Man Booker has announced its 2013 winner, the youngest ever winner, Eleanor Catton for her 2nd novel The luminaries.
From Man Booker’s website Continue reading
Man Booker has announced its 2013 winner, the youngest ever winner, Eleanor Catton for her 2nd novel The luminaries.
From Man Booker’s website Continue reading
Canadian writer Alice Munro wins 2013 Nobel Prize for Literature 2013 for her short stories. As the jury praised her ‘‘finely tuned storytelling, which is characterised by clarity and psychological realism”. Many of Munro’s stories are set in Huron County, Ontario. Her strong regional focus is one of the features of her fiction. Another is the omniscient narrator who serves to make sense of the world.
82 years old Alice Munro has written about 14 short story books and has won Man Booker International and Commonwealth Writers Prize in previous years and many other awards.
Parramatta City Library has some of Alice Munro‘s titles for loan.
Biographies and memoirs strike at our humanity. Understanding the motivations of another person’s life, empathising with their situation no matter how different it is from your own can create some powerful emotions that stay with you for many years.
From sporting lives, the lives of refugees, the life on the land or the life spent exploring the world, there is so much to experience. From the lives of celebrities to the lives of reality show stars to the little told story of a family member, their story written and handed down only through their family #egoreads can inspire us and help us with out future directions. You can add to the discussion on Pinterest too.
So indulge yourself in #egoread and join us on 29 October for a live twitter discussion starting at 8.00pm Australian Eastern Daylight Time. 9.00pm New Zealand Summer Time, 6.00pm Singapore Standard Time, 12.00 noon Central European Summer Time. Note : this is a staggered start to the discussion.
Use the tags #egoread and #rwpchat as you discuss the reading, watching playing that is your experience of egoreads, so others can join in the conversation too. You might like to use instagram to join the discussion – don’t forget the hashtags.
2nd October 2013
Title: The Pied Piper
Author: Nevil Shute
Book Summary
During John Howard’s holiday in France, the Nazis invade and he is forced to try to escape back to England with the two small children of some friends. The roads become impassable and Howard also comes across five more children who need his help. He ends up leading this motley group of youngsters through the French countryside constantly beset by danger yet heroically protecting his charges.
Group Comments
NOTE COMMENTS MAY CONTAIN PLOT SPOILERS
26th September 2013
Title: Foal’s Bread
Author: Gillian Mears
Book Summary
The long-awaited new novel from the award-winning author of THE GRASS SISTER tells the story of two generations of the Nancarrow family and the high-jumping horse circuit prior to the Second World War. A love story of impossible beauty and sadness, it is also a chronicle of dreams ‘turned inside out’, and miracles that never last, framed against a world both tender and unspeakably hard. Set in hardscrabble farming country and around the country show high-jumping circuit that prevailed in rural New South Wales prior to the Second World War, FOAL’S BREAD tells the story of two generations of the Nancarrow family and their fortunes as dictated by the vicissitudes of the land. It is a love story of impossible beauty and sadness, a chronicle of dreams ‘turned inside out’, and miracles that never last, framed against a world both tender and unspeakably hard. Written in luminous prose and with an aching affinity for the landscape the book describes, FOAL’S BREAD is the work of a born writer at the height of her considerable powers. It is a stunning work of remarkable originality and power, one that confirms Gillian Mears’ reputation as one of our most exciting and acclaimed writers.
Group Comments
NOTE COMMENTS MAY CONTAIN PLOT SPOILERS Continue reading