Sunday, December 18, 2011

Merry Christmas & A Happy New Year


I would like to take this opportunity to wish everyone a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. 2011 was jammed packed and I'm sure 2012 will be immense as well.

Our book club members managed to read 9 new novels during 2011, including: 'The Girl with a Pearl Earring', 'Mr Rosenbaum's List', 'Shirley, Goodness & Mercy', 'The Secret Adventures of Charlotte Bronte - a novel', 'Wanting', 'The Tale of Two Cities', 'The Good Earth', 'Eat, Pray, Love', and 'People of the Book'.


Each book offered a variety of genres, settings, characters, story lines and discussions. Each book touched the reader in a variety of ways and helped enrich our reading lives.

Holidays are either fast approaching or have already arrived. So, now is the perfect time to kick back and relax with a book or two for the holiday season. Whatever you choose to read, enjoy and savour.

So, until next time...
happy reading...

PS Write and tell us what you'll be reading over the holidays.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Day 1: NaNoWrimo Has Begun

Well Deb kicked off her stint for the month of November and posted just over 1700 words for Day 1. That's not too shabby, but will she be able to keep up the pace? She plans to journal about the experience here. Below is the link...check it out.

http://www.nanowrimo.org/en/profile/edit

Deb's chosen Novel topic is: 'This Life' and it is a story that will capture the trials, tribulations and joys of a family and their life together. Generations learn from each other by the stories passed down. This is one family's modern day history.

NaNoWrimo encourages their participants to aim for 50,000 words within the month of November. Deb wonders if she can sustain this?

Stay tuned.

So, until next time...happy reading & writing...

Friday, October 28, 2011

October Writers' Club Meeting - Networking

Sitting by an open window
A gentle breeze plays the flimsy curtain
The writer waits while
Thoughts and ideas flip and spin
Desiring to settle
But where, and in what order
The writer looks out
past the window
and through, to the open field
and dreams
Ⓒ Deb Smith - 29 Oct 2011

Writing can be a very solitary activity 

No one can join with you to get those words, your words down on paper. If you don't sit down and begin, then the words will stay silent, locked away inside you. Writers must commit daily to putting their words down on paper. If there is no commitment, then again, no words will appear. Writing is a slave to time, or is time a slave to writing? Or, is the writer a slave to their writing?

Writing, even just thinking about writing is time consuming

It is important for the writer to diarise a date and time to write - everyday. This should be a priority. No one said it would be easy, but if writing is to you, like oxygen is to the body, then you need to prioritise. So, make time.

Balance is the key

Writers need to get out. Out and about to meet new people and observe characters who walk the streets and inhabit our world. Writers need to socialise. They need to note down life's idiosyncrasies, the ways, the why fors and whens. I'm sure I just broke some grammatical rules with that last sentence, but I love it, so it is going to stay. Writers get to choose what stays and what goes, at least for some of the time.

Writers on missions

Writers owe it to their readers to go on missions, so they can report back, create scenes with authenticity, build upon the real, with creative flair and imagination. Writers frame what they observe with their pens, like photographers frame with their lens. Photographers must go out into the world, as must writers.

Writers who network

Networking simply makes sense. Writers who mix it up with other writers develop layers of experience, absorb wisdom, share their gifts and impart snippets of knowledge, that would be missed if left back at that window with a view.

Writers UNITE AND CONNECT with other Writers

Writing Clubs are a great and informal way to connect and share ideas with other like-mindeds. They are a source of information and wisdom, and, along with the odd tale of desperation, juicy depictions of adventurous journeys, and wondrous encounters with success makes for very interesting fodder. Listening to other writers share their work is like an elixir for good health; a definite source of inspiration. Writing festivals and writing courses are also great ways to inspire and ignite imagination.

So...what's stopping you?




Thursday, October 27, 2011

October Book Club - 'Wanting' by Richard Flanagan

Book Blurb:
'Bass Strait, 1839. A young Aboriginal girl, Mathinna, runs through the wet wallaby grass of a wild island at the edge of the world to get help for her dying father. Eighteen years later in Manchester, the great novelist Charles Dickens is a sensation, starring in a play that more and more resembles the frozen landscape of his own inner life.


The most celebrated explorer of the age, Sir John Franklin, and his wife, Lady Jane, adopt Mathinna as an experiment to prove that the savage can be civilised - only to discover that within the most civilised can lurk the most savage. When Sir John disappears in the Arctic while searching for the fabled Northwest Passage, Lady Jane turns to Dickens for help.


Inspired by historical events, Wanting is a haunting meditation about love, loss and the way life is finally determined never by reason, but only ever by wanting. It confirms Richard Flanagan's growing reputation as one of the most original and powerful novelists working in the English language today.'


This was a delicious book to devour. It was captivating and a marvellous read that left you WANTING more. Flanaghan intertwined all threads of the story seamlessly. And, when you wonder...how could you possibly link an Aboriginal girl, an Arctic explorer and his wife, and Charles Dickens, it leaves you scratching your head at how well Flanagan has managed to do so.

