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Magdalena Ball
Compulsive Reader's author interviews, book chat, literary discussions, readings and more. It's an audio haven for book lovers! Recent and upcoming guests include Terry Denton, Marion Halligan, Sir Ken Robinson, Emily Ballou, Sofie Laguna, Matthew Riley, John Banville, Felicity Plunkett, Mark Coker, Peter Bowerman, Eric Maisel, Ramona Koval, Tim Flannery, Carl Zimmer, Gail Jones, Jane Smiley, Frank Delaney, Ben Okri, and many more.
Total 181 episodes
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PS Cottier and NG Hartland on The Thirty-one Legs of Vladimir Putin

PS Cottier and NG Hartland on The Thirty-one Legs of Vladimir Putin

PS Cottier and NG Hartland, authors of The Thirty-one Legs of Vladimir Putin, read from and talk about their new book, which won the Finlay Lloyd 20/40 publishing prize for fiction. We talk about some of the key themes in the book like identity, semblance, what's real and what isn't, the book's prescience in dealing with power dynamics and image, their writing process, characters, works-in-progress, and lots more. More information on The Thirty-One Legs of Vladimir Putin can be found here: https://finlaylloyd.com/product/the-thirty-one-legs-of-vladimir-putin-ps-cottier-ng-hartland/ PS Cottier's website: https://pscottier.com/
33:1114/11/2024
John Kinsella on Beam of Light

John Kinsella on Beam of Light

John Kinsella reads from and talks about his new short story collection Beam of Light. We talk about the use of furniture in this book, the connective themes, its malevolent undercurrent, the importance and beauty of a sentient landscape, his characters and their struggles against the colonial mindset, what poetry and fiction can do and why he might choose one form or another, and lots more. For more on John and his extensive body of work, visit: ⁠https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Kinsella_(poet)⁠ For more on Beam of Light visit: ⁠https://transitlounge.com.au/shop/beam-of-light-stories/
33:5516/09/2024
Girls on Key 10th Anniversary Zoom

Girls on Key 10th Anniversary Zoom

This was a special zoom session of poetry to mark the 10th anniversary of Girls on Key featuring Sophia Wilson, Mikaela Nyman, Kiri Piahana-Wong, Patricia Sykes, Nancy Holland-Shroder, and open mic readings from Anna Forsyth (GoK founder), Lou Steer, and Magdalena Ball (host) Video link: https://www.facebook.com/830439988/videos/1307289250655911/ Girls on Key: https://girlsonkey.wixsite.com/.../copy-of-girls-on-key... Sophia Wilson: https://sophiakwilson.wordpress.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluetree_poet/ Sea Skins: https://flyingislandspocketpoets.com.au/?s=Sophia%20wilson Mikaela Nyman: https://www.otago.ac.nz/.../otago.../robert-burns-fellowship https://www.read-nz.org/writers-files/writer/nyman-mikaela Kiri Piahana-Wong: https://www.anahera.co.nz/books/tidelines Patricia Sykes: https://www.spinifexpress.com.au/patriciasykes Nancy Holland-Schroder: https://www.instagram.com/nancylouiseholland/?hl=enhttps://www.aucklandacademyofdance.co.nz Lou Steer: https://www.facebook.com/lousteerartist/
59:1914/09/2024
Sarah Temporal on Tight Bindings

Sarah Temporal on Tight Bindings

Sarah Temporal is a prize-winning poet, producer, and educator who runs the well-respected regional arts initiative Poets Out Loud. She joins us to read from and talk about her debut book Tight Bindings. Visit Sarah’s website at: https://sarahtemporal.com/ Watch videos of Sarah performing and order Tight Bindings: https://puncherandwattmann.com/product/tight-bindings/ Damien Becker’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seasaltskin?igsh=MWVqNDFkYzR0M3J1MA==
34:1328/08/2024
Patti Miller on the newly revised version of Writing True Stories

Patti Miller on the newly revised version of Writing True Stories

Patti Miller joins us to read from and talk about her book Writing True Stories which has just been extensively updated and extended. She talks about what has changed in the 30+ years since she started teaching Life Writing, the impact of technology, her best tip, her own work in progress, and lots more. Find out more about Patti and Writing True Stories at her website: https://lifestories.com.au Find a copy of Writing True Stories here: https://www.routledge.com/Writing-True-Stories-The-Complete-Guide-to-Memoir-Creative-Non-Fiction-Personal-Essay-Diaries-Biography-and-Travel/Miller/p/book/9781032765631
35:3904/07/2024
Julia Levitina on The girl From Moscow

Julia Levitina on The girl From Moscow

Julia Levitina reads from and talks about her new book The Girl From Moscow including such things as how the book came about, why fiction, how the book follows her own departure from the Soviet Union, the importance of 1983 as her setting, inherited trauma and her protagonists, antisemitism, the theatre, her work-in-progress and lots more. Find out more about Julia at her website here: https://www.julialevitinaauthor.com/
35:2324/06/2024
Omar Musa on The Fullness

