Helen Garner sits down with John and Elizabeth McMahon, a distinguished scholar of Australian literature. Helen's novels range from the anti-patriarchy exuberance of Monkey Grip (1977) to the heartbreaking mortality at the heart of The Spare Room (2008). She has also authored a slew of nonfiction, plus screenplays for Jane Campion's Two Friends and Gillian Armstrong's wonderfully Garneresque The Last Days of Chez Nous. After a reading from John's favorite, The Children's Bach, the trio discusses Garner's capacity for cutting and cutting, creating resonant, thought-inducing gaps. Garner connects that taste for excision, perhaps paradoxically, to her tendency to accumulate scraps, bits and pieces of life. She relates her father's restlessness...
We are just delighted to welcome you back to the second season of Novel Dialogue, putting scholars a...
This study supports the contention that linguistic analysis can be an important tool in understandin...
Shola von Reinhold is the author of LOTE, a novel about getting lost in the archives and finding wha...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
This practice-based creative writing research project consists of a novella, Things to Talk about La...
Among types of books, novels allow readers the most conversational possibilities: readers may "overh...
The paper aims at exploring Margaret Atwood’s vision in her books emphasized in aninterview wr...
The voice of the author permeates the novel according to Mikhail Bakhtin and this voice is not isola...
Book synopsis: The relationship between writer and reader, an unnerving intimacy with a total strang...
Ruth Ozeki, whose most recent novel is The Book of Form and Emptiness, speaks with critic Rebecca Ev...
What is the nature of the narrative act? Is the author a god? A pawn? In the fictive realm, who can ...
Henry Green described his experiments in fiction as "conversations" between the writer and his unse...
ь LTHOUGH MARGARET ATWOOD has stated that the prob-lem with writing a novel is "sustaining your...
Caryl Phillips, professor of English at Yale, world-renowned and prize-winning novelist (from The Fi...
The author and narrator of a novel must each have a voice; a strong voice that the reader can hear ...
We are just delighted to welcome you back to the second season of Novel Dialogue, putting scholars a...
This study supports the contention that linguistic analysis can be an important tool in understandin...
Shola von Reinhold is the author of LOTE, a novel about getting lost in the archives and finding wha...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
This practice-based creative writing research project consists of a novella, Things to Talk about La...
Among types of books, novels allow readers the most conversational possibilities: readers may "overh...
The paper aims at exploring Margaret Atwood’s vision in her books emphasized in aninterview wr...
The voice of the author permeates the novel according to Mikhail Bakhtin and this voice is not isola...
Book synopsis: The relationship between writer and reader, an unnerving intimacy with a total strang...
Ruth Ozeki, whose most recent novel is The Book of Form and Emptiness, speaks with critic Rebecca Ev...
What is the nature of the narrative act? Is the author a god? A pawn? In the fictive realm, who can ...
Henry Green described his experiments in fiction as "conversations" between the writer and his unse...
ь LTHOUGH MARGARET ATWOOD has stated that the prob-lem with writing a novel is "sustaining your...
Caryl Phillips, professor of English at Yale, world-renowned and prize-winning novelist (from The Fi...
The author and narrator of a novel must each have a voice; a strong voice that the reader can hear ...
We are just delighted to welcome you back to the second season of Novel Dialogue, putting scholars a...
This study supports the contention that linguistic analysis can be an important tool in understandin...
Shola von Reinhold is the author of LOTE, a novel about getting lost in the archives and finding wha...