This book is stunning and simple to read. The language Flanagan uses is easy on the eyes and flows logically. So glad that this book was added to our list of selections this year. If you haven't already read this ... then we highly recommend you get started.

Until next time,

happy reading...

September Book Club - 'Shirley, Goodness & Mercy' by Chris Van Wyk

Some of our members found it a challenge to obtain a copy of this month's selection, Shirley, Goodness & Mercy by Chris Van Wyk. Buying online was the quickest, cheapest and best option this time around. Those who purchased their copy from The Book Depository seemed to have the least problems. The books, although second hand, came within the week and all in good condition. Those who ordered the books from the American Bookstore waited weeks and weeks and as a result, weren't able to read the book in time.

As a guess, this is the only book so far that caused the group any grief in procuring.

There were mixed reviews with regard to Van Wyk's work. Most members enjoyed the author's glimpse into life as a young coloured boy growing up in the township of Riverlea, Johannesburg, South Africa. Although the shadow of apartheid lurked the writer did not dwell on this, but shared delightful anecdotes of his special relationships with his family members, both immediate and extended. He also showed the importance of humour and laughter in life.

Accounts such as this are important to one's culture. Stories of what life was like are important to build an overall picture of the life and times. They become mosaics, woven and threaded in the fabric of society.

The importance of this author's work is something we thought about and discussed at length. For those not from South Africa, it was a glimpse into another's culture. However, the bigger picture is that here was a young coloured boy, all grown up, defeating the odds to be a voice for his people and his life blood. When you think like that you gain a deeper perspective.

This book is worth picking up and visiting.

Enjoy...

Until next time,
happy reading...

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Brisbane Writers Festival - September 7 - 11th


I have attended the Brisbane Writers Festival now for the past eight years or so and I am never disappointed. I am looking forward to clocking up another year, to stroll around Brisbane's beautiful icon, The State Library and its gardens to check out this year's line up of talented authors.

For those of you still coming down from MasterChef, the menu of authors and sessions is already out. I am an early bird and have studied the gourmet selections and have booked in my workshops and the sessions I wish to attend. You can tell I am writing this at lunch time and have food on my mind. I'm sure those of you who enjoy your culinary delights would be interested to know that some foodie authors will be in attendance. Click on the link to find out more.

http://www.brisbanewritersfestival.com.au/default.asp?pageID=73&CatID=51

This year again, I will be accompanying a school group of enthusiastic readers and writers. My colleagues and I always get excited at this time of year. We love going on outings with our students, especially with the line up of talented children's authors to select from. This year sees Emily Rodda, James Joy, James Phelan, Belinda Jeffrey, Tristan Bancks and Wendy Orr, to name but a few. If these names don't whet your appetite...well...what can I say?

I'm booked into Wendy Orr's session and looking forward to sharpening my skills for writing for young readers. Click on the link to discover more.

http://www.brisbanewritersfestival.com.au/default.asp?pageID=73&CatID=47

Another workshop I'm excited to be attending is Writing Romance that Sells with popular panelists, Christina Brooke and Anna Campbell. Hopefully their hints and tips will help steam up pages of my novel in progress.

There are many & varied workshops this year to choose from, but to find one that suits you...Click on the link.

http://www.brisbanewritersfestival.com.au/default.asp?pageID=73&CatID=66

I know I am excited to be attending what's become my annual pilgrimage. Maybe I'll see some of you while I'm there.

So, for a festival of storytelling...here is the official Brisbane Writers Festival website to check out all the action for yourself.

http://www.brisbanewritersfestival.com.au/

till next time...
happy reading & writing




The Word Writers Fair - Weekend of 12 November 2011

If you are a writer who enjoys networking and attending writing fairs, then this is something for you.

The Word Writers Fair is coming to Brisbane...
To find out more, please click on the link.

http://thewordwriters.com/

Bedlam: The Further Secret Adventures of Charlotte Bronte by Laura Joh Rowland

For those readers who enjoyed last month's book, 'The Secret Adventures of Charlotte Bronte, here is a link to Laura Joh Rowland's latest book about Charlotte's adventures.

http://www.laurajohrowland.com/

Click on: The Secret Adventures of Charlotte Bronte and it will take you to Rowland's latest book. I know some of our readers were a little disheartened by the ending in Rowland's first book about Charlotte's adventures. Many readers were disappointed that the good Miss Charlotte did not end up with her man...well, maybe she does???

Check it out...and find out.

Until next time,
happy reading...

August Book Club - 'The Secret Adventures of Charlotte Brontë' by Laura Joh Rowland

It took some of our readers a little time to warm to the idea that the
Charlotte Brontë who wrote Jane Eyre and lived the life of a parson's daughter could in fact be the adventurous heroine from Laura Joh Rowland's novel, 'The Secret Adventures of Charlotte Brontë. But once we got our heads around the concept Rowland was trying to sell us, most enjoyed the read.

