"As a writer and a reader I am attuned to how literature and art of all kinds expands our sense of life and our understandings of it ... I often reflect on the relationships between living and writing"
Get Close Reading with @VanessaBerry
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We heard you like words, so we made you a newsletter.
Close Reading is a fortnightly dispatch of literary obsessions. Each edition features a guest writer who shares one word, one quote, one poem, one book, and one other thing.
Subscribe for free at https://t.co/SiOmQQJXqP
Close Reading is a fortnightly dispatch of literary obsessions.
Each edition features a guest writer who shares one word, one quote, one poem, one book, and one other thing.
Free of algorithms. Free to subscribe.
Get it at https://t.co/PVvvAvLG3Y
We heard you like words, so we made you a newsletter.
Close Reading is a fortnightly dispatch of literary obsessions. Each edition features a guest writer who shares one word, one quote, one poem, one book, and one other thing.
Subscribe for free at https://t.co/SiOmQQJXqP
I've launched a newsletter.
Close Reading is a fortnightly dispatch of literary obsessions.
Each edition features a guest writer who shares one word, one quote, one poem, one book, and one other thing.
Free of algorithms. Free to subscribe.
Get it at https://t.co/PVvvAvLG3Y
โWool is a potent source of language and storytelling".
I chose the name @woolgather_co for my studio, and wrote a short piece about the origins of the word, in a tale that spans from Italian Alps, to fields of England, to farms of Australia.
https://t.co/C9NG8kaEVc
Woolgather is a purpose-driven studio dedicated to social, cultural & environmental projects. Sometimes these worlds dovetail, as they did with On a Floating World, a publication that gathered stories of how water shapes us, for @CityNewcastle & @PortofNewcastle.
The Australian Government spends less than 0.1% of our annual budget on nature conservation and biodiversity.
Australia has the worldโs highest mammal extinction rate, and is the only developed country listed as a global deforestation hotspot.
โWe have produced more than 8 billion tonnes of plastic pollution, enough to cover the surface of Australia with a crust 20 centimetres thick"
To combat this growing crisis, bioplastics are positioned as a green alternative. But are they what they seem?
https://t.co/yQtzWvCC5y
"In Australia, controversy is treated as an institutional failure rather than cultural vitality. The result is a narrowing of ambition, purpose and the place of literature in our society. The door is opened to mediocrity."
Marcia Langton for @SatPaper.
https://t.co/5KRtd9KDJK
Drummer Laurence Pike improvises to field recordings of Palm Cockatoos, who break off small branches and rhythmically beat them on trees to attract mates and establish territory. The only known animal to create and use a tool musically.
https://t.co/km9CBzAHhz
โIt was our second anniversary, we were in Bermagui, and my shoes were filling with blood.โ
An accident cut our trip short, but saved us from driving into a bushfire. I wrote about that day, and our changing climate, in a story called The Lost Holiday.
https://t.co/H92n5bRkNm
My work has always been divided between words and images, but at the end of last year, I decided to dedicate myself to the words.
In this transition, one creature has occupied my thoughts and has become a totem: the bogong moth.
This is why: https://t.co/vdTJKH4xf6
It has been a particularly gloomy season in Australian literature, so QUT saving @Meanjin is very welcome win.
The name Meanjin is a Turrbal/Yagara word for land on which Brisbane is located, so this is a homecoming too. Love to see it.
https://t.co/AJ9N4InAeR
We float in the water
between the ocean
and the river.
We watch silverbodied fish
flashing in the seaweed
like turning tinsel.
A million moon snail eggs
in swollen jelly submarines
bump against us
as the current
carries them
downstream.
Found an Australian word Iโd never heard before: snigging. Originating from the coastal timber-yards of the 18th century, snigging described the act of dragging wood with ropes and bullocks from the forest to the river.
Over 100,000 bony bream have washed up on the shores of Lake Menindee, following the recent heatwaves. The most likely cause of death is hypoxia, where the heat reduces oxygen in the water, leading to suffocation.
https://t.co/LTleDeOMOT