Omar Musa on The Fullness

Omar Musa joins us to perform from and talk about his new album The Fullness. We talk about collaboration and his amazing collaborators, pushing into liminal spaces of multiple identities, leaning into grief and joy ("our lives given shape by shadows"), ego deflation, how some of the songs on The Fullness were created, the percussiveness of rap and its conjunction with poetry, the alchemical process of art, the dissolving of borders between artforms and nationalities, the resonance of the mother tongue, poetry as a language of feeling, the value of working on multiple projects at once, and lots more.  Listen to The Fullness: https://open.spotify.com/album/4KTsmsM6AlcoZbno4rlpax?si=91db8a8708684c52 Omar's website: https://www.omarmusa.com.au/
33:5413/05/2024
Kent MacCarter on Fat Chance

Kent MacCarter on Fat Chance

Kent MacCarter joins us to read from and talk about his new poetry book Fat Chance. We talk about Kent's process, about having written the "feel bad book of the year”, his journalistic process, the nature of Gossypiboma (retained medical objects), memoir, reverse ekphrasis, and lots more. For more information or to purchase a copy of Fat Chance visit: https://upswellpublishing.com/product/fat-chance Kent will be a guest at this year's Brisbane Writers Festival. For details about his two events, visit: https://bwf.org.au/2024/brisbane-writers-festival/artists/kent-maccarter
31:5619/04/2024
Robbie Coburn on Ghost Poetry

Robbie Coburn on Ghost Poetry

Robbie Coburn reads from and talks about his new book Ghost Poetry. Topics covered include the many ghosts that haunt the pages of the book, dreams and nightmares, the relationship between horses and people, subject and object, the subconscious, confessional poetry and the creative act/the artifice, horses, gothic country as a genre, and lots more. Where to buy the book: Upswell - Ghost Poetry (upswellpublishing.com) Robbie's website: Robbie Coburn
31:3606/03/2024
Marina Kamenev on Kin

Marina Kamenev on Kin

The author of Kin: Family in the 21st Century reads from and talks about her new book, about the many permeations of family both nuclear and otherwise, about the book's origins, some of her key themes and challenges including such things as donor privacy versus the rights of a child to know their origins, helping people start families vs the commodification of reproduction, future tech and the risk of Eugenics, and lots more. Find out more about Marina and Kin at: Marina Kamenev Marina's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kamenevwrites
32:2218/02/2024
Eugen Bacon on Serengotti

Eugen Bacon on Serengotti

Award winning author Eugen Bacon reads from and talks about her latest book Serengotti. We discuss such things as the books themes including notions of privilege, racism, misogyny and the multiplicity of the self, the book's unique narrative voice, the protagonist Ch'anzu and other characters, on working through and beyond binaries and genres, on world and app creation, and much more. Find out more about Eugen at: https://eugenbacon.com Grab a copy of Serengotti at: Serengotti | Transit Lounge
33:3330/01/2024
Valerie Werder on Thieves

Valerie Werder on Thieves

Valerie Werder reads from and talks about her award-winning debut novel Thieves. In this wide-ranging interview we talk about such things as representation, semantics, spirituality, thievery and its many iterations, cognitive dissonance, the changing subjectivity and tenses, the art and cosmetic industries, connection and lots more. Find out more about Valerie Werder at her website: Valerie Werder | Thieves Get a copy of Thieves direct from the publisher here: Thieves: A Novel by Valerie Werder (fenceportal.org)
37:4704/12/2023
Beatriz Copello on No Salami Fairy Bread

Beatriz Copello on No Salami Fairy Bread

Beatriz Copello, author of No Salami Fairy Bread drops by to read from and talk about her newest poetry book. We talk about such things as the linguistic quality of the book, its structure, overall themes including migration, memoir, feminism, coming-of-age, the use of humour, why she chose verse, her new fantasy work-in-progress, and lots more. The book can be purchased here: https://www.ginninderrapress.com.au/store.php?product/page/2905/Beatriz+Copello+%2F+No+Salami+Fairy+Bread
29:1621/11/2023
Samuel Lucas Allen on CUT

Samuel Lucas Allen on CUT

Award winning filmmaker Samuel Lucas Allen talks about their new short film CUT. We talk about how the film came together as a project, the extraordinary cinematography, on working with their father, Richard James Allen (who has been on the show several times to talk about his own work), and the father-son relationship in general, Judaism, guilt, toxic masculinity, the acting team (including a well-behaved chicken), the film score by composer Sam Weiss, what's exciting them right now and lots more. Samuel's website: https://www.samuellucasallen.com/ Sydney premiere of CUT at JIFF: https://www.jiff.com.au/films/2023-shorts# Stills (including the one we talked about at the Sydney Jewish Museum) and other worldwide showings of CUT: http://physicaltv.com.au/cut-2023/
29:2125/10/2023
Esther Ottaway on She Doesn't Seem Autistic