Rowland has toyed with the Brontë family and created a whole new world of fictionalised high adventure and espionage based on research she did on Charlotte Brontë some years ago.

Did it work? Well, we'll have to let you be the judge on that score. Everyone has their own take on the classics and let's just say that most of our readers enjoyed the story, although it did have many flaws throughout. But, if you skip over these and don't think too hard about them and simply read the book as a high adventure tale, then we are sure you will enjoy the story as much as some of us did. We found that the further along in the story we journeyed the better it became. Rowland made good use of tension throughout and kept our hearts pounding in places.

We did wonder if Charlotte and her family would actually ever put themselves in such perilous situations, but for the sake of the story, we decided not to challenge this too much.

Overall, we recommend this book. It is a good read. The storyline is interesting and creative and everything linked up. Charlotte manages to involve herself and interacts with some big names throughout story and the tale is very entertaining. It is not your run of the mill, modern day espionage story and Rowland does a great job authenticating the language used throughout. We all agreed the author did a great job and believed that Charlotte could have been the narrator of the story.

If you are interested in this author, please click on the link and find out more.


http://www.laurajohrowland.com/

We hope you have found this information useful.
So, until next time,
happy reading...



Sunday, July 31, 2011

The Girl With a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier

The month of July saw our book club indulge ourselves with a novel that all members of Novel Tea 'n Pages enjoyed. Members agreed that Tracy Chevalier's tale, centred around the old world painter Johannes Vermeer, was well written and a light, quick read that added some interest, yet in our already busy lives, didn't bog us down.

The story starts and revolves around young Griet who leaves her home to take a position as a maid in the home of Johann Vermeer with his wife and family. Johann and his wife come to Griet's home to meet her before she takes up the household position and Vermeer finds Griet very interesting in the way she lays out the vegetables in order of colour and type of vegetable. She is very particular and pays extreme attention to detail. As an artist, Vermeer is most taken with this particular quality in Griet.

The story develops around not only the relationship Griet has with her family, and also the family of Vermeer, but Chevalier studies the deeper relationship between the painter and young Griet. From the blurb on the back of the book, the reader is led to believe that there is a scandal, and there is of a sorts, but probably not in the way you might expect. The reader though, must remember that this story was set in 1664.

It is a beautiful tale of respect and longing and Chevalier uses extraordinary language that gives a life and richness, as any artist's palette.

Lines like, 'I was chopping vegetables in the kitchen when I heard voices outside our front door - a woman's, bright as polished brass, and a man's, low and dark like the wood of the table I was working on. The were the kind of voices we heard rarely in our house. I could hear the rich carpets in their voices, books and pearls and fur.'...'My mother's voice - a cooking pot, a flagon - approached from the front room. They were coming to the kitchen. I pushed the leeks I had been chopping into place, then set the knife on the table, wiped my hands on my apron, and pressed my lips together to smooth them...' sets the tone and voice so well and urges the reader to read on...simply delicious.

Chevalier uses beautiful language throughout her work and her descriptions are a treasure trove of wonderful images.

When Vermeer meets Griet for the first time, the following exchange takes place...in the kitchen...

     "'What have you been doing here, Griet? he asked. 
     I was surprised by the question but knew enough to hide it. 'Chopping vegetables, sir. For the soup.' 
     I always laid vegetables out in a circle, each with it own section like a slice of pie. There were five slices: red cabbage, onions, leeks, carrots and turnips. I had used a knife edge to shape each slice, and placed a carrot disc in the centre.
     The man tapped his finger on the table. 'Are they laid out in the order in which they will go into the soup?' he suggested, studying the circle.
     'No sir.' I hesitated. I could not say why I had laid out the vegetables as I did. I simply set them as I felt they should be, but I was too frightened to say so to a gentleman.
     'I see you have separated the whites,' he said, indicating the turnips and onions. 'And then the orange and the purple, they do not sit together. Why is that?' He pick up a shred of cabbage and a piece of carroty and shook them like dice in his hand.
     I looked at my mother, who nodded slightly.
     'The colours fight when they are side by side, sir.
     He arched his eyebrows, as if he had not expected such a response. 'And do you spend much time setting out the vegetables before you make the soup?'
     'Oh no, sir,' I replied confused. I did not want him to think I was idle.
     From the corner of my eye I saw a movement. My sister, Agnes, was peering round the doorpost and had shaken her head at my response. I did not often lie. I looked down.
     The man turned his head slightly and Agnes disappeared. He dropped the pieces of carrot and cabbage into their slices. The cabbage shred fell partly into the onions. I wanted to reach over and tease it into place. I did not, but he knew that I wanted to. He was testing me."

The map inserted into the front and back sleeve of the 1999 edition was great to explore and get a real sense of place.

We highly recommend this book to anyone who loves historical fiction. It is a short tale and most enjoyable.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

June's Book Club: 'People of the Book' by Geraldine Brooks

I must begin with apologies for being so quiet on the blog front, but I needed to take a short break. But I'm back now and will start with a wrap up of our last meeting's book, 'People of the Book' by Geraldine Brooks.

