition is published by Fremantle Press. It features selections from the 1,200 strong art collection and is called Fertile Soil: Fifty Years of the City of Fremantle Art Collection.

Thursday, 14 May 2009

The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street launch pictures

Here are some photos from The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street launch at Dymocks Fremantle on 8 May. The pictures are courtesy of Lindsay Pow.


Gabrielle Metcalf launching The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street

Author Marlish Glorie, with guests Gina Varne and Geoff Bremar

Anita and Gary Black

Heather Pow and Friends

Marlish signing a copy of her novel




Call for Submissions – Literary Awards Review

Copied from the DCA website:

"The Department of Culture and the Arts (DCA) is calling for submissions from authors, publishers, book sellers, librarians, academics and members of the public for the review of the West Australian Premier’s Book Awards and the Australia Asia Literary Award.

A review of both award schemes is underway and we are seeking your input to evaluate the award schemes and gather suggestions on how it could be delivered or improved in the future. For further information click on the link below to the DCA website.

http://www.dca.wa.gov.au/news/stories/front_page_items/call_for_submissions__literary_awards_review

Submissions close 5 pm 25 June 2009 and can be emailed to: elizabeth.spencer@dca.wa.gov.au
Or mailed to: Literary Awards Review
C/0 Elizabeth Spencer, SPO Projects
Department of Culture and the Arts
PO Box 8349 Perth Business Centre WA 6849"

Wednesday, 13 May 2009

The launch of The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street



Around 150 of Marlish Glorie’s family and friends gathered at Dymocks Fremantle to celebrate the national launch of her first novel The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street on Friday 8 May.

Glorie amused her crowd with anecdotes of the publishing process and thanked local Director and Theatre Arts Lecturer at Notre Dame University, Gabrielle Metcalf for launching her novel.

“The number of people who turned up and were eager to buy my book floored me. I was just so moved by the love and support they all gave me,” said author Marlish Glorie.

Glorie described the evening as a wonderful night.

“I had an absolute ball at my book launch and suddenly the four years it took me to write The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street made it all worth while.

“It is a night I could replay a thousand times,” said Glorie.

Glorie wrapped up the evening by mingling with her guests and signing copies of her book.

We’d like to thank Clive Klicker and the Dymocks Fremantle team for hosting the event.

Fremantle Press at the ETA WA Conference

Authors Jon Doust, Kate McCaffrey and AJ Betts will take part in a panel discussion on young adult literature at Framing the Future, the ETA State Conference on Saturday 16 May.

Reviewer Heather Zubek will chair a discussion of young adult literature at 11.50am at Perth College Mt Lawley.

The 2009 State conference Framing the Future will explore directions for the curriculum in English. Innovation and evolution at a national level will be discussed and consideration given to the possible impact of these developments at the classroom level.

Tuesday, 12 May 2009

Fremantle Press designer shortlisted for a MAMPDA

Fertile Soil: 50 Years of the City of Fremantle Art Collection was shortlisted for the 2009 Museums Australia Multimedia and Publication Design Awards.

The book was designed by former Fremantle Press employee Tracey Gibbs and was shortlisted in the education category alongside its audio guide and brochure.

Entries were judged on their relevance of purpose, communication clarity and degree of usability.

Gibbs said she was chuffed to be shortlisted for the book’s design alongside the designer of the audio guide and brochure.

Monday, 11 May 2009

Haynes gets another gong from sci fi fans

Author of the Hal Spacejock series Simon Haynes has been shortlisted for his third science fiction award in 2009.

Hal Spacejock: No Free Lunch was shortlisted for a "Ditmar" on Saturday 9 May.


Haynes is one of six finalists in the Best Novel category that also includes Nathan Burrage, Margo Lanagan, Justine Larbeliester, Kim Westwood and Sean Williams.

Read more here

Sunday, 10 May 2009

Destroying Avalon sold to Hungary

Cyberbullying is as much of a problem in Hungary as it is in Australia according to Fremantle Press Rights Manager, Clive Newman.

Newman sold the rights to the teen novel Destroying Avalon by Kate McCaffrey to Hungarian publisher Animus Publishing in Budapest in April 2009.

“When first published in 2006 Destroying Avalon certainly struck a chord with parents and teenagers who were struggling to come to terms with what was then a new phenomenon,” said Newman.

