Writing Workshop – Goondiwindi August 23rd.

I'll be conducting a writing workshop at the Goondiwindi State Primary School Conference Room from 9.30 to 4pm on Saturday August 23, 2014. Course Details -  The fundamentals of writing. Learn the craft of writing in this lively, interactive session which will introduce you to both the fundamentals of writing and the joy of storytelling. By [...]

By | August 3rd, 2014|A WRITERS LIFE, Inspiration|0 Comments

The Great Plains: A peak at my next novel out November 2014.

 A sneak peak at the cover of my new novel. The Great Plains will be published November 2014. I'm really excited about this work. As part of the research for the book I toured Texas and Oklahoma on a research trip last year. My mum came with me to help out with the note-taking as I [...]

By | July 25th, 2014|A WRITERS LIFE, Inspiration|0 Comments

The Agony & the Ecstasy – Art in literature

The Agony & The Ecstasy of Stone’s Michelangelo Biographical novels of artists abound, but perhaps the most famous is Irving Stone’s The Agony and the Ecstasy about one of the most famous artists of all time, Michelangelo.   Stone took much of his material from nearly 500 letters attributed to Michelangelo, which had never before [...]

By | June 17th, 2014|A WRITERS LIFE, Inspiration, Opinion|0 Comments

Maris Morton: The 2010 Scribe Cal Fiction winner releases a new novel.

I had the pleasure of reading Maris Morton's first novel A Darker Music  which I read prior to publication and endorsed whole-heartedly. It's a terrific book, which went on to win the inaugural Scribe Cal Fiction prize for 2010. Her latest offering should prove equally enjoyable. Here Maris joins me to talk about The Herb Gardener. " Thank you, Nicole, for inviting [...]

By | June 4th, 2014|A WRITERS LIFE|0 Comments

Art in Literature: The Picture of Dorian Gray

The Picture of Dorian Gray as a Mirror on Wilde’s Society  In the late Victorian era during which Oscar Wilde wrote, bourgeois society had begun ascribing moral values to its art, believing art should be used to provide the masses social education and moral enlightenment (think Charles Dickens). Wilde and many of his contemporaries rebelled against that idea, looking to untether art from any moral responsibility through the aestheticism movement, which believed art had no purpose at all. One of Wilde’s most famous works, and his only published novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray is often  seen as a direct condemnation of—or perhaps a sort of parody of—the idea of art as moral. As you may remember, the main conceit of the story is that Dorian Gray, an attractive and  hedonistic young man, remains young and beautiful despite his appetites, while his portrait  ages and grows more grotesque with every act of debauchery. Where Victorian society wanted art to provide a moral lesson to the viewer, Dorian’s portrait  does the opposite for Dorian himself, providing him with all the excuse he needs to follow his  desires wherever they lead him without any consequence. And society was certainly scandalized by this! Some British reviewers at the time even went so far as to insist that Wilde be prosecuted  on moral grounds. But seen with modern eyes, it becomes a little more challenging to see whether Wilde succeeded in his goal of proving that art should have no purpose. Dorian does, in fact, get his just desserts in the end, when he stabs the portrait and is later found, stabbed, and hideously grotesque and aged, suggesting that even Wilde couldn’t let him get away with all his dirty deeds without some comeuppance. In fact, for many, the novel is a tale of the price of vanity and hedonism; rather than, as Wilde said, a work of art with no purpose. Where’s the truth? Perhaps somewhere in between. The painter in the novel, Basil, declares that art should be  “unconscious, ideal, and remote.” Yet his own painting of Dorian is anything but, both because of its mystical powers, but also because of the way Basil idolizes his subject. Because these are so contrary to the aesthetic ideal, some see the portrait of Dorian Gray as something of a cautionary tale, as in: this is the price you pay for insisting that art has a moral lesson. Whatever the meaning, The Picture of Dorian Gray remains one of the most well known and oft-read pieces of literature that revolve around a work of art. Where do you think Dorian Gray lies on the moral spectrum? Cautionary tale of vanity and vice or a purposeless work of art? I’d love to hear your theories in the comments.  

By | April 22nd, 2014|A WRITERS LIFE, Inspiration|0 Comments

The Dog Blog: When cravings turn dangerous.

I’m a bit wounded at the moment. In fact I may need surgery. Well it’s not quite that bad and to some extent it’s my own fault. You see I love peanut butter. Always have. Ever since I was a pup. I remember sitting on Nicole’s lap, me cute as… Nicole, eating peanut butter on [...]

By | April 14th, 2014|A WRITERS LIFE, COUNTRY LIFE|0 Comments

Magic Mushrooms-The Dog Blog

I’ve never been one to question a dog’s food preferences. I myself have always been particularly particular, especially when it comes to the store purchased versions of what the two-legged’s deem suitable dog tucker. However some of my mates are just grateful for a feed even if it is from the local supermarket, bottom shelf, [...]

By | April 7th, 2014|A WRITERS LIFE|0 Comments

The Dog Blog: Frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn.

I thought the two-legged’s were going to have some sort of fit with the length this dry spell was going on for. But then it actually rained. You would have thought it was Christmas. There was a lot of talking loudly and sitting watching the rain fall and a bottle of fizzy stuff was popped. [...]

Rain. Yep, we finally got some liquid gold.

One minute we're sweeping the dust off the back porch, the next we're sweeping the mud off. Yes it's rained, in a big way. We had 110 glorious mils yesterday which in the old scale is 440 points.             We'll be planting crops on this....         And [...]

Jennifer Smart on Home and Away and that first novel…

Meet Jennifer Smart, ex-Home & Away assistant director and scriptwriter. Jennifer's first novel The Wardrobe Girl is out now and she dropped by to share her thoughts on writing that first book... " 'Write what you know’, is the very sound advice offered to aspiring writers on the subject of their first novel. I guess [...]

By | March 26th, 2014|A WRITERS LIFE, Inspiration|0 Comments
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