Esther Ottaway on She Doesn't Seem Autistic

Esther Ottaway talks about and reads from her new book She Doesn't Seem Autistic. Through a number of poems, Esther talks about many of the key themes, rhythms, structures and concepts in the book, including masking, humour, her use of animals, on reclaiming clinical labels, the relationship between art and advocacy, and lots more. Find out more about Esther at: Home | Esther Ottaway, Poet (jimdosite.com) Purchase a copy of She Doesn't Seem Autistic: She Doesn't Seem Autistic - Puncher & Wattmann (puncherandwattmann.com)
36:0220/09/2023
Richard James Allen on Text Messages from the Universe

Richard James Allen on Text Messages from the Universe

Richard James Allen joins me to read from and talk about his latest book Text Messages from the Universe. We talk about many things including the book's deeply spiritual themes, its links with The Tibetan book of the Dead, the unique format of the book and how it relates to its matching film, what's exciting him at the moment, and lots more. Video version can be seen here: https://youtu.be/0lKl8XXydfs You can get hold of Text Messages from the Universe (at its ridiculously low price of $10) from: https://flyingislandspocketpoets.com.au/product/text-messages-from-the-universe-by-richard-james-allen/ For more about the film Text Messages from the Universe (available for screenings and readings, email [email protected]) visit: http://physicaltv.com.au/text-messages-from-the-universe/ For more about Breaking Plates (film in post production by Karen Pearlman: tax deductible donations gratefully received via Documentary Australia): https://documentaryaustralia.com.au/project/breaking-plates/ For more about CUT (film by Samuel Lucas Allen: coming soon) visit: http://physicaltv.com.au/cut-2023/ For the full suite of Richard's many projects, visit his website The Physical TV Company: http://physicaltv.com.au/
32:1401/07/2023
Alisa Bryce on Grounded

Alisa Bryce on Grounded

Soil scientist Alisa Bryce reads from and talks about her book Grounded. In this conversation we cover such things as how the book came about, Alisa's deep love of soil and both how important it is to all aspects of our lives, but also how fun and interesting it is, the importance of broad-reaching science communication and its relationship to academia, soil and the microbiome, why we have only mapped 2% of the underground world, on the comfort of how “the human story in the soil ends about 5-19 metres down”, the many chapters that might make it into her next book, her inspiration, and lots more. Find more about Grounded and Alisa at: alisabryce.com.au The Digsloo (fantastic children's poem/story by Alisa, referenced in our conversation): https://thedigsloo.com/ Mary Roach (major influence referenced in our conversation): https://www.maryroach.net/
31:0621/06/2023
Alan Fyfe on T

Alan Fyfe on T

Alan Fyfe joins us to read from and talk about his latest novel T, which shortlisted for the T.A.G Hungerford Prize (Australia) and the Chaffinch Press Aware Prize (Ireland), and was recently was shortlisted in The WA Premier's Prize for an Emerging Writer.  Alan also reads from and discusses his debut collection, G-d, Sleep, and Chaos, forthcoming from Gazebo Books in 2024. Find out more about Alan and his work at Alan's website: https://alanfyfe.com Purchase a copy of T: https://alanfyfe.com/purchase-t-a-novel Contact Alan (as per his request!): https://alanfyfe.com/contact
36:5931/05/2023
Ashley Kalagian Blunt on Dark Mode

Ashley Kalagian Blunt on Dark Mode

Ashley Kalagian Blunt joins us to read from and talk about her new thriller Dark Mode. We talk about such things as her research, the Dark Web, her protagonist Reagan Carson, her fabulous plant store setting Voodoo Lily and dark flowers, what she's reading now, her work-in-progress (hint it's another thriller), and lots more.  Ashley's website: ⁠https://www.ashleykalagianblunt.com/⁠ Click here for more information on Dark Mode, the free book club pack, or to take Ashley up on her offer to come talk to your club:  ⁠https://www.ashleykalagianblunt.com/dark-mode⁠ James and Ashley Stay at Home podcast: ⁠https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/james-and-ashley-stay-at-home/id1514919350⁠
31:0104/04/2023
Oisín Breen on Lilies on the Deathbed of Étaín & Other Poems

Oisín Breen on Lilies on the Deathbed of Étaín & Other Poems

In this wide-reading and humorous interview, Irish poet, academic and journalist Oisín Breen reads from and talks about his new poetry book Lilies on the Deathbed of Étaín & Other Poems with Simon Whitby Brown.  Find out more about Oisin here: https://www.pw.org/directory/writers/oisin_breen By a copy of Lilies on the Deathbed of Étaín & Other Poems here: https://beirbuapress.com/2023/01/01/lilies-on-the-deathbed-of-etain-and-other-poems-by-oisin-breen/ Find out more about Simon Whitby Brown and his famous moustache here: https://twitter.com/lordhandlebar?lang=en
45:0404/03/2023
A conversation with Meera Atkinson