It was unanimous from the club members who attended our meeting that this is a book worth reading...a must read. The research that went into this book made it authentic and captivating. We found it to be a page turner that was gripping and moving.

Geraldine writes in a way that helps the reader skim along with ease. The concept of this work is interesting and intriguing. Ms Brooks' characters are flawed but are likeable. The book is based on a sliver of truth, but ultimately it is a work of fiction.

Hannah Heath is a renowned book conservator who is asked to restore the Sarajevo Haggadah, a Jewish prayer book. To do this she must travel to Bosnia in order to complete the job. While she undertakes the task, she slowly discovers the secrets that surround the book and its survival.

This is a book that all book and history lovers will enjoy. I particularly enjoyed reading about the way ancient books and parchments were made using the intestinal gut of sheep and also the process of illuminating and design of the illustrations in these books was fascinating. I enjoyed these aspects of the book as much as the story itself.

Friday, May 6, 2011

May's Book Club: 'The Good Earth' by Pearl S. Buck

Pearl Comfort Sydenstricker was born on 26 June, 1892 in Hillsboro, West Virginia. Her father, Absalom Sydenstricker, a West Virginian, was a preacher who was afflicted by the missionary craze of the 1880s. Pearl's mother, Carie Stulting, had met Absalom Sydenstricker, a minister of the Southern Presbyterian Church, in Hillsboro, her birthplace. The couple married in 1880, and set out for California where they would board a steamer that would take them to China. As Presbyterian missionaries and God's agents, they arrived in Hangchow, China to save the unfortunate Chinese who were ignorant about Christianity. Pearl was sixth of the seven children of Absalom and Carie. She was born in the United States during her parents' year of home leave from China. She was taken to China when she was three months old. As a precocious child, she asked many questions and read everything that came within her reach. She was educated at home by her mother and a Chinese tutor, first publishing in the Christian Observer as a girl of six. She began to write regularly for the Shanghai Mercury, an English newspaper that offered rewards for children's stories and essays. Pearl was encouraged by her mother to write every week, and later decided to become a novelist. Living in Chiangking, Pearl learned Chinese before any other language, and played with Chinese children. She grew up with Chinese customs and traditions, even having a Chinese governess. Later she said that as a child, she simultaneously belonged to two worlds-an American missionary world and a Chinese world. This explains her wish as a novelist to encourage intercultural understanding among different peoples.
During the time Pearl was growing up in China, the country was restless and violent, and hatred against foreigners culminated in the Boxer Uprising of 1900. During the fearful time, Pearl and the rest of her family, except for her father, went to live in Shanghai. In 1901, the family, including Absalom, went to the United States, but returned to Chiangking after a year. During adolescence, Pearl was sent to a nearby missions school for girls. Pearl wanted to attend college in the United States, and attended Randolph-Macon Woman's College in Virginia, a Christian institution. Finding encouragement and academic stimulation at Randolph-Macon, Pearl adapted well to her collegiate life, but continually felt like an outsider because she embraced a culture that Americans found alien. She studied Philosophy, and teacher assisted Psychology for a year after graduating.
After graduating, Pearl stayed in America, but sought a passage to China when she received news of her mother's illness. In China, she met John Lossing Buck, an American agricultural missionarywho arrived after the Chinese Revolution. Pearl and Lossing were married in Chiangking in 1917, and immediately moved to Ahnwei where Pearl gathered ideas for The Good Earth. Although the marriage lasted for eighteen years, it was hardly a happy one.
Pearl began writing during what she called a "fantastic era," a period of turmoil for China. She published stories in Nation, The Chinese Recorder, Asia, and Atlantic Monthly. Her first novel wasEast Wind, West Wind which was published by the John Day Company in 1930. She later divorced Lossing, and married John Day's publisher, Richard Walsh, who published everything Pearl wrote. East Wind, West Wind received favorable review, but Walsh knew that Pearl could write better. The Good Earth was published in 1931, and became the best-selling book of 1931 and 1932, bringing Pearl the Pulitzer Prize, the Noble Prize for Literature, and many other literary honors. Pearl's exquisite storytelling and the appeal of a story about land were two of the many reasons for its high success in America. The novel was translated into over thirty languages, made into a play and an MGM motion picture. Other non-fictional work and novels quickly followed The Good Earth including A House Divided, Dragon Seed, Pavilion of Women, and The Time is Noon.
Pearl S. Buck died in Danby, Vermont on 6 March, 1973.
Bibliography
Buck, Pearl S. The Good Earth. New York: Pocket Books, 1958.
Conn, Peter. Pearl S. Buck: A Cultural Biography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
Stirling, Nora. Pearl Buck: A Woman in Conflict. New Jersey: New Century Publishers, Inc. 1983.

"BookRags Book Notes on ." 6 May 2011.


As a reader, when you take the time to select a book and make the effort to read it, you do so because you want to experience something, you want to feel changed in some way and you hope to learn something from it.


