The Crimson Petal and the White

February 19, 2015 | Posted by Lesley Jakobsen | Fiction, THUMBNAIL REVIEWS, WRITING & LITERATURE |

Petals & Thorns. Both good and bad.
(Image by Y Nekonomania)

(Michel Faber) I have never understood the concept of “beach”, “holiday”, or “summer” reading.   The idea seems to be that, for some reason,  when my toes are being lapped by a foreign sea,  I want to read the sort of rubbish which I would not give shelf space to at home. Because my feet are damp, my brain must be too. Being the gullible type, I have fallen for this publishers’ spin in the past.  I have packed “light”, much vaunted contemporary fiction in my carry-on bag and have optimistically bent back the first of the 600 or so pages as the A380 taxis.  By the…

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No Man’s Land

February 13, 2015 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | Plays, THEATRE, Ulalume, WRITING & LITERATURE |

(Harold Pinter) Adelaide University Theatre Guild, 2014 Clive James described this piece as akin to “a chess game being played out long after a draw should have been declared, since there are only two knights and two pawns left on the board.”  Whilst this could not describe a real game, you get his point. It’s another psychodrama but with enough keen sense of modern discourse to give us (pardon us for this) pause… Pinter’s stronger characters can never resist the chance to crush their weak or shifty (usually self-delusional) adversaries.  Here, two men with literary pretensions, watched and ‘waitered’ by…

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A House and its Head

(by I Compton-Burnett) Ivy Compton-Burnett* must have had a strange family life (just look at her hair).  She was the seventh of her father’s  children and the first of her (less than affectionate) mother’s five.  A brother died of pneumonia, another on the Somme. Two of her sisters (“Baby” and “Topsy”) committed suicide together one Christmas Day. None of the twelve had children.  None of the girls married. Certainly her books are about strange families.  The Edgeworth family of A House and its Head is unhappy, decidedly in its own way.  The solipsistic father Duncan is oblivious to his (first) wife’s misery and to…

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The Clearing House

February 9, 2015 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | Classic Books, Fiction, Ulalume, WRITING & LITERATURE |

Are we over the publishing tactic of “tease, obfuscate, hit-and-run”? Reports (and comma errors) are rife over the discovery of a Harper Lee spin-off, Go Set a Watchman, with Scout Finch now grown up and sittin’ at the back of the bus.  The latest in a long line of similar finds, from The Original of Laura (nb: notes on index cards, not a novel) and similar teases over Kafka and J. D. Salinger, this has the added frisson of publication in the author’s lifetime. TVC can’t wait for future unearthed treasures: Luke Rhinehart’s Snake Eyes; J.K.Rowling’s Harry Potter Goes to…

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Melbourne & Victorian Bookshops

February 9, 2015 | Posted by Lesley Jakobsen | TRAVEL, Ulalume, WRITING & LITERATURE |

The Varnished Culture attended a book launch and signing in April 2017 and made two important discoveries. First, we rather like Albert Park, once an inner Melbourne ‘burb of faded grandeur, now a plush and trendy nook that is about to out-Toorak Toorak. And the Avenue Bookshop matches that vision – new books, great selection. They’ve sister stores in Elsternwick and Richmond but we’ll stick to Albert Park, thank you. Hill of Content, Hill of Content, Hill of Content. Perched on a real hill, hiding behind the trams and general horror of Burke Street traffic. It always makes TVC smile when we see that…

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