Saturday, September 20, 2014

Ross Gibson at The Memoir Club for Readers and Writers

Next meeting: Tuesday, 30 September 2014, 6.00 - 9.00 PM

The Randwick Literary Institute,
60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031
RSVP: MemoirClubSydney@gmail.com

Memoir Classic with Ross Gibson, speaking about James Agee’s  
Knoxville: Summer of 1915

'We are talking now of summer evenings in Knoxville, Tennessee, in the time I lived there so successfully disguised to myself as a child.’—James Agee, Knoxville: Summer of 1915
 
James Agee
Originally written in 1935 and published three years later in The Paris Review, James Agee's brief, lyrical evocation of life in Knoxville, Tennessee, over a long summer evening in 1915—a year before the author's own father's death in an automobile accident—has become a classic of American literature. Capturing a ‘marvel of dailiness’ from a five-year-old boy’s perspective, Agee’s prose has been described as ‘wondrous’—‘unabashedly poetic, sacramental in its embrace of reality, and rhythmical as rain on a Tennessee tin roof’ (Will Blythe, The New York Times Sunday Book Review).  
 Legend has it that Agee wrote Knoxville in one 90-minute sitting and never touched it again until it was stitched in, posthumously, to the start of A Death in the Family, his autobiographical novel which was published two years after Agees death in 1955, to great acclaim and a Pulitzer Prize in 1958. Despite or perhaps because of the improvised nature of the writing, the voice of Agee’s text seems to vacillate seamlessly between that of the child-narrator living out a seemingly endless summer evening of his childhood, in safety and domestic bliss, and an adult-narrator remembering with nostalgia and wistfulness those summer evenings long-gone.

This month the Memoir Club is delighted to present Ross Gibson as the guest speaker for our annual Memoir Classic meeting, in which we focus on a work of memoir that has had a profound and continuing effect upon the evolution of the genre.

http://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0542/4573/files/Ross_Gibson_medium.jpg?1567
Ross Gibson is renowned for the ’speculative brilliance’ of his work, that combines imagination with recorded history, and ’seeks out the ghosts’ that haunt a particular moment—say, Sydney Town after WW2, or a stretch of Queensland highway where bad things happen. 
Describing his own work as in a ‘composting’ phase at the moment, Ross will also share with us the processes and ways in which his own voice always eventually finds a way to push through the ‘traditions’ that he works with.

James Agee (1909-1955) was an American author, editor, journalist, poet, screenwriter and film critic. He was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, but lived most of his adult life in New York. His best known works include Knoxville: Summer of 1915, which was set to music for voice by Samuel Barber in 1947; a novel, A Death in the Family (1957), and as screenwriter, the screenplays for The African Queen (1951) and The Night of the Hunter (1954). He was also well known for his work of film criticism for The Nation, which was gathered into collections, Agee on Film I & II.

Ross Gibson is Centenary Professor of Creative & Cultural Research at the University of Canberra. As part of his research he works collaboratively to produce books, films and artworks, and over recent years has focussed on investigating the use of narrative and private ritual in the comprehension of everyday experience. Selected works include the books Seven Versions of an Australian Badland (2002), The Summer Exercises (2009) and 26 Views of the Starburst World (2012), the video installation Street X-Rays (2005), the interactive audiovisual environment BYSTANDER (a collaboration with Kate Richards) (2007) and the durational work Conversations II for the 2008 Biennale of Sydney. His more recent work has included the serialised photographic poem, AccidentMusic, published online weekly in partnership with the Justice & Police Museum in Sydney (2010-2013).








When: last Tuesday of every month (28 October, 25 November; then the Memoir Club goes into recess over the summer, and resumes in March 2015)

Time: 6.00 - 9.00 PM (come for a cuppa and help us set up at 5.30 PM - please remember to bring your own cup!)

Where: The Randwick Literary Institute, 60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031. Tel: 02-9398 5203 (for directions and venue info). Street parking available. Clovelly bus 339 on the doorstep. For how to get there, see: http://randwickliteraryinstitute.com.au/faqs/

What: A communal space to meet other writers and readers and converse about all things to do with reading and writing memoir. We are interested in all kinds of life stories and in different ways of telling them. The genre of life writing and the possibilities of expanding and reworking the genre is exciting to us. Therefore we have a somewhat open and inclusive approach to what makes a memoir, and we hope you do too! Here is a space to connect with others and share ideas, questions and just hang out. Each meeting will start off with a talk, conversation or discussion about a particular topic or book, sometimes with a guest speaker or facilitator, then we move to an informal gathering and catch up.

Donation: $10 at the door for hall hire, refreshments and speakers.

Food: $15 for a plate of delicious vegetarian finger food (different each meeting). Ring or text to book a plate: 0450 907 422.

