The winner of Miles Franklin Award

Well, I wanted to be able to tell you at the first instance, but it’s not. Still hopefully it’s not too late to let you know that this years Miles Franklin Literary award goes to Peter Temple for his novel ‘Truth‘. It’s the first time, since 1957, the award started, that the nation’s most prestigious literary award goes to a crime writer.

Congratulations to the author. Truth is a story about murder, corruption, family, friends, honour, honesty, deceit, love, betrayal - and truth. A stunning story about contemporary Australian life, Truth is written with great moral sophistication.

Parramatta City Library has copies available for loans. Enjoy reading it. 

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2nd Tus Evening Reading Group Discussion Notes

Author: Abdellah Taia

Title: Salvation Army

It is an autobiographical novel and translated from French. The story starts in a poverty stricken town in Morocco where Taia spent his childhood, bound by family order and latent sexual tensions. As a young adult, he falls for an older man who introduces him to Europe, the possibility of leaving home and leaving its repressive social mores behind.

 

  • The group members thought the book was about Taia at a moment of transition between being a nice Moroccan boy and that of an adult. He was one of nine children in the family.
  • This book is also about poverty and sexual tourism and its benign and cruel side. Money is an obsession in a poor country such as Morocco where the average wage is minuscule and a man feels like a man only when he can bring home a basket full of vegetables and meat.
  • It was interesting read, allowing the reader to travel through places such as Morocco, Geneva, Switzerland.
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Review of ‘Summertime’ by J M Coetzee

Title: Summertime

Author: J. M. Coetzee

The Nobel Laureate J M Coetzee presents another master piece – ‘Summertime’, to his readers, and again, you will not be disappointed.

A young writer is to write a biography of John Coetzee. Off he goes on a journey that takes him from South Africa to Brazil to England in getting some personal testimony from people, whom had personal relationship with J Coetzee, in South Africa in 1970s.

In addition, the young writer also gathers some fragmental pieces of diaries from Coetzee that was written in the same periods. From those personal stories and diaries, a young Coetzee gradually appears in front of readers. He is awkward, shy, bookish and often emotional isolated. It is a time when South Africa is deeply divided by Apathies and the Western world is divided by anti war protests. Coetzee, as well as many white people from colonies, face personal crisis of cultural and social identity. Wherever he goes, Coetzee does not fit in- a long haired and beared man with some writings that no one seems to know what about. He teaches some students English as a teacher not on permanent basis. He teaches English poetry, which raises suspicious from some parents. He does manual works and lives in a run-down house, which also is very much disapproved by the extended Coetzee family. He places himself on the peripheral of the society. 

It is a fictional biography written by J. M. Coetzee himself presented in the third person. The stories are often sad, but sometimes funny. The structure of the book is well knitted together by setting his personal diaries at the start and the end of the book that links all chapters.  The main body of the book is formed by some first person narratives which are not only Coetzee’s relationships and love affairs with those who were around him at the time, but it pictures a wider and gloomier ambience of South African society in 1970s.

It’s a very enjoyable reading Summertime has won the 2010 NSW Premier’s Literary Award.  

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The Shortlists For the Australian Book Industry Awards

The Shortlists For the Australian Book Industry Awards are out. The list is below

Australian: origins to Eureka, by Thomas Keneally (Allen & Unwin)

Bart: my life, by J B Cummings (Pan Macmillan)

Jasper Jones, by Craig Silvey (Allen & Unwin)

Ransom, by David Malouf (Random House Australia)

Truth, by Peter Temple (Text Publishing).

Shortlisted for International Success of the Year are Hinkler Publishers for the children’s series of books ang games Dora the explorer and the open sea, and Allen & Unwin for The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas.

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