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Today, Elsewhere

These made-up words describe your life better than you can: Mashable considers Ben Schott’s Schottenfreude, a book of faux German words to describe the human condition.

What literary products would you like to see? (Check out some suggestions on Twitter with the hashtag Read more

‘A philosopher’s stone, an enigma for the ages.'

‘It must be clear immediately and to every reader that this is not a novel but a book of puzzles, a Socratic cipher for political philosophers and a riddle for allegorists; but there are even more puzzles, and more kinds of puzzle, in this book than might be apparent on first

Today, Elsewhere

‘Write what is going to keep you awake at night; write what you don’t understand; write to figure something out. Good novels are journeys into the unknown, for their authors as well as their readers.’ Toni Jordan in The Millions on the ideas behind fiction.

fridayfrivolity

A project for the weekend: DIY telephone bookends.

Famous authors' last words. (What was ‘Moose…Indian’ all about?)

Norman Mailer insults your favourite writers.

Q: How many male novelists does it take to screw in a lightbulb?

A: War is hell.

Male novelist jokes.

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Today, Elsewhere

‘Now reissued in the Text Classics series, A Lifetime on Clouds is still the quixotic oddity it was in 1976: truly one of the world’s most unusual yet endearing coming-of-age stories.

Patricia Edgar’s In Praise of Ageing

The Sydney Morning Herald spoke to Patricia Edgar, author of In Praise of Ageing, about the obstacles and opportunities of ageing.

You can listen to Patricia on Radio New Zealand, on 774 ABC Melbourne, on Drive with Tim Cox on 612 ABC Brisbane and on Life Matters on Read more

Today, Elsewhere

‘This book is like a master-class in perfection’: Garry Disher’s Bitter Wash Road, reviewed.

14 published novels written during NaNoWriMo.

Jeff Sparrow on the value of literary magazines.

Great press for Margaret Drabble and The Pure Gold Baby

Alex Clark compares Margaret Drabble’s latest book—her seventeenth—to The Millstone, Drabble’s celebrated 1965 novel. Also from the Guardian is an interview with Margaret Drabble, in which she talks about, among other things, writing, drinking and depression.

The Read more

fridayfrivolity

10 great meals in literature, in photographs.

Goodnight, Dune and other children’s books/sci-fi classics mashups.

7 great works of fiction inspired by architecture.

British crime writers, glaring.

Game of Thrones characters imagined as Mr Men and Little Misses.

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Great press for Garry Disher’s Bitter Wash Road

‘Disher has drawn both a vivid and visceral picture of a backblocks bush town, its inhabitants ground down by the stresses of isolation, hard work and irregular, relentlessly shrinking incomes.’ The Guardian reviews Garry Disher’s latest standalone novel, Bitter Wash Road.

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