A conversation with Meera Atkinson

Meera Atkinson reads from her book Traumata and talks about her work, the ongoing relevance of Traumata, the difficulty and the necessity of the hybrid form,  on language, blood, the patriarchy, beauty and its commodification, the power of engagement with the past - personally and collectively, literature, poetry and much more. Find out more about Meera and her work at her website: https://www.meeraatkinson.com Two recent publications of Meera's: http://cordite.org.au/scholarly/writing-threat-and-trauma/?fbclid=IwAR0_Jw8QBcYTnoamuqiNNUt5_E2XTb58_Ontnasx4kGspZasq81mAF4ZR6w https://theconversation.com/friday-essay-reclaiming-artist-musician-anita-lane-from-the-despised-label-of-muse-188815
30:4116/02/2023
Kateryna Kazimirova on Voices of Freedom: Contemporary Writing From Ukraine

Kateryna Kazimirova on Voices of Freedom: Contemporary Writing From Ukraine

One of the two editors of Voices of Freedom: Contemporary Writing From Ukraine reads from and talks about her new anthology.  Kateryna Kazimirova talks about the project and how it came together, how she chose the 27 authors, the importance of art in wartime, the many styles of the work, on translation and collaboration, her project Craft Magazine, and lots more.  Voices of Freedom: Contemporary Writing From Ukraine is published by 8th and Atlas Publishing and can be purchased here: https://www.8thandatlaspublishing.com/product-page/voices-of-freedom-contemporary-writing-from-ukraine Editors: Kateryna Kazimirova and Daryna Anastasieva Craft Magazine: https://craftmagazine.net
34:3321/12/2022
Hazel Smith on Ecliptical

Hazel Smith on Ecliptical

Poet, performer, emeritus professor, and new media artist Hazel Smith reads from and talks about her new book Ecliptical. We talk about metapoetry, multimedia, humour, eclipses, emphasis, John Ashbery and Frank O'Hara, and lots more.    Visit Hazel's website here: http://www.australysis.com/hsmith.htm My review of Ecliptical here: https://compulsivereader.com/2022/10/31/a-review-of-ecliptical-by-hazel-smith/ To purchase a copy of Ecliptical in both hard copy and digital visit: https://shortaustralianstories.com.au/product/ecliptical/ We spoke about the multimedia piece "The Lips Are Different" which can be viewed and read about here: https://thedigitalreview.com/issue00/lips-are-different/begin.html For more of Hazel's multimedia work visit: http://www.australysis.com
33:3311/11/2022
Sara Kidd on The Vegan Cake Bible

Sara Kidd on The Vegan Cake Bible

Sara Kidd joins me to talk about her new cookbook The Vegan Cake Bible. We cover such things as how Sara became the vegan cake queen, why she's drawn to cake, the extensive process she went through to create a cookbook including doing all of her own photography, how she chose which cakes to include, her favourite cake (hint - see links below), her 'holy grail' cake she wants to veganise, on collaboration, her feelings about the future of veganism and the planet, on coming to terms with sugar, her vintage style, on living sustainably, and lots more.  Sara's website: https://sarakidd.com Sara's cooking class Patreon which we discuss: https://www.patreon.com/join/sarakidd/checkout?rid=3463991&&ru=undefined Sara's favourite cake (Swedish Princess Cake): https://youtu.be/q6vj5a_wBmE
30:3111/08/2022
Bastian Fox Phelan on How to Be Between

Bastian Fox Phelan on How to Be Between

Bastian Fox Phelan reads from and talks about their new memoir How to Be Between. We talk about such things as speaking about the self with all of its multitudes, finding a voice, gender norms, facial hair, their nature writing, motherhood, what's next and much more.  Find out more at Bastian's website: https://www.bastianfoxphelan.com/#
35:0902/08/2022
Beth Spencer on The Age of Fibs

Beth Spencer on The Age of Fibs

Beth Spencer talks about and reads from her new book The Age of Fibs.  Beth talks about how the book came come together, about the transformation of her work through proximity, on the incorporation of popular culture, the relationship between artefact, memory, memoir and fiction, the way identity is a construct, on trauma and hope, and lots more.    Visit Beth at her website: https://bethspencer.com Watch the video interview: https://youtu.be/Fr2_TD8VX6w Age of Fibs page: https://bethspencer.com/blog/books/the-age-of-fibs/
39:2016/06/2022
Michelle Cahill on Daisy & Woolf

Michelle Cahill on Daisy & Woolf

Michelle Cahill, author of Daisy & Woolf, joins me at Woollahra Gallery to read from and talk about her new book, writing through Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway, the burden of the canon, giving a voice to marginalised characters, literary decolonisation, the complex relationship between real life and fiction, intertextuality, the conjunction of place against time, and lots more.  Visit Michelle's website: https://michellecahill.com 2016 Interview with Michelle on Letter to Pessoa: https://anchor.fm/compulsivereader/episodes/Interview-with-Michelle-Cahill-on-Letter-to-Pessoa-e2s73u
33:0503/06/2022
Talking poetry with Yilinhi/Lorna Munro

