Archive for May, 2010
Over the last couple of weeks I’ve been co-judging, along with Stefan Laszczuk, a short-story prize run by the editors of Adelaide University’s student magazine, On Dit. Of course I put my hand up, because now I am a fusty old ex-Voiceworks editor, desperate to get my hands on the raw content of young, emerging Australian [ READ MORE ]
I struggled with My Idea of Fun for a while, and nearly gave up on it when I got sent a more interesting manuscript to read1. I even got to the point where I had written a short note about where the book had gotten up to, and the reason I was abandoning it, so [ READ MORE ]
For some reason lately, every time I got out for some hair of the dog, I wind up getting drunk, and partying like it’s September 10 2001. I often go out alone, looking for interesting randoms. When this happens, and we strike up a conversation, I lose myself in the moment and I don’t want [ READ MORE ]
Sam Cooney republished an article he wrote for Bookseller+Publisher about, well, the relationship between booksellers and publishers – and how this relationship is changing as publishers embark on direct-sales ventures, which, I guess, have the potential to undermine the traditional business models of booksellers. On the surface it seems like a superfluous debate, when compared [ READ MORE ]
Here is a Bertrand Russell quote that constitutes my favourite aphorism: The essence of the liberal outlook lies not in what opinions are held, but in how they are held: instead of being held dogmatically, they are held tentatively, and with a consciousness that new evidence may at any moment lead to their abandonment. I don’t know [ READ MORE ]
Something that especially inspires me about the young people I know in publishing is that they are, mostly, and for want of a better word, ’social justice natives’. Perhaps not in the strong sense that today’s teenagers are ‘digital natives’ compared to people my age, who can remember a time before computers could be bought [ READ MORE ]
I haven taken to writing aphorisms lately, in lieu of having the time to sit down and complete longer thoughts. The first one is about non-fiction editing: A good non-fiction editor is a non-specialist – one who has no previous knowledge of the subject, and therefore no preconceptions or predilections for facilitating the expression of a [ READ MORE ]