Blog visit

Nicole Alexander, author of The Bark Cutters and A Changing Land, has invited me over to visit her blog today. Nicole and I are almost ‘neighbours’ – we both live in rural NSW, but she’s a few hours west from me, down the slopes and out on the plains. So please do come over and say hello to Nicole, and if you haven’t read her books yet, you’re in for some good reads!

Posted in General | Comments Off on Blog visit

Curiosity

There’s a family of local kangaroos who often graze close to our sunroom windows – a big buck, a female with a tiny joey in her pouch, and a very curious adolescent:

Young kangaroo

They’re quite wild, so I have to be quite still and reach for the camera slowly and carefully – any sudden movements and they bound away. Hence the photo taken across the sewing table!

Here’s Mum, and you can just see her joey peeking out to nibble some leaves:

Kangaroo and joey

Yes, I know, I have a very tough life, trying to write with views like this just outside my window!

 

Posted in Life, Wildlife | 2 Comments

Aussie Author Month

Aussie Author Month logo

April is Aussie Author Month, and book bloggers around the country – readers, reviewers, booksellers and authors – are celebrating the rich diversity of Australian books.

I’m very proud to have joined the ranks of Australian authors, many of whom I’ve held in awe through my reading life, way back to my childhood. So, I thought I’d use Aussie Author Month to highlight some authors, past and present, whose books I’ve loved.

First up, a classic from my childhood: Ethel Turner’s Seven Little Australians, originally published in 1894, and continuously in print since then. The ABC made a 10-part miniseries of this in 1973, and I loved it. We watched it on TV, and then during the school holidays the National Library showed an episode a day, and my sister and I travelled into the city on the bus every day to watch it again. There were a fair few youngsters who did the same thing – this being long before videos were around; if it wasn’t on one of the two TV channels, there weren’t many other options.

Part of the series was filmed at Lanyon homestead, south of Canberra – an area I knew well, even back then. So it was wonderful to see the story set against familiar landscapes on TV.

Seven Little Australians - 1974 cover

I read the book after watching the series. Despite it’s vintage, it’s a lively book with an engaging narrative style, and a distinctive Australian voice. The seven little Australians of the title are a large and active family; definitely not, as Turner explains in the opening pages, model children. Judy remains my favourite of them; her passion for life, her vitality, her cheek and her loyalty and love for her siblings are wonderfully drawn. And yes, I still cry at the end. No matter how many times I read it, or watch the series, I’m leaking tears and sobbing.

Thank you, Ethel Turner, for your wonderful book.

Posted in Aussie Author Month, Austalian books | 5 Comments

Work, work… and a little play

I’ve been working full-time at the university since the beginning of semester, and it is keeping me very busy. I’m teaching an undergraduate course on Digital Media, and as it hasn’t been properly revised for some time, I’m writing it as I teach it. Two-thirds of our students are off-campus students, studying online, so in addition to a combined lecture/tutorial for the on-campus students, I have to prepare teaching material for the external students as well, and interact with them online. So, although I’ve been online a lot, it hasn’t been around here, or on Twitter or Facebook very much at all.

There’s time for a little bit of play, though – walking the dogs in the autumn evenings, a few rows of knitting here and there, a day trip to Tamworth last Saturday with Gordon, and I’m looking forward to the Australian Romance Readers Convention in Sydney, the weekend after next.

ARRC2011 logo

I’ll be on a couple of panels during the weekend, and attending the evening events and the booksigning – ARRA are doing a fantastic job with the organisation, and it’s going to be a great weekend!

And still talking about playing, during my lunchbreak today, I had made a short, simple animation at xtranormal.com. Just a bit of fun – an introduction to romantic suspense:

Now, off for something else enjoyable – G’s making poached eggs on my wholemeal sourdough toast for dinner!

Posted in General, Life, Romance genre | 2 Comments

Diversions

I had to fly to Sydney yesterday for a follow-up appointment with my neurosurgeon. An 8.40 flight down there, a couple of hours to browse the shops before the 1pm appointment, then a relaxed afternoon with more browsing and meeting my publisher Bernadette for coffee before the 7pm flight back to Armidale.

That was the plan. But it was a cloudy, rainy day, and the morning plane from Sydney couldn’t land at Armidale. It’s a regional airport, and QantasLink flies Dash-8 Aircraft on the Syd-Armidale route, with 4 or 5 flights in and out each day. So, the other 40 or so passengers and I were loaded onto a bus, and trundled the 125km down the Great Dividing Range to Tamworth to meet our diverted plane, and fly out from there – leaving around 10.30am.

There went my morning in Sydney – but I did have a pleasant chat with a friend in the bus to Tamworth. Both of us had brought books to read on the plane, but neither of us can read in buses, so we talked about books instead.

Would you believe, the plane last night also couldn’t land at Armidale? I had a suspicion it might happen, and the flight attendant had commented that when they’d left Armidale at 5pm it was raining and cloudy. The pilots circled the town a couple of times, but couldn’t get good visuals on the runway…. so, back we went to Tamworth! This time I slept most of the way up the Range to Armidale, only waking up as we turned into the airport. Gordon was there to collect me, and we finally got home around 11pm.

The time I did get to spend in Sydney was good – and the great news is that the surgeon is very happy with my recovery, and I should have no more problems now. In 12 months, we’ll do a CT Scan and a follow-up appointment, just to make sure everything’s fine, but there’s no reason to expect that it won’t be. And the best news is that I’m allowed to drive again! Yay!

I also had a lovely meeting with Bernadette in one of Newtown’s many cafés, talking books and publishing (and weaving and textiles). We’re still hoping for October publication for my next book – but I do have to get it finished soon. As I’m also teaching at the local university for this semester, I’ll be working hard to get everything done… so please forgive me if the blog is quiet. I’m sure you’d rather see a published book than my blog posts!

Speaking of published books, plane travel is guilt-free reading time for me, and yesterday’s read was one I’ve looked forward to for ages – my friend Helene Young’s new release, Shattered Sky. A romantic suspense, set in the tropics of north Queensland, with a pilot and a navy commander tracking down people smuggers in the rugged isolation of Cape York.  Thanks, Helene, for a great read – I enjoyed every page! (And finished it as we were circling Armidale… – great timing!)

Shattered Sky by Helene Young - front cover

 

Posted in General, Life | 5 Comments