Talking poetry with Yilinhi/Lorna Munro

Lorna Munro or Yilinhi is a Wiradjuri and Gamilaroi woman, multidisciplinary artist, poet, performer, radio and podcast host. She joins me today in the lead-up to the Sydney Writers' Festival to read some of her poems and talk about her work, her collaborations with Ancestress and Eric Avery as Poetribe, the power of spoken word, speaking language, decolonialisation in art, Yala Gari, the poet-in-residence program she created with Red Room for students, pushing boundaries, her new Red Room collaboration Fair Trade with January Rogers, and lots more.  The Sydney Writers Festival session is on May 21st from 2-3pm at Carriageworks Track 8 - details here: https://www.swf.org.au/festivals/festival-2022/how-to-write-a-river-a-sky-a-seed/ You can hear tracks from Poetribe here: https://soundcloud.com/poetribe At the same Soundcloud link first song on the Sovereign Trax March is Yilinhi's collaboration with Ancestress "Speak the Truth" More about Eric Avery: https://ericavery.com.au More about Red Room's Fair Trade: https://redroompoetry.org/projects/fair-trade/ More about January Rogers at Twitter: https://twitter.com/janetmarieroger Video version of this session: https://youtu.be/GMINfk4xS28
44:5813/04/2022
Nick Courtright on The Proofs, the Figures: Walt Whitman and the Meaning of Poems.

Nick Courtright on The Proofs, the Figures: Walt Whitman and the Meaning of Poems.

Kristina Darling interviews Nick Courtright about his new book The Proofs, the Figures: Walt Whitman and the Meaning of Poems. In “Song of Myself,” Walt Whitman wryly remarks about one’s being “proud to get at the meaning of poems,” a comment highlighting the long-fraught problem of poetic interpretation and the pride-worthy intellectual labor required to elucidate the meaning of a text. Using Whitman’s own “When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer,” an eight-line poem published in 1865, as its case study, The Proofs, the Figures: Walt Whitman and the Meaning of Poems  investigates the chief methods available to readers when they embark on literary meaning-making, while also highlighting the challenges innate to such a task. With examples ranging from the critical and scholarly to the popular-cultural and survey-based, investigating interpretive prospects for “When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer” confirms that “to get at the meaning of poems” is a project of infinite opportunity both rewarded by and afflicted with the impossibility of absolute comprehension. By employing an array of formal, historical, mediational, and psychological techniques, Dr. Courtright confronts the lasting question of “what counts” or is relevant as evidence for an interpretation, while casting a wide net for the resources and methodologies that can be brought to bear not just on this single text or author, but on all texts and for all authors. Dr. Courtright’s book has already earned strong praise for its engaging prose and thought-provoking analysis.  Dr. Matt Cohen, Co-Director of the Walt Whitman Archive and author of The New Walt Whitman Studies (Cambridge UP), says, "The Proofs, the Figures has all of Nick Courtright's usual hallmarks: humor, trenchant readings, sustained skepticism, and a tactical leveraging of critical voices both old and new."   Similarly, Dr. Chad Bennett, author of Word of Mouth: Gossip and American Poetry  (Johns Hopkins UP) and Your New Feeling is the Artifact of a Bygone Era  (Sarabande), praises Courtright as a critic and thinker: "I appreciate, as always, Nick Courtright's lively and accessible writing, engagement with audience, and the ambition of this project. I'm impressed by how much ground he covers." A scholar-practitioner, Dr Courtright is also the author of The Forgotten World, Let There Be Light, and Punchline, a National Poetry Series finalist.  He is the Executive Editor of Atmosphere Press. His poetry has appeared in The Harvard Review, Kenyon Review, Boston Review, The Iowa Review, AGNI, Gulf Coast, and The Southern Review, among dozens of others, and essays and other prose have been published by such places as The Huffington Post, The Best American Poetry, Gothamist, and SPIN Magazine. With a Doctorate in Literature from the University of Texas, he lives in Austin with the poet Lisa Mottolo and their children, William and Samuel.  Find out more about Nick Courtright at: https://nickcourtright.com Kristina Marie Darling is a poet, essayist, and critic. She holds a doctorate from the Poetics Program at S.U.N.Y.-Buffalo, as well as an M.F.A. from New York University.  Find out more about Kristina Marie Darling at: https://kristinamariedarling.com
27:0419/03/2022
Jessica Au on Cold Enough For Snow