Our book club members were not disappointed with our month of May's reading selection. For some of us, this was not the first time we had read Ms Buck's book and it proved just as enjoyable the second time around.


The book is written in simple yet rich language that proved easy to read. The story itself was an interesting tale of a traditional Chinese family that showcased old Chinese culture in surprising and entertaining ways.


It is obvious the author knows Chinese culture inside out. She has lived it and she brought to life the character of Wang Lung and Olan, and their mutual desire to raise a family and become respectable members of their farmland community in a way that was both raw and sensitive. 


When any young couple begin their lives together they are full of hopes and dreams, however, sometimes life circumstances get in the way. Many of us live lives full of rich dreams to fulfil but when life circumstances come along it can all change. Our course may change and there can be a shift in our direction that we were not expecting. This happened to Wang Lung and Olan.


The tale of the young couple was steeped in traditional culture, which was quite unfamiliar to some of our book club members. The book offered an opportunity for us to learn about another culture, especially through some quite horrendous trials and tribulations. At times this proved a massive contrast to our own beliefs and understandings and made for some great conversation at our meeting.


Our readers discussed at length the role of women in Chinese society and most members held Olan in high esteem for her dedication to her husband, family and home. We spent quite a bit of time contrasting Wang Lung's first wife Olan to his second chosen wife, Lotus. Both wives came from slavery. Olan was a domestic slave to a prestigious family, whilst Lotus was sold into slavery as a prostitute. It was interesting that our members held more compassion for Olan. The author's character development of Olan and Lotus played an important part in determining the readers' reactions and feelings toward these two characters. 


We also spent a bit of time discussing the significance and symbolism that surround the two pearls that were so important to Olan. Wang Lung initially granted Olan her wish to keep the two pearls, but in the end, he had a change of heart and eventually took them from Olan and gave them to his beautiful new wife, Lotus. This surely was an act of ultimate betrayal to Olan and it deeply saddened her, although she maintained a deep respect for her husband.


The characters spread throughout this tale were strong and Buck used them well to show traditional Chinese culture at its maximum. Times were tough and horrid and characters' traits were tested along the way, so it was clear to the reader who they felt empathy for and who didn't deserve anything at all.


Overall, this is a great tale of a simple farming family, that looked at its rise and fall, and its rise again in society. It plotted Wang Lung's growth and power as he, along with Olan work hard to ferret away their silver coins. Through hard work and teamwork, they managed to build an empire, but in the end, it was Wang Lung's greed that caused grief for his family and grew disappointment and sadness in Olan's heart. 


If you haven't already read this book, our club members highly recommend you do something about it. This is a must read book.


Our members all learned many things about traditional Chinese culture and we felt changed after reading the tale.


If you choose to take up the challenge, we feel you'll be pleasantly surprised.


Until next time,
happy reading...

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Event: Geraldine Brooks - In conversation with Craig Bolland




Geraldine Brooks



Wednesday June 8
6.00pm


Brisbane Better Bookstore Event
QUT Auditorium F509, Victoria Park Road, Kelvin Grove
In Conversation with Craig Bolland


6pm for 6.30pm start
Ticket Price: $15-$20


Bookings: Call your store:
American Bookstore (07 3229 4677);
Avid Reader (07 3846 3422);
Coaldrake’s (07 3367 8526)



Those of you who are interested in coming along to this event, please contact Deb. Once numbers are in Deb will book for this event.

April 2011 Book Club: 'Eat Pray Love' by Elizabeth Gilbert

Take some tasty, chocolatey mudslide cakes and other small delicacies piled high atop pretty plates as well as gooey chocolate mini Easter eggs brimming to overflow in petite glassware and combine with tinkling china teacups and light conversation and you now have an image of the way this month's book club kicked off. And, what better way to celebrate this month's title, Eat Pray Love by Elizabeth Gilbert?

We had a small number who turned out for our April's meeting and, whilst the numbers were smaller this month, the discussion and social interaction, (which is a major focus in our club) was large. There are always plenty of opportunities to enjoy light-hearted banter and catch-up socially, but we always manage to balance it with an engaging discussion about the book of the month. How deeply we discuss a book depends upon the dynamics of the group. Each month we allow ourselves to be led by the feel of the group and usually, our reading guides.

Eat Pray Love was generally received with mixed feelings. Some readers loved the book, while others didn't, and still others enjoyed parts of it whilst other parts, not so. It was a mixed bag of thoughts and feelings. This is the type of book that makes for great discussion, especially with such a variety of feelings floating around, and depending upon how strong some of those feelings were.

Eat Pray Love falls within the travel documentary genre and if you've visited the bookstores lately, it doesn't take you very long to figure out that it is a very popular genre. Many writers take the opportunity to combine their love of travel and writing as a way to turn out running commentaries on their experiences. And who wouldn't mind doing that, especially if it became a major seller?

Because of the number of travel writers, it is often hard to choose the exact book you want and, on the flip side, as a writer with strong competitors, you need to have the cutting edge; a unique way that sets you apart from all the rest, namely, the Black Caviar of the field (speaking in horse racing terms).