Future Speakers: Members Night of Readings (October); Fiona McGregor (November)

Look forward to seeing you there! Please do pass information on to anyone who might be interested in this community gathering.

mem·oir /ˈmemˌwär/
Noun. A historical account or biography written from personal knowledge. An autobiography or a written account of one's memory of certain events or people.


“Memories of childhood were the dreams that stayed with you after you woke.”
                                                                                                          —Julian Barnes

“What happens when we remember? The word itself is telling. Re-member. It stems from two Latin roots: (a) memor: ’to be mindful’, and (b) membrum: ‘a limb’. When we remember, we bring something back to mind, and we also re-join the separate portions or limbs of a body of knowledge so that the cuts or dismemberments caused by amnesia can be overridden and so that a cohesive vision of past experience can come together momentarily. Furthermore, ’to remember’ is closely related to another organic verb: ’to record’, which means ’to bring back to the heart’."
                                                                                                          —Ross Gibson


“I was greatly interested in improvisatory writing, as against carefully composed, multiple-draft writing: i.e. with a kind of parallel to improvisation in jazz, to a certain kind of ‘genuine’ lyric which I thought should be purely improvised… It took possibly an hour and a half; on revision, I stayed about 98 per cent faithful to my rule for these ‘improvised’ experiments, against any revision whatever.”
                                                                                                          —James Agee

Thursday, August 21, 2014

The Memoir Club: August Memoir Writing Masterclass with Barbara Brooks & Alison Lyssa

Tuesday, 26 August 2014, 6.00 - 9.00 PM

The Randwick Literary Institute,
60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031
RSVP: learn@bigpond.net.au

Our next Memoir Club meeting is an opportunity to fire your writerly imagination and  garner crafty writing advice from two popular, highly regarded and extremely experienced writers and teachers of creative writing.
http://www.bang2write.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/writing-533x400.jpg
Photo from Bang2write.com
The Masterclass will focus on strategies, ideas and techniques to aid your writing project. Part of the evening will be a conversation between Barbara and Alison on the scope memoir offers for you to explore your story and your role as the ‘eye’ of that story – the ‘eye’ that is at once participant, narrator and interpreter of the thought, feeling and experience that your story illuminates.

Given memoir’s brilliant power of bricolage and its freedom to borrow from fiction, poetry and drama, we’ll be discussing such techniques as: the vivid depiction of place and people; the creation of scenes; and the writing of dialogue. And, there’s memoir’s power to use language: its clarity, its rhythms and its delight in metaphor. Important too – well, actually, crucial – is your participation. Your questions and input will be welcomed.
For part of the evening we will divide into two groups for writing exercises and discussion. For the writing exercises please bring:

Writing materials and your sense of adventure; and,
An object or photograph that connects you with a theme, person or place vital to your writing project.

PLEASE NOTE THAT THE DONATION FOR THE MASTERCLASS SESSION THIS MEETING WILL BE $20, to cover the teaching component.

Barbara Brooks
is a writer and teacher of writing. She has taught at the University of Technology, Sydney and other universities, and runs her own BB Writinglife Masterclasses in memoir & fiction http://bbwritinglife.blogspot.com.au/. She has published a collection of short stories, Leaving Queensland, and a biography, Eleanor Dark: a writer’s life. Her latest work, Verandahs, is a memoir that crosses into fiction. Extracts have been published in magazines and anthologies. See http://uts.academia.edu/BarbaraBrooks.

Alison Lyssa
is a playwright editor and writing mentor. She has published plays, poetry, short fiction and essays. She has mentored documentary film-makers at AFTRS, run community theatre projects in Western Sydney, and taught Writing for Performance and Creative Writing at UTS, UWS and Macquarie University. She recently gained a doctorate in creative writing with a new play, Hurricane Eye: A Masque for the Twenty-first Century.  Her play, Pinball, first performed at Sydney’s Nimrod Theatre in 1981, was revived for this year’s Mardi Gras, to acclaim.








When: last Tuesday of every month (30 Sept, 25 Oct etc.)

Time: 6.00 - 9.00 PM (come for a cuppa and help us set up at 5.30 PM - please remember to bring your own cup!)

Where: The Randwick Literary Institute, 60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031. Tel: 02-9398 5203 (for directions and venue info). Street parking available. Clovelly bus 339 on the doorstep. For how to get there, see: http://randwickliteraryinstitute.com.au/faqs/

What: A communal space to meet other writers and readers and converse about all things to do with reading and writing memoir. We are interested in all kinds of life stories and in different ways of telling them. The genre of life writing and the possibilities of expanding and reworking the genre is exciting to us. Therefore we have a somewhat open and inclusive approach to what makes a memoir, and we hope you do too! Here is a space to connect with others and share ideas, questions and just hang out. Each meeting will start off with a talk, conversation or discussion about a particular topic or book, sometimes with a guest speaker or facilitator, then we move to an informal gathering and catch up.