Read more

Tuesday, 5 May 2009

Bookclub notes for Bookshop on Jacaranda Street

About the Novel
In the novel The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street, the Maze Second-hand Bookshop has a maze in it, which in a way sums up the book. Helen Budd-Doyle initially describes it as ‘a simple book maze.’ To which Vivian retorts, ‘Isn’t that an oxymoron.’ The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street is a seemingly straightforward tale but it doesn’t take long for it to reveal itself as a multi-layered story in which people’s lives become interwoven in peculiar and unexpected ways. It is an elaborate story about family, and how its own unique cycle of falling apart, then getting put back together again, is the very machinery of this institution.

Grief is the foundation of this novel. It is because of grief that Arnold is an obsessive junk collector and Helen is a voracious reader. They are each still in mourning for the loss of their firstborn son who died at the age of eight, twenty years before the novel opens. Trapped in their individual expressions of mourning, their marriage runs along a fault line that ultimately undergoes a tectonic shift, causing their alliance to break, and a multitude of other events to unfold.

Helen leaves Arnold to go and live with her neighbour and close friend, Astrid. Motivated by concern for her son, Vivian, and financed by Astrid’s recent win at the casino, she buys a dilapidated second-hand bookshop from Jim, an alcoholic businessman facing financial ruin.
Her other son Gabriel, who has just returned from a three year stint in the army, a career move made largely as an act of rebellion against his father’s junk, tells the most outlandish lie in a desperate attempt to get his father to change his ways. Arnold, feeling numb with despair, is willing to fall for anything to retain his sanity. He decides to swallow Gabriel’s lie about having a pregnant girlfriend.

At the heart of the novel is the Maze Bookshop, through which many and various characters are pumped in and out, giving the novel its life. The Maze provides the Budd-Doyles with a much-needed bond and in fact it becomes their salvation as each family member becomes, in their way, involved with its running.

Despite grief being the catalyst for this story, The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street is infused with a good deal of ironic humour. The humour counterpoints and illuminates the sheer power of a grief which, for the Budd-Doyles, sets off a bizarre chain of events that fortunately results in love, redemption and a happy ending.

About the Author
The path to becoming a writer has been a fairly straightforward one for me. As a child I was a storytelling addict, and then in adolescence I fell in love with reading. So there I was thirty years ago: in love with reading and addicted to storytelling, and the natural progeny of this was writing.

The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street is a conglomeration of diverse issues I spun together over a four-year period in the hope of turning it into a sensible story. Most of the central issues — grief, junk collecting, illiteracy, books, and overriding all these, preconceived notions of how people should behave — are ones I’ve experienced myself, or been in close contact with, hence my preoccupation with them.

For a long time I mulled over all these disparate strands, until I reached the point where I decided, yes! I think I can start weaving a story out them.

I wrote this way deliberately, with the intention that the dissimilar issues bounce off one another or illuminate one another, as, for instance, junk is used as a metaphor for Arnold’s grief, as well as a symptom.

This is typical of the way I write: marrying divergent themes until I have what I believe is a seamless narrative. It is a random way to write, but then I think that reflects how I see life — as a morass in which humankind stumbles along. And there’s the sense of it all! Life makes no sense, and the best I can do as a human being is to make sense of my own attitude towards the world. I hope that comes through in The Bookshop on Jacaranda Street.

Discussion questions

  • Grief provides the powerful undertow of this book. Discuss how the writer has presented the individual expressions of grief. Does Helen’s behaviour run contrary to what you might expect? What about Arnold’s? Consider what normal behaviour might be when you lose a child.
  • Is Arnold’s junk collecting unreasonable given the circumstances that prompted it?
    Helen seeks sanctuary in a church, Astrid at a casino. How important is sanctuary in our everyday lives, and where do we seek it?

  • Vivian at one point in the book says to Gabriel, ‘Fiction is a lie which tells the truth.’ Would you agree or disagree with this assertion? Give your reasoning.

  • Helen acquired her bookshop in a somewhat unethical and risky manner — doing with business with someone who was not only an alcoholic but was facing bankruptcy. (Conducting business with a person who is inebriated is deemed illegal but must be proven in a court of law.) In Helen’s case do the ends justify the means?

  • Another issue covered in the book is the need to believe in a lie for emotional survival, as Arnold and Astrid do. How often and under what circumstances might we believe in lies to suit our own purpose, or for emotional survival?

  • Helen is a self-confessed literary snob. Do you consider this a character flaw? How does it contribute toward the story?

  • Is character destiny? Discuss the importance of Gabriel’s personality and how his impetuous actions move the story along.

  • Arnold has a passive personality. Things happen to him; he is not generally proactive. Why do you think the writer has portrayed him like this: an impotent yet easygoing soul.
    Make a list of Helen’s numerous flaws and consider why these flaws are important in the development of the book.

  • If, like Helen, you wish that at times your life could be like a book, which book would you choose, and why?