Jessica Au on Cold Enough For Snow

Jessica Au’s first novel, Cargo, was published by Picador in 2011 and was highly commended in the Kathleen Mitchell Award for a writer under 30. She is the former deputy editor of Meanjin, and is currently an associate editor at Aeon. Her new book Cold Enough for Snow won the inaugural Novel Prize and was published by Giramondo, New Directions and Fitzcarraldo Editions in February 2022, and translated into fifteen languages. She joined us today to read from and talk about Cold Enough for Snow. During the interview we talked about such things as the way she conveys interiority, about the mother-daughter relationship in her book and the philosophic tension between the way they see the world combined with the tenderness that exists between them, on elegy, perception, ekphrasis, memory, migration and many other key themes that this beautiful book encompasses.   Cold Enough for Snow (and more information about the book) can be found here: https://giramondopublishing.com/jessica-au-a-note-on-cold-enough-for-snow/ Jessica's website: https://www.jessicaau.com Compulsive Reader's review of Cold Enough for Snow: http://www.compulsivereader.com/2022/02/21/a-review-of-cold-enough-for-snow-by-jessica-au/
36:4323/02/2022
Charles Freyberg on The Crumbling Mansion

Charles Freyberg on The Crumbling Mansion

Charles Freyberg reads from and talks about his latest book of poetry The Crumbling Mansion and chats with me about performance and the power of memorisation, bringing characters to life, Kings Cross and its importance in his work, on nostalgia and ecological loss, on breaking binaries, his new work-in-progress and much more.  You can find some excerpts from Charles' latest show in the links below: Trickster Spirits: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lIrN39Voqfk Vanessa Up the rickety darkened stairs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djopxXq434w
33:3815/12/2021
KA Rees on Come the Bones

KA Rees on Come the Bones

KA Rees is a writer of poetry and short fiction. She has been published by Margaret River Press, Cordite, Australian Poetry, Overland, Review of Australian Fiction, Spineless Wonders and Yalobusha Review, among others. She received a Varuna fellowship for her manuscript of short stories, she was shortlisted for the 2016 Judith Wright Poetry Award, was the recipient of the 2017 Barry Hannah Prize in Fiction and runner-up in the 2018 Peter Cowan Short Story Award, and the national winner of the 2019 joanne burns Microlit Award. Her debut poetry collection, Come the Bones was published late last year as a Flying Island Pocket Book, and is the subject of today’s conversation.  KA reads a number of poems in the collection and talks about how the book came together as a collection, the relationship between the individual poems and the book, her current Sydney Observatory residency and much more.   Find out more about KA Rees and connect with her (and message her to get an autographed copy of Come the Bones!) at Twitter: https://twitter.com/perniciouskate and Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kateamber01/?hl=en
37:4313/10/2021
James Bradley | Author of Clade - on climate fiction

James Bradley | Author of Clade - on climate fiction

On its one-year anniversary, we've re-aired, with permission, James Bradley's wonderful conversation with Beth Spencer from Climactic's ArtBreaker.  James and Beth Spencer spoke about James' new book Clade, about climate fiction, and about the imperative for art and the conversation is even more relevant today and deserves a replay.  Original publication is here: https://www.climactic.fm/show/art-breaker/james-bradley-author-of-clade-on-climate-fiction/ And do please check out the Climactic network - they do terrific work. Artbreaker's main page is here: https://www.climactic.fm/show/art-breaker/ James Bradley's website is: https://cityoftongues.com Beth Spencer's website is: http://bethspencer.com/blog/
01:03:5730/09/2021
Beth Spencer in conversation with Kit Kelen

Beth Spencer in conversation with Kit Kelen

Beth Spencer in conversation with Kit Kelen about his creative practice as poet, artist, publisher, collaborator, academic, mentor, musician and blogger. Kit reads selections from some of his many books intercut with original guitar tracks. They discuss Holden cars, bushfires, coal-addiction, and the role of place in his work -- as a writer who uses a lot of Australian idiom, colloquialisms and reference to landscape in his poetry, and who has also been widely translated. The process and benefits of translation, the role of habits and doodling, the disruptive power of humour in creative and political practice, and the importance of community and friendship. Links: The Daily Kit blog - www.thedailykitkelen.blogspot.com www.kitkelen.com - art and writing Originally premiered on Climactic's Artbreaker: https://www.climactic.fm/show/art-breaker/beth-spencer-on-artbreaker-kit-kelen-on-creativity-habit-and-disruption/ (republished with permission)
56:2805/08/2021
Lillian Avedian on Journey to Tatev

Lillian Avedian on Journey to Tatev

Lillian Avedian is an Armenian American journalist and poet from Los Angeles. In this episode she reads from and talks about her debut book of poetry, Journey to Tatev.  We talk about many of the key themes in the book - the many journeys: physical, metaphorical, about the uneasy alliance between grandmother, mother, daughter, on coming out, the rejection of shame and the acceptance of the richness of desire, on the sensual evocativeness of food (especially Nazouk), on writing a duel language book and the power of the mother-tongue, and lots more.  Find more about Lillian on Twitter: https://www.instagram.com/lillian_avedian/?hl=en Lillian's work at The Armenian Weekly: https://armenianweekly.com/author/lillian-avedian/ To buy a copy of Journey to Tatev visit: https://www.girlsonkey.com/poetryportalshop/Journey-to-Tatev-Lillian-Avedian-p307875338
33:3930/06/2021
Adam Aitken on One Hundred Letters Home