Donation: This month for the Memoir Writing Masterclass only: $20 at the door for hall hire, refreshments and speakers/ teachers.

Food: $15 for a plate of delicious vegetarian finger food (different each meeting). Ring or text to book a plate: 0450 907 422.

Future Speakers: Ross Gibson (Sept), Memoir Club Members Night (Oct).

Look forward to seeing you there! Please do pass information on to anyone who might be interested in this community gathering.

mem·oir /ˈmemˌwär/
Noun. A historical account or biography written from personal knowledge. An autobiography or a written account of one's memory of certain events or people.


“A memoir is a work of sustained narrative prose controlled by the idea of the self under obligation to lift from the raw material of life a tale that will shape experience, transform event, deliver wisdom. Truth in a memoir is achieved not through a recital of actual events, it is achieved when the reader comes to believe that the writer is working hard to engage with the experience at hand. What happened to the writer is not what matters; what matters is the large sense the writer is able to make of what happened. For that the power of a writing imagination is required.”                                                                                                                                      —Vivian Gornick

“I don’t know where the idea originated that memoir writing is cathartic. For me, it’s always felt like playing my own neurosurgeon, sans anesthesia. As a memoirist, you have to crack your head open and examine every uncomfortable thing in there."
                                                                                                                                     —Koren Zailckas


“Non-fiction, and in particular the literary memoir, the stylised recollection of personal experience, is often as much about character and story and emotion as fiction is."
                                                                                                                —Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

PLACES STILL AVAILABLE: Inviting the Muse: Creativity and Craft for Writers course at the NSW Writers Centre, starting 24 August 2014


http://housetohome.media.ipcdigital.co.uk/96/000012c76/e40d_orh550w550/koi-Carp---Garden-Clinic---Homes--Gardens.jpg

“In order to create, we draw from our inner well. This inner well, an artistic reservoir, is ideally like a well-stocked trout pond. We’ve got big fish, little fish, fat fish, skinny fish—an abundance of artistic fish to fry. As artists, we must realise that we have to maintain this artistic ecosystem.”
                                                               —Julia Cameron

How do we nourish our inner wells of creativity amid busy and demanding lives? Do we have a story to tell, a novel, travel narrative or memoir that we're supposedly writing, but find ourselves constantly stalled? How do we keep the creative juices flowing?  

Over four Sunday mornings, author and creative writing teacher Beth Yahp shares practical, inspiring and fun ways to re-energise our creative selves—to invite the Muse back into our daily lives. The emphasis is on beginning a creative writing practice in order to keep your artistic reservoir well-stocked, whether you’re beginning a new writing project or looking to nourish an existing one on its journey towards completion.

As well as tending to creativity (making room for the Muse), this course for beginners and the more advanced also focuses on writing craft skills: using language effectively to “make things new”, creating believable characters, bringing places to life for the reader, and mapping our stories on the page. There will be in-class writing exercises, readings and discussion of students’ work.

As Helen Garner writes: “Curiosity is a muscle. Patience is a muscle. What begins as a necessary exercise gradually becomes natural. And then immense landscapes open up in front of you.” This course is for those who want to explore their creativity while honing their writing craft; to access and explore the “immense landscapes” of a more creative writing life.


Inviting the Muse: Creativity for Writers


To book: Online: http://www.nswwc.org.au/products-page/fiction/inviting-the-muse-creativity-for-writers/ or ring: (02) 9555 9757

When: 4 x Sunday mornings: 24, 31 August; 7 14 September, 10am-1pm
 

Cost: Full price: $440; Member: $310; Conc Member: $265
This course is for people who are interested in writing fiction, travel or life stories. It is for those who have a story to tell and have been wondering how to get that story going—to access the creative energy and writing craft practices that bring stories alive on the page. The course imparts ways to entice creativity back into our writing and daily lives, through a combination of short presentations, discussion of selected readings, writing exercises and workshopping to explore new ways of seeing and ‘making things new’ as writers. We explore meditation techniques, drama and drawing to access the parts of us where the muse lives.

Course Breakdown
 

Class 1: Inviting the Muse
  * The Child and the Critic in balance
  * Learning to play again; learning to ‘waste time’; learning to listen

Class 2: Translating the World to the Page
  * It’s All About Words: Curiosity, Vulnerability, Vocabulary
  * Creative Sources: Leap and the net will appear; the writer’s journal; memory

Class 3: Accessing Inner Lives
  * The Inner Lives of Characters
  *  The Secret Lives of Stories

Class 4: Creative Mapping of Places and Journeys
  * Mapping a place; mapping a journey
  * Which story do I tell, and how do I shape it?