Eat Pray Love is one of those major sellers I just mentioned.Why? Just what did Elizabeth Gilbert do that set her apart from all the rest?

Well, that question makes for much discussion, but she obviously struck a chord with a large proportion of the western population. Was it the entrapment of marriage, outgrown and now loveless that readers connected with, or was it the chance to travel with the author and visit three countries that they had not visited before? Or maybe readers simply wanted to experience the food, culture, meditation and prayer along with the author, and connected with these aspects. Who knows? But what became obvious from listening to our book club members was that the book, or at least parts of the book meant something different for each of them based on their own experiences, their culture, their views on life and religion, and where they were now in their life. So too, I think, for the general population.

This is a book that you choose for personal reasons and not based on the recommendation by others. This is a book that the author must have the edge; the Black Caviar of the racing field.

I know personally, that with all the hype that surrounded this book, even before the movie came out, I ummed and ahhhhed about it. Oprah and her Book Club (which I respect) had sanctioned and promoted it and the general population raved about it.

For me, it took many visits to a variety of book stores, where it wooed me before I purchased a copy. As I wandered around the stores, looking at new and old titles, it always managed to intrigue me when I found it displayed. I'd pick it up and fondle it, run my fingers over its front cover. I'd hold it and read the back cover then carry it around the store with me, only to return it back to its rightful place on the shelf, edged out by other titles more pressing for me to take home. Finally though, one day I eventually felt sorry enough for it. I'd had enough of it begging me to take it home like an orphaned puppy. I finally decided it was its turn to come home to my place. Why this time? I don't know. Perhaps I was finally curious enough for it.

Was I glad? Was it worth the purchase? For me - definitely. I thoroughly enjoyed it and was glad to have shared some of my time with this author and her tale of self discovery. Elizabeth Gilbert is a writer who is easy to read. She kept the language simple and the themes a little more complex. I enjoyed her writing technique so much so that now I would like to read her other documentary called The Last American Man.

Novel Tea 'n Pages recommends Eat Pray Love to those book lovers where it either 'jumps out at you' (blatantly) or if it woos you. No matter what way - it will get you. Good luck. All I can say is, enjoy it for what it is.

So, until next time,
happy reading...

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Writers' Club - March Wrap Up

In the beginning...

Everyone is busy these days so it is necessary to prioritise from the most important, through to least important on your list of things to do. Most people have a list, whether they write it down or not. Because we all come from a variety of backgrounds, we naturally measure our priorities differently.

This was one of the main issues raised at Novel Tea 'n Pages first Writers' Club meeting held on Saturday, 12 March, 2011, where a small group of people who love to write or who would like the opportunity to write met up and discussed their objectives and hopes.

Finding time for the 'luxury' of writing is not always the top of people's priority lists. But, as they say, if you value something, you will make time for it. Some members crossed this bridge when it came time to commit to participating in a writing group situation. Some members were at a crossroads, tossing up whether they should commit to such an activity or not. For whilst writing for them was a priority, it was way down on the list of must dos. Were there perhaps, more important things they should be doing for their families, they questioned. Luckily, they had very supportive spouses who encouraged them to come along and try it out for themselves.

How many of us feel like this? It is very common for women especially, feel this way. These are very real issues faced by some who want to write but find it hard to justify the amount of time that will be spent doing it, especially when there are so many other ways to 'fill up' our life.

There is no doubt family is important, and that is totally another topic for conversation.

However, it is also very important to have some balance in your life. A lot of people sacrifice themselves for the good of the family and then wonder why they sometimes feel resentful, or feel like they have no time for themselves. Everyone needs, and should allocate time for themselves, to do something they really enjoy. There are lots of options out there, but specifically today, we are discussing writing.

Today, was a good outcome though. For those who may have felt some reluctance decided to come along anyway at the encouragement of their spouses, and were decidedly happy they made the effort. They discovered that once they committed themselves to the first meeting and wrote down their objectives and desires for writing, it enabled them to spend some time thinking specifically about what they hoped to gain and to write down their aims. This brought a delicious sense of fulfilment and purpose, and gave them direction. It inspired them.

The role of writing groups:

Writing groups play a very important role for writers. They are the perfect way to keep writers accountable and help them schedule regular writing sessions and it gives them a purpose to show up.

Writing can easily be regarded as a hobby. Some people play sport, some paint and so, why not write? If you love it, then it could be the perfect outlet for you.

There are several important reasons for bringing writers together:

  • Writing is inevitability a solitary activity so, joining a group is an excellent way to share your interest with others who understand the pressures and joys of being a writer. 
  • It is also important to receive constructive feedback on work in progress. It is often difficult to remain objective about your own work and whilst friends and family are always keen to lend a hand, unless they are in the writing industry, it is hard for them to give helpful and focused feedback that is required.
A good writers' group has the capacity to provide a strong, supportive and knowledgeable group of friends who can deliver honest objective and constructive feedback on each other's work in a supportive environment.