Adam Aitken on One Hundred Letters Home

Adam Aitken reads from and talks about his memoir One Hundred Letters Home.  We talk about the book's multi-genres structure, the limits of memory, artefacts and perception, "fluid subject positions" and the shifting nature of identity, his poetry book Archipelago and the ongoing appeal of France, his new book due out later in the year, and lots more.  Find out more about Adam and his books at his blog: https://adamaitken.blog
36:1816/06/2021
Michael J Leach on Chronicity

Michael J Leach on Chronicity

Australian academic, writer, and poet, Michael J. Leach reads from and talks about his latest poetry book Chronicity.  We talk about such things as the relationship between the visual/concrete poems on the page and their sonic qualities in live readings, the sensual, visceral nature of the work, how he chooses and works with constraints, his use of humour and the way he plays scientific precision against emotion, the way poetry enables him, as a scientist, to work better with the complexities of the real world, and lots more.  You can find out more about Michael and Chronicity at his website: https://mleach11.wixsite.com/writing/chronicity Chronicity was published by Melbourne Poets Union (ISBN: 9780648967910) and a copy can be purchased by emailing Hamish Danks Brown [email protected] cc: [email protected]
34:1023/05/2021
Emily Maguire on Love Objects

Emily Maguire on Love Objects

Australian writer Emily Maguire's new novel is a clear-eyed and compassionate novel about love and family, betrayal and forgiveness, and the things we do to fill our empty spaces. In this interview, created for The Newcastle Writers' Festival's Stories to You series https://www.newcastlewritersfestival.org.au/news/#podcasts, Emily reads from and talks about Love Objects.  Find out more about Emily here: https://www.emilymaguire.com.au
34:4114/04/2021
Alison Treat interviews Leslie K Barry about Newark Minutemen

Alison Treat interviews Leslie K Barry about Newark Minutemen

In this guest episode, author and podcaster Alison Treat interviews Leslie K Barry about her book Newark Minutemen. Note that this is a re-pod from Alison's excellent podcast Historical Fiction: Unpacked. In this interview, author Leslie K. Barry talks Newark Minutemen, and its historical 1938 setting, including the little known history behind the book around a shadow Nazi party called the German-American Bund led by an American Fuhrer and inspired by Leslie's own uncle's role in fighting this party.  More on Newark Minutemen can be found at the book's website and Facebook page. Leslie K Barry's Goodreads page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/20201224.Leslie_K_Barry Find out more about Alison Treat at her website: http://alisontreat.com Watch another interview with Leslie about the book conducted by her sister here: https://youtu.be/K96g5GXBNT4
45:3410/04/2021
Chris Mansell on Foxline

Chris Mansell on Foxline

Chris Mansell is one of Australia’s notable powerhouses in the poetry world.  Chris was one of the founders of Five Islands Press and now runs PressPress, an independent publishing house she founded in 2002.  Chris has had over a dozen of her own books of poetry published as well as artist books, CDs, a collection of short fiction and even a children’s book. Her extensive body of work has been translated into many languages, and won many prizes including the Queensland Premier's Literary Award (poetry) the Meanjin Dorothy Porter Poetry Prize. Chris joins us to read from and talk about her poetry book Foxline, published in 2020 by Flying Island Books.  Find out more about Chris at her website: http://www.chrismansell.com
35:2124/03/2021
Zacchary Bird on Vegan Junk Food

Zacchary Bird on Vegan Junk Food

Does being vegan mean having to miss out on burgers, jalapeno peppers and deep-fried banana fritters? No way, according to Melbourne writer and vegan recipe developer Zacchary Bird. In this episode that aired for the Newcastle Writers Festival's Stories to You series, Zacchary spills the tea on his first book Vegan Junk Food.
30:3710/03/2021
Paul Rabinowitz on The Clay Urn

Paul Rabinowitz on The Clay Urn

Paul Rabinowitz talks to Tinfoil Crowns author Erin Jones about his novella The Clay Urn. They talk about the inspiration for his story, on working with a real situation--the Arab/Isreali conflict--in a fictional context, his evocative setting, his own experiences in the Isreali army, the complexity of war and the impact of that on young people, on seeing both sides of any conflict, key themes and takeaways from The Clay Urn, and much more.  Find out more about Paul Rabinowitz at his website here: https://www.paulrabinowitz.com Find out more about Erin Jones at her website: http://www.betterpeaches.com/erin-jones
19:1016/02/2021
Angus Gaunt on Black Rabbit