Food: Tea and coffee making facilities will be provided. Course participants are advised to bring their own lunch as there are no cafes within easy walking distance.

Student Requirements: Pen and paper.

Friday, July 25, 2014

The Memoir Club: Mandy Sayer in conversation with Patti Miller

Tuesday, 29 July 2014, 6.00 - 9.00 PM

The Randwick Literary Institute,
60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031
RSVP: learn@bigpond.net.au 

Next Tuesday’s Memoir Club presents award-winning memoirist Mandy Sayer, whose latest work, The Poet’s Wife, begins: Our marriage wasn’t always unhappy 

http://images2.eruditetechnologies.com.au/original/readings/978/174/237/9781742373539.jpg   Described as ‘a memoir of a marriage’, it is a tale of passion, of love and betrayal, of jealousy and control. It is a tale of common- place cruelty; of an emotional cage the captive can only see with the benefit of hindsight. It is a compelling account of the kind of abusive relationship that leaves little physical evidence, but it is also a beacon of hope that shows escape and recovery are possible. (Kylie Mason, The Newtown Review of Books)
  
Mandy Sayer met Yusef Komunyakaa at Mardi Gras in New Orleans, when she was 22, and travelling around the US busking with her jazz musician father; Komunyakaa was starting out as a poet from the American South. Even though we’d grown up in vastly different cultures and countries, we’d both known poverty, domestic violence and the expectation that neither one of us would ever amount to anything… That was probably what united us more than anything: our shared defiance of that prediction.  
Mandy Sayer and American poet Yusef Komunyakaa on their wedding day in 1985.
Mandy Sayer and American poet Yusef Komunyakaa on their wedding day in 1985.

By the end of their ten year marriage, he had become a professor of poetry and won the Pulitzer Prize; she had become a prize-winning writer and lecturer in writing herself, with his support, but things were unravelling.  Komunyakaa was ‘a fascinating poet but a puzzling husband’—by turns affectionate, protective, controlling, insulting and punitive. Mandy became clinically depressed and contemplated suicide when the marriage became abusive.

‘The idea of a memoir as a “detective story by a wife about a husband” takes on a more forensic dimension when the poet’s wife begins to seek out clues…
(Susan Sheridan, Sydney Review of Books). Yet, ‘the memoirist is creator of her personal myth’.

Mandy Sayer has had an extraordinary life, and her creative use of it has been described as the strength of her writing. Come share in both the extraordinary story of and the equally extraordinary story of her writing The Poet’s Wife. 


http://www.abc.net.au/reslib/200605/r87249_257465.jpg Mandy Sayer is a well-known writer—memoirist, novelist, poet, reviewer and columnist. She wond the Vogel award for her first novel, Mood Indigo, but is best known for her memoirs. Her first memoir, Dreamtime Alice, was about her career as a street performer with her father, tap dancing while he played jazz drums. This year she was the joint Nonfiction Writer in Residence at UTS (with her husband, Louis Nowra), and she is researching a book about the history of gypsies in Australia.

Patti Miller
is the author of the bestselling autobiographical texts, Writing Your Life (1994) and The Memoir Book (2007), as well as four other books: The Last One Who Remembers (1997), Child (1998), Whatever The Gods Do (2003), and her most recent book The Mind of A Thief (2012), which won the NSW Community and Regional History Prize in 2013. Patti gives memoir workshops in Paris and Writing the Senses workshops in Ubud, as well as teaches 'True Stories' for the Faber Academy. Her new memoir, Ransacking Paris, is due in May 2015.








When: last Tuesday of every month (29 July, 26 August, 30 September etc.)

Time: 6.00 - 9.00 PM (come for a cuppa and help us set up at 5.30 PM - please remember to bring your own cup!)

Where: The Randwick Literary Institute, 60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031. Tel: 02-9398 5203 (for directions and venue info). Street parking available. Clovelly bus 339 on the doorstep. For how to get there, see: http://randwickliteraryinstitute.com.au/faqs/

What: A communal space to meet other writers and readers and converse about all things to do with reading and writing memoir. We are interested in all kinds of life stories and in different ways of telling them. The genre of life writing and the possibilities of expanding and reworking the genre is exciting to us. Therefore we have a somewhat open and inclusive approach to what makes a memoir, and we hope you do too! Here is a space to connect with others and share ideas, questions and just hang out. Each meeting will start off with a talk, conversation or discussion about a particular topic or book, sometimes with a guest speaker or facilitator, then we move to an informal gathering and catch up.

Donation: $10 at the door for hall hire, refreshments and speakers.

Food: $15 for a plate of delicious vegetarian finger food (different each meeting). Ring or text to book a plate: 0450 907 422.