It is hoped that Novel Tea 'n Pages can grow to be a supportive and friendly group of writers who can be there for each other along the various journeys our members take. There is room for beginner writers and critiques, and well as the experienced. We all have to start somewhere and it is our hope to develop critiques and writers who are sensitive to all.

Today was the start of what is hoped...a wonderful journey for many.

So, until next time...

happy writing...

Thursday, March 3, 2011

April 2011 Book Club: 'Eat Pray Love' by Elizabeth Gilbert

About the Book:

'From the way Elizabeth Gilbert’s tale begins --- with our heroine in Rome, fawning over a sexy, young Italian --- one could be forgiven for thinking that Eat, Pray, Love might just belong on the chick-lit shelf next to Amy Sohn’s Run, Catch, Kiss. But first blushes can be deceiving, and from the book’s introductory quote --- “Tell the truth, tell the truth, tell the truth” --- we know Gilbert’s not out to deceive. Not her readers and, most important, not herself.

In what could be construed as a coming-of-age story for thirtysomethings, Gilbert leaves behind an excruciating divorce, tumultuous affair, and debilitating depression as she sets off on a yearlong quest to bridge the gulf between body, mind, and spirit. Part self-deprecating tour guide, part wry, witty chronicler, Gilbert relates this chapter of her life with a compelling, richly detailed narrative that eschews the easy answers of New Age rhetoric. In the book’s early pages, a flashback finds the smart, savvy, successful Gilbert on her knees on the bathroom floor of the Westchester house she inhabits with her husband, wailing and wallowing in sorrow, snot, and tears (“a veritable Lake Inferior”), awkwardly embarking on her first conversation with God.

During the interminable wait for her divorce, Gilbert accepts a magazine assignment in Bali, where she meets a ninth-generation medicine man “whose resemblance to the Star Wars character Yoda cannot be exaggerated.” He evaluates her palm, forecasting her return to Bali --- a prediction that resurfaces when she hatches an escape plan from pain: “to explore the art of pleasure in Italy, the art of devotion in India, and, in Indonesia, the art of balancing the two.”

Drawn by the beauty of its mother tongue, Gilbert arrives in Rome dead set on a self-restoration remedy rooted in pleasure and chastity, a peculiar pairing she describes as the antidote for decades spent sublimating herself to lovers with the dedication of “a golden retriever and a barnacle.” For Gilbert, luxuriating in simple pleasures means sounding the curtain call on personal demons --- in this case a good-cop, bad-cop routine starring loneliness and depression --- and allowing her own desires (gelato for breakfast!) to take center stage.

Pleasure triumphs, and our protagonist is prepared for the next leg of her journey: an ashram in India, where racing thoughts eventually yield to successful meditation and a cast of supportive characters, including a plumber-poet from New Zealand, an ever-amiable, sage Texan, and the Indian tomboy she scrubs the temple floors with as part of her devotional duty.

By the time Gilbert arrives in Indonesia, she has shed her grief, realizing her own ability to control her reaction to life’s events. She is strong, enjoying a succession of simple days spent with the medicine man, a Javanese surfer dude, and a woman healer. Bicycling around Bali, she finds balance and, as the title suggests, love. Happiness, Gilbert comes to realize, “is the consequence of personal effort. You fight for it, strive for it, insist upon it, and sometimes even travel around the world looking for it.”'



Notes from: Reading Group Guides

Novel Tea 'n Pages Book & Writers' Club - Writers' Workshop

Saturday, 12 March: Writers' Workshop.
9:00am - 11:00am
Chandler Qld

Saturday, 12 March, 2011, Novel Tea 'n Pages Book & Writers' Club will host its very first Writers' Workshop. This workshop is open to all Book Club members, however, we are an open club and welcome new members.

Once a month Writers' Workshop will meet every 3rd Saturday of the month, and will complement Book Club, every 1st Wednesday of the month. It is open to anyone who loves to write or is interested in the writing process and would like to develop their skills, share and receive constructive feedback from an objective group of individuals.

New members are most welcome.

This is a great way to meet with other like-minded people, share your passion or writing projects and grow in skill together.

The Process:

Our first meeting will be a time to meet with others to share the objectives we'd like to receive from a workshop each month. This is the time we will share our ideas and indicate the projects we will be working on. Members will participate in a short writing exercise to help improve their skills and encourage spontaneous writing.

Why attend Writers Workshops?

Meeting up with others is a great way to share your craft, ideas and passions, rather than keeping it all to yourself. Writing is meant to be shared. It is a great way to discuss and learn more about the process and gain confidence. It is also an excellent way to mix socially and grow friendships.

If anyone is interested in joining, there are a limited number of places left for the first Writers' session. Please contact Deb Smith via blog (comments), face book (inbox) or email for further details.

So, if this sounds like you, please contact us. We are looking forward to meeting some new writing buddies...

until then...

happy writing...

March Book Club: Mr Rosenblum's List by Natasha Solomon

Novel Tea 'n Pages' first book club meeting for 2011 kicked off on 2 March. It would be correct to think that it feels like months since we were all together because it has been.