Angus Gaunt on Black Rabbit

The author of Black Rabbit and co-owner of Sappho Books reads from and talks about his latest novel and its quirky characters, about the impact of 2020, about themes and his writing style, the inherent beauty of writing for oneself, the value of small publishers, his work-in-progress, the book he's reading and loving (Janet Frame's An Autobiography), and lots more.   Angus' website: https://www.angusgaunt.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/angus.gaunt Sappho Books: https://www.sapphobooks.com.au/
32:2706/10/2020
Denise O'Hagan on The Beating Heart

Denise O'Hagan on The Beating Heart

Denise O'Hagan reads from and talks about her new poetry book The Beating Heart.  We cover such things as how the book came about, the relationship between memoir, poetry, and meaning making, on the use of sensual stimulus and poetry is everywhere, on time, and the way our pasts are ever present, on the 'heart' of and in the book, on editing for The Blue Nib, and lots more.  Connect with Denise O'Hagan at her website here: https://denise-ohagan.com and on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/DeniseOHagan3 Visit The Blue Nib: https://thebluenib.com
34:2021/09/2020
Lee Kofman on Imperfect

Lee Kofman on Imperfect

Author, mentor, writing teacher and speaker Lee Kofman reads from about talks about her memoir Imperfect.  In this brief but far-reaching conversation, we talk about some of Lee's key themes such as body surface and how it shapes us, the power of creative nonfiction, combining memoir and research and the connection for her, how she chose the people who were profiled in the book, the anthology she edited, Split, and lots more.  Find out more about Lee at her website: https://leekofman.com.au/
38:0027/08/2020
Nicola Redhouse on Unlike the Heart

Nicola Redhouse on Unlike the Heart

Nicola Redhouse reads from her book Unlike the Heart and talks about the way her research grew from her own postnatal anxiety to something much bigger, about the relevance of the literary perspective on scientific inquiry, her readership, the genetic links that drive us, on the way in which her book helped her family, her works in progress and lots more. You can watch this in full video at the Newcastle Writers’ Festival YouTube site: https://youtu.be/q0NCgiqxvdw Find out more about Nicola at her website: https://www.nicolaredhouse.com/
29:4521/05/2020
Maria Tumarkin on Axiomatic

Maria Tumarkin on Axiomatic

Maria Tumarkin reads from her award-winning book Axiomatic and talks about language and accents,  the many different representations of time in Axiomatic: horizontal, vertical, chronological, cyclical, and 'real' and how she represents these multiple temporalities, about her characters and their complexities, about memory and the limitations of narrative, on axioms and the way they are true and not true, on productivity and caretaking, and much more.  You can find out more about Maria's work at her website: http://www.mariatumarkin.com The video version of this conversation can be found here:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVuhP6yyuwE
42:3208/05/2020
Sophie Hardcastle on Below Deck

Sophie Hardcastle on Below Deck

Sophie Hardcastle reads from her latest and much lauded novel Below Deck. We also talked about many things including her Provost scholarship at Oxford, on being an artist-in-resident with Chimu Adventures in Antarctica, the big themes of Below Deck, including ecology, respect, compassion, and the interconnectedness of all things, the link between visual art and written art, the current pandemic, and much more. Full Video version here: https://youtu.be/82COIj2UXbw Find out more about Sophie's writing, art, and her screenplay work at her website: https://www.sophiehardcastle.com/
33:5617/04/2020
Gillian Swain book launch My skin its own sky

Gillian Swain book launch My skin its own sky

Following the cancelled Newcastle Writers Festival, Gillian Swain and I decided to launch her new poetry book, My skin its own sky,  online.  The launch was featured in this year's online Newcastle Writers Festival #NWFSTORIESTOYOU (see video link below). My skin its own sky was published in Dec 2019 by Flying Island Books, and is Gillian's second published work following Sang Up (Picaro Press, 2001). Gillian lives in East Maitland with her husband and their four children, where they run their successful coffee roasting business, River Roast Video version of launch: https://youtu.be/Z0ZxKQj2dkg Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/gillian.swain.75 River Roast Coffee: https://riverroast.com
26:2910/04/2020
Virtual launch of Morgan Bell's Idiomatic, for the people

Virtual launch of Morgan Bell's Idiomatic, for the people

As the Newcastle Writers Festival had to be cancelled this year due to Coronavirus, we did a virtual launch for Morgan Bell's  poetry chapbook Idiomatic, for the people.  The session, which we conducted with Zoom, was a lot of fun and after my launch Morgan read and spoke about several of the poems in the collection, as well as how the book came together. The full video version can be found here: https://youtu.be/1G3kbb2wCfU.  You can buy copies of Idiomatic, for the people from the Girls on Key Poetry Portal (https://www.girlsonkey.com/poetryportalshop/Poetry-book-Idiomatic-For-The-People-Morgan-Bell-p140419435) or Amazon (https://www.amazon.com/Idiomatic-people-chapbook-Morgan-Bell/dp/024445776X)
39:0821/03/2020