Future Speakers: Beth Yahp & Barbara Brooks Memoir Masterclass (August); Ross Gibson (September); Members Night of Readings (October)

Look forward to seeing you there! Please do pass information on to anyone who might be interested in this community gathering.

mem·oir /ˈmemˌwär/
Noun. A historical account or biography written from personal knowledge. An autobiography or a written account of one's memory of certain events or people.


“The things that make you a functional citizen in society—manners, discretion, cordiality—don’t necessarily make you a good writer. Writing needs raw truth, wants your suffering and darkness on the table, revels in a cutting mind that takes no prisoners."
                                                                                                     —Natalie Goldberg

“I’m in control of the material… The good thing about being a writer is, usually the writer gets the final word."
                                                                                                          —Mandy Sayer


“To remember is to re-enter, and be riven.”
                                                                                                          —Harold Brodky

Sunday, June 22, 2014

The Memoir Club: Michael Mohammed Ahmad in conversation with Beth Yahp

Tuesday, 24 June 2014, 6.00 - 9.00 PM

The Randwick Literary Institute,
60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031
RSVP: learn@bigpond.net.au

Next Tuesday’s Memoir Club presents a new talent that will change Australia’s contemporary literary landscape. 

 
Come share the stories of Michael Mohammed Ahmad, a young Lebanese writer from Western Sydney, whose work of autobiographical fiction offers insight into the life and customs of The Tribe, members of a small Muslim sect who fled to Australia just before the civil war in Lebanon in 1975. 

Young Bani offers a child’s unflinching yet wise view of the lives of three generations of The House of Adam:
 
"I was only seven when this happened but it always feels like right now. My Tayta raises her blouse and shows me her stomach. It’s so big it rests on her large thighs. Her skin is golden and soft, and sometimes, when she holds me close and kisses me, her body feels like a plastic bag filled with warm water. She only has a few teeth left and she smiles between them. Tayta’s hands are like wood because she has arthritis. They’re thick and brown and dry and she can hardly move them, except for when she’s preparing aa-jeen, which is what we call dough. Tayta places both her hands under the base of her stomach and she lifts. She reveals to me eleven scars that look like train tracks running in different directions just below her belly button. She points to one and she says in Arabic, ‘This is your father, Jibreel.'"

Ghassan Hage described The Tribe as ‘a significant and astonishing novel that takes us inside the cultural world of the Adam family, a socio-economically disadvantaged Australian Syro-Lebanese Alawite extended family from Sydney and Melbourne… The book is in the best tradition of ethnographic novels: it generously offers us access to a unique cultural world and describes to us some of its features, warts and all, with remarkable details.' (Overland Journal, Winter 2014)

Ground-breaking, funny, intricate and moving, The Tribe opens up Arab-Australian lives far from the racist abstractions dished out by the mainstream media. Michael Mohammed Ahmad is an exciting new literary talent, whom the Memoir Club is honoured to present this month. 

Michael Mohammed Ahmad was chief editor of Westside Publications from 2005 to 2012. His essays and stories have appeared in the Guardian, HEAT, Seizure, SBS Online, The Lifted Brow and Coming of Age: Growing Up Muslim in Australia (Allen & Unwin). In 2012 he received the Australia Council Kirk Robson Award in recognition of his leadership in community arts and cultural development He is currently a doctoral candidate in the University of Western Sydney Writing & Society Research Centre.


 Michael Mohammed Ahmad stars as Billy
Michael Mohammed Ahmad as Billy "The Kid" Dib in I'm Your Man (Downstairs Belvoir , 2012)
Beth Yahp is the author of a novel, various short fiction and non-fiction, and works for the stage and radio. Beth was recently awarded a Doctorate of Creative Arts from the University of Technology, Sydney, for a travel memoir which is due to be published by Random House Australia in 2015. Beth currently teaches in the Masters of Creative Writing program at the University of Sydney. She also runs small group masterclasses once or twice a year for writers of memoir, fiction and travel writing.







When: last Tuesday of every month (29 July, 26 August, 30 September etc.)

Time: 6.00 - 9.00 PM (come for a cuppa and help us set up at 5.30 PM - please remember to bring your own cup!)

Where: The Randwick Literary Institute, 60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031. Tel: 02-9398 5203 (for directions and venue info). Street parking available. Clovelly bus 339 on the doorstep. For how to get there, see: http://randwickliteraryinstitute.com.au/faqs/

What: A communal space to meet other writers and readers and converse about all things to do with reading and writing memoir. We are interested in all kinds of life stories and in different ways of telling them. The genre of life writing and the possibilities of expanding and reworking the genre is exciting to us. Therefore we have a somewhat open and inclusive approach to what makes a memoir, and we hope you do too! Here is a space to connect with others and share ideas, questions and just hang out. Each meeting will start off with a talk, conversation or discussion about a particular topic or book, sometimes with a guest speaker or facilitator, then we move to an informal gathering and catch up.