It was very encouraging to have almost every member turn up on the night and this only added to the diversity of discussion that revolved around our first book for the year, 'Mr Rosenblum's List' by Natasha Solomon, a first time author.

Reading an author's first novel can sometimes be full of pitfalls and errors, however, it can also be an extremely worthwhile experience. Coming from a teaching background I sometimes equate the first novel as I would a 'demonstration' lesson, meaning the best of the best with the skills you have. First time novelists are a bit the same, mixing the best of their best with the skills they have learned so far. This can go three ways. An ordinary attempt, a good attempt with something lacking or, sometimes it can deliver a lovely surprise to a reader. Like biting into a mysterious bar of chocolate and having a delicious and gooey sensation ooze into your mouth which you weren't expecting. Are you hungry yet?

Well that's how our club members felt about Natasha Solomon's first novel. We were all pleasantly surprised.

The book was well received and everyone enjoyed it and commented that it was a charming (some used the term, 'cute') book with many issues woven throughout that made good fodder for a reader to chew over. It was a great choice of book to start the year off with.

Some of our members are from South Africa and have, as Jack Rosenblum and his wife, Sadie did, made the big move from their own country to a new country. In their case, from South Africa to Australia where the differences in culture has sometimes appeared subtlety, but sometimes felt gargantuan.

During the night it was interesting to hear members speak of their own thoughts and experiences compared to the fictitious Mr & Mrs Rosenblum. Funnily enough there were many similarities where members could relate to some events and situations the Rosenblum's found themselves in. Even though the story is set postwar, some of the issues the Rosenblum's encountered still happen in today's modern society.

The author is quite authentic and fresh in her portrayal of some of the relationships that developed between different characters. She did not write in a predictable fashion and managed to get the tone in the story 'just right'. One perfect example for instance was when Jack began to slowly build his golf course one hole at a time. The tone the author used authenticated the laborious efforts he put to the task causing us to feel overwhelmed by the magnitude of what he was trying to do. As readers, the author guided us in such a way that we could empathise with Jack at the slowness and hardship he went through to build his first hole, only to have it torn down by the legendary 'woolly pig'. We felt his pain and frustration along with him.

Some of the more poignant parts of the story involved the relationships between the characters, especially Sadie and her husband, who had endured a long, yet somewhat lonely marriage, Sadie and her daughter Elizabeth, and the relationship between Jack and Elizabeth. The author layers the depths of these relationships well and keeps things real and sometimes very raw. Many of us who are about to, or who have gone through the empty nest syndrome will relate very well indeed to many situations that arise between Elizabeth and her parents.

The author raised some valid issues and problems that included assimilation and conformist trends versus holding on to homeland culture. These are problems that often confront people who adopt a new country. Often immigrants face many dilemmas on treading the fine line between fitting in and holding onto the freedom of being who they are and their homeland's culture. It is in this area that Sadie really struggles. Jack does not wish to look back from where he has come. He is full of energy and is only interested in fulfilling his wish to be a perfect English gentleman, at all costs. Jack is very persistent in many areas of his life. His ability to persevere is an endearing quality, although sometimes can appear to be quite painful. Sadie however, longs to remember her heritage, her parents and family and introduces the tradition of baking like her mother to help her remember.  For her, the journey is much more painful and slow. Sadie struggles to leave her family and her past behind as she tries to make a new life in London.

Although the tale, and some call it a fable, encounters some complex issues, the language is simple and enjoyable. This is not a difficult or challenging narrative. The story is splattered with interesting characters that carry the comedic storyline well and keep the reader entertained.

This book is highly recommended by our members, especially if you enjoy a light and entertaining read.

So, until next time...

Happy reading....

Thursday, February 3, 2011

February Book Club - The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd

Those who attended book club this month said they enjoyed February's book immensely.

It is the right of passage story about a young 14 year old girl called Lily, the relationships she shares with her neglectful and distant father, her nanny, the townsfolk of southern America, and the women who enveloped Lily and Rosaleen and took them in.

Lily's authentic and likeable character was discussed at length. The story was told through her eyes and in such a way that the reader couldn't help but be drawn into her world and that of the bee-keepers.

We followed and discussed our thoughts and answers to the guideline questions posted here on this website. The questions helped prompt us to a deeper level of thinking.

The book was full of issues between different characters, the country at the time (1964) in which the story was set, relationships, racial prejudice and questioned traditional family roles. The book is not predictable at all and the author's technique to build tension enticed us to turn the pages quickly to discover answers to our questions.

The author cleverly used motifs and symbolism to present ideas to the reader. The idea of a Black Madonna works well with the characters in the story. The idea of bee-keeping and the queen bee works well with the theme carried throughout the story.

We were all pleased that this book was selected for book club and would like to highly recommend it to other book clubs and anyone interested in a great tale that will touch the heart.

The next book featured for the month of March is: 'Mr Rosenblum's List' by Natasha Solomon.

Until next time...
happy reading