Donation: $10 at the door for hall hire, refreshments and speakers.

Food: $15 for a plate of delicious vegetarian finger food (different each meeting). Ring or text to book a plate: 0450 907 422.

Future Speakers: Mandy Sayer (July).

Look forward to seeing you there! Please do pass information on to anyone who might be interested in this community gathering.

mem·oir /ˈmemˌwär/
Noun. A historical account or biography written from personal knowledge. An autobiography or a written account of one's memory of certain events or people.


“Stories nurture our connection to place and to each other. They show us where we have been and where we can go. They remind us of how to be human, how to live alongside the other lives that animate this planet… When we lose stories, our understanding of the world is less rich, less true."                                                                                                           —Susan J. Tweit

“I once saw hourglasses in my grandmother’s eyes, and now I see them again, the sands of time dictating my future. But what if the desert in my grandmother’s eyes came to an end? What if it collided with the sea, somewhere, beyond the dunes?"                   —Michael Mohammed Ahmad

“When it comes to memoir, we want to catch the author in a lie. When we read fiction, we want to catch the author telling the truth.”
                                                                                                                      —Tayari Jones

Friday, May 23, 2014

The Memoir Club Presents: Saskia Beudel in conversation with Barbara Brooks

Tuesday, 27 May 2014, 6.00 - 9.00 PM

The Randwick Literary Institute,
60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031
RSVP: learn@bigpond.net.au

Saskia Beudel’s A Country in Mind: Memoir With Landscape “intertwines genres of memoir, travel literature, historical and ecological writing in order to reveal the complex interplay between history, memory and landscapes”.—Autumn Royal, TEXT Review

After a period of loss, and much change, Saskia began walking. Within 18 months she had walked in the Snowy Mountains, twice along the south-west coast of Tasmania, the MacDonnell Ranges west of Alice Springs, the Arnhem Land plateau in Kakadu, the Wollemi National Park in New South Wales, and in Ladakh in the Himalayas. But she kept returning to the glowing ochre gorges of central Australia.

The book that emerged tells stories from Australia’s desert heart, examines the entanglement of Aboriginal and European cultures, remembers POW camps in Indonesia during World War II, and relives childhood epiphanies in a haunting collection of landscapes while tracing family secrets across the globe.



Saskia powerfully captures the enigmas of displacement, belonging and the intricacies, often strikingly at odds with one another, of Aboriginal and settler understandings of the desert environment in her book A Country in Mind, which will be discussed at the Memoir Club.

Saskia Beudel is the author of the novel Borrowed Eyes (Picador, 2002), which was shortlisted for the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards for fiction and the Dobbie Awards for a first manuscript. She has published widely as an essayist, with works appearing in the Iowa Review, Best Australian Essays, HEAT, Overland and the Cultural Studies Review. Her second book, A Country in Mind, was published in 2013.

Barbara Brooks has published fiction, essays and a biography, Eleanor Dark: a writer’s life, and co-edited Mud Map: Australian women’s experimental writing. She teaches at UTS and Masterclasses (see http://bbwritinglife.blogspot.com.au/).








When: last Tuesday of every month (27 May, 24 June, 29 July etc.)

Time: 6.00 - 9.00 PM (come for a cuppa and help us set up at 5.30 PM - please remember to bring your own cup!)

Where: The Randwick Literary Institute, 60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031. Tel: 02-9398 5203 (for directions and venue info). Street parking available. Clovelly bus 339 on the doorstep. For how to get there, see: http://randwickliteraryinstitute.com.au/faqs/

What: A communal space to meet other writers and readers and converse about all things to do with reading and writing memoir. We are interested in all kinds of life stories and in different ways of telling them. The genre of life writing and the possibilities of expanding and reworking the genre is exciting to us. Therefore we have a somewhat open and inclusive approach to what makes a memoir, and we hope you do too! Here is a space to connect with others and share ideas, questions and just hang out. Each meeting will start off with a talk, conversation or discussion about a particular topic or book, sometimes with a guest speaker or facilitator, then we move to an informal gathering and catch up.

Donation: $10 at the door for hall hire, refreshments and speakers.

Food: $15 for a plate of delicious vegetarian finger food (different each meeting). Ring or text to book a plate: 0450 907 422.

Future Speakers: Michael Mohammed Ahmad (June), Mandy Sayer (July).

Look forward to seeing you there! Please do pass information on to anyone who might be interested in this community gathering.

mem·oir /ˈmemˌwär/
Noun. A historical account or biography written from personal knowledge. An autobiography or a written account of one's memory of certain events or people.


“How do people imagine the landscapes they find themselves in? How does the land shape the imaginations of the people who dwell in it?"—Barry Lopez

“The events I’m touching upon involve at least two sets of conflicting memories and histories. Because of this it is almost impossible for me to write redemptively of my father’s past, or to recuperate it in any simple way, especially writing from within a settler culture such as Australia’s, where the question of dispossession is still pressing and unsettling."—Saskia Beudel

“Before it can ever be a repose for the senses, landscape is the work of the mind. Its scenery is built up as much from strata of memory as from layers of rock."—Simon Schama

Monday, April 14, 2014

The Memoir Club presents: Martin Edmond in conversation with Brent Clough

Tuesday, 29 April 2014, 6.00 - 9.00 PM

The Randwick Literary Institute,
60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031
RSVP: jessica.kirkness@students.mq.edu.au  

http://www.thebigidea.co.nz/files/imagecache/display/images/Martin-Edmond%20small.gif 
Martin Edmond has been described as a "memoirist, whose 'memoirs' are quest books, rehearsing investigations, making enquiries, retailing anecdotes and philosophical ruminations in pursuit of some invariably elusive subject" (David Eggleton, Landfall Review).

His prize-winning work of narrative non-fiction, Dark Night: Walking with McCahon, re-traces and re-imagines the "lost journey" that pre-eminent New Zealand artist Colin McCahon spent wandering from the Botanical Gardens to Centennial Park in Sydney, disoriented and adrift, while a retrospective of his work was due to open at the Art Gallery of NSW in 1984.  

Colin McCahon
Colin McCahon

"Colin McCahon is the most celebrated New Zealand painter of the 20th Century... His explorations on canvas of his relation to the world and his standing place in New Zealand, squinting into the hard sun, represent defining statements about what it means to be 'from here'... McCahon reconceived Aotearoa, the land of the long white cloud, as the land of the long black shadow [to paraphrase Murray Bail]."—Paul Stanley Ward, NZEDGE.

This month the Memoir Club is pleased to present Martin Edmond in conversation with Brent Clough about, among other things, the ways in which a fascination with the lives of creative individuals and sensitivity to the power of place have mapped Martin's own way in the world.

'Are there not twelve hours of daylight?', Colin McCahon, 1970

Martin Edmond was born in Ohakune, in the central North Island of Aotearoa New Zealand. He moved to Sydney in 1981, where he lives and works as an author, essayist, poet, screenwriter and sometime cabbie. In his hugely erudite non-fiction he has explored the life of his father, Pacific history, New Zealand artist Philip Clairmont, drugs and art, travel, and his own paths to self-discovery. In 2013 Martin was awarded the New Zealand Prime Minister's Award for Literary Achievement for non-fiction.

Brent Clough is a New Zealand-born broadcaster who has lived in Sydney since 1984.







When: last Tuesday of every month (27 May, 24 June, 29 July etc.)

Time: 6.00 - 9.00 PM (come for a cuppa and help us set up at 5.30 PM - please remember to bring your own cup!)

Where: The Randwick Literary Institute, 60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031. Tel: 02-9398 5203 (for directions and venue info). Street parking available. Clovelly bus 339 on the doorstep. For how to get there, see: http://randwickliteraryinstitute.com.au/faqs/

What: A communal space to meet other writers and readers and converse about all things to do with reading and writing memoir. We are interested in all kinds of life stories and in different ways of telling them. The genre of life writing and the possibilities of expanding and reworking the genre is exciting to us. Therefore we have a somewhat open and inclusive approach to what makes a memoir, and we hope you do too! Here is a space to connect with others and share ideas, questions and just hang out. Each meeting will start off with a talk, conversation or discussion about a particular topic or book, sometimes with a guest speaker or facilitator, then we move to an informal gathering and catch up.

Donation: $10 at the door for hall hire, refreshments and speakers.

Food: $15 for a plate of delicious vegetarian finger food (different each meeting). Ring or text to book a plate: 0450 907 422.

Future Speakers: Saskia Beudel (May), Mandy Sayer (August).

Look forward to seeing you there! Please do pass information on to anyone who might be interested in this community gathering.

mem·oir /ˈmemˌwär/
Noun. A historical account or biography written from personal knowledge. An autobiography or a written account of one's memory of certain events or people.


"Years of solitude had taught him that, in one's memory, all days tend to be the same, but that there is not a day, not even in jail or in the hospital, which does not bring surprises, which is not a translucent network of minimal surprises."—Jorge Luis Borges

"McCahon, I think, was only Christ in the same way that I am a pilgrim following in his, McCahon-Christ's footsteps. That is, casually, intermittently, opportunistically, wilfully, because only in these fragmentary assumptions of another being's reality can something be said that would otherwise remain unarticulated."—Martin Edmond

"I only need black and white to say what I need to say. It is a matter of light and dark."—Colin McCahon

Friday, March 21, 2014

The Memoir Club for Readers and Writers Resumes on 25 March 2014

A Special Evening of  
"Memoir Favourites" 
to kick off our program for 2014

Tuesday, 25 March 2014, 6.00 - 8.30 PM
The Randwick Literary Institute,
60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031

Join us for an evening featuring some Memoir Favourites of our members. Jessica, Barbara, Patti and Beth will speak about and read work by writers who have profoundly influenced and inspired them.

Barbara Brooks on Doris Lessing

Jessica Kirkness on Helen Garner

Patti Miller on Annie Dillard

Beth Yahp on Maxine Hong Kingston


"What really knocks me out is a book that, when you're done reading it, you wish the author that wrote it was a terrific friend of yours and you could call him up on the phone whenever you felt like it," says Holden Caulfield in JD Salinger's Catcher in the Rye, adding, "That doesn't happen much, though."

Some authors and their works stay with us and keep the conversation going years after we've read them and felt that they were friends, and this is a chance for us to share in that oblique and perhaps longer-lasting friendship and conversation.

If you have a memoir favourite that you'd like to share with other members tonight, please do bring a passage along to read out—and email Beth to let her know: bywritingworks@gmail.com

Barbara Brooks has published fiction, essays & a biography, Eleanor Dark: a writer’s life, and co-edited Mud Map: Australian women’s experimental writing. She teaches writing at UTS & Masterclasses (see http://bbwritinglife.blogspot.com.au/).

Jessica Kirkness is a student at Macquarie University. She has just begun the second year of her Masters of Research degree. As part of her Masters thesis, Jessica is writing a memoir which discusses the experiences of her Deaf grandparents in a hearing world.

Patti Miller is the author of the critically acclaimed The Mind of a Thief. She has written Australia’s best-selling autobiographical writing texts, Writing Your Life, and The Memoir Book as well as a novel Child, and two memoirs, The Last One Who Remembers and Whatever The Gods Do. She is currently working on another narrative nonfiction, Ransacking Paris. She has taught life writing for nearly twenty five years.

Beth Yahp is originally from Malaysia. She is the author of a novel, various short fictions and non-fiction, and works for the stage and radio. Beth was awarded a Doctorate of Creative Arts from the University of Technology, Sydney, for her travel memoir documenting "detours through food, family and politics in Malaysia" in 2013. Beth currently teaches in the Masters of Creative Writing program at the University of Sydney.







When: last Tuesday of every month (29 April, 27 May, 24 June etc.)

Time: 6.00 - 9.00 PM (come for a cuppa and help us set up at 5.30 PM - please remember to bring your own cup!)

Where: The Randwick Literary Institute, 60 Clovelly Road, Randwick 2031. Tel: 02-9398 5203 (for directions and venue info). Street parking available. Clovelly bus 339 on the doorstep. For how to get there, see: http://randwickliteraryinstitute.com.au/faqs/

What: A communal space to meet other writers and readers and converse about all things to do with reading and writing memoir. We are interested in all kinds of life stories and in different ways of telling them. The genre of life writing and the possibilities of expanding and reworking the genre is exciting to us. Therefore we have a somewhat open and inclusive approach to what makes a memoir, and we hope you do too! Here is a space to connect with others and share ideas, questions and just hang out. Each meeting will start off with a talk, conversation or discussion about a particular topic or book, sometimes with a guest speaker or facilitator, then we move to an informal gathering and catch up.

Donation: $10 at the door for hall hire, refreshments and speakers.

Food: $15 for a plate of delicious vegetarian finger food (different each meeting). Ring or text to book a plate: 0450 907 422.

Future Speakers: Martin Edmund (April), Saskia Beudel (May), Mandy Sayer (August).

RSVP: RSVP Betty learn@bigpond.net.au.

Look forward to seeing you there! Please do pass information on to anyone who might be interested in this community gathering.

mem·oir /ˈmemˌwär/
Noun. A historical account or biography written from personal knowledge. An autobiography or a written account of one's memory of certain events or people.


"Whole parts of me are made by experiences that haven't been described before."—Doris Lessing

"I think some people wished I'd kept myself out of the book. But I kind of insist on it because I want the reader to share my engagement with the material, if you like, not pretend that I'm doing it completely intellectually."—Helen Garner

"The line of words feels for cracks in the firmament."—Annie Dillard

"'You must not tell anyone,' my mother said, 'what I am about to tell you. In China your father had a sister who killed herself. She jumped into the family well. We say that your father has all brothers because it is as if she had never been born."—Maxine Hong Kingston