Final Draft - Great Conversations

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Great conversations with authors from Australia and around the world.

  1. -13 h ·  Bonus

    Book Club - Antoun Issa’s Rebirth

    Antoun Issa is a Lebanese-Australian journalist and co-founder of Deepcut News. Antoun has a new book out entitled Rebirth and with the byline a “Love Story from the depths of war.” Rebirth chronicles Antoun’s mothers experiences of the beginnings of the Lebanese civil war in the 1970s and her subsequent migration to Australia. The novel centers around the experience of the pseudonymously named Khalil family and their eldest daughter Laila. Laila works as a seamstress, supporting her father’s income for the family and giving her some small degree of autonomy in moving around Beirut between home and her work. Laila is of an age when her family would be seeking a match, and for her to marry, but Laila is jealous of her independence, her role as a support to her family, and is also secretly in love with the handsome hairdresser she sees coming to and from work. Laila might reasonably worry about the approval of her family and the politics of relationships in a close knit community. When war breaks out and factions around the city close off territories she comes to understand that simple things such as living and dying can be easily overturned by desperate men with guns. In a short while she will see her life and her love transformed utterly. Rebirth is a deeply personal and tremendously affecting novel. In crafting the book Antoun Issa meticulously crafted stories from locals in Beirut and his  mother’s own reminiscences. He takes these interviews and transforms them into a vibrant narrative evoking both the history of the time, but also something of the community and what is being lost as it is felt by those who would come to mourn it eternally. When I read the book it was against the backdrop of a new war unfolding in Lebanon, with invading Israeli forces uprooting town much as Rebirth describes the uprooting and displacement of the Khalil family. As that conflict escalates I turn again to Rebirth as a source for understanding what is at stake and the generational trauma visited on those who are driven from their lands. Rebirth is a vessel for that memory. It is also a testament to the humanity of the people who are caught in the middle of conflict. Those who become casualties but often don’t get memorialised as the fighters do because they are poor, or not strategically important in the schemes of little men with big guns. This is an incredible work of narrative non-fiction and a generous invitation to all readers to understand both the history and the personal consequence of a decades long conflict seared into the hearts of so many Lebanese diaspora across the world and in Australia.

    3 min
  2. 23 juin ·  Bonus

    Book Club - Y.M. Abdel-Magied’s At Sea

    Yassmin Abdel-Magied is a Sudanese diaspora author, screenwriter and award-winning social advocate. She has published six books, including essays in Talking About a Revolution and a series for younger readers, You must be Layla and Listen Layla. Today we’re going to be talking about her latest, literary fiction debut, At Sea.  Zainab has spent her life on oil rigs living the fly in fly out life. It’s meant missing out on a lot, including a relationship with her sister. Now she’s in Perth on a promise that she will see her sister through the birth of her first child. This could finally be the chance to repair their relationship. When Zainab’s boss Bryce calls her back from leave to investigate strange goings on on the rig Clarissa Clyde, she knows this could be her big break. Zainab’s reluctant to leave Kareema but thrilled at the opportunity to take charge as a tool pusher. Joining a rig near the end of a drill isn’t easy. As a woman on the rigs Zainab knows she won’t get an easy ride, let alone an open door to the mysteries plaguing the Clarissa Clyde. The rig is almost too perfect and the team are rough but nothing she hasn’t handled. She is determined though, and haunted by Bryce’s words, ‘Make sure everyone gets out alive’. The hook for me with At Sea was Yassmin’s writing. I wouldn’t normally gravitate to a thriller set on the high  seas but I know from experience Yassmin tackles big ideas. I also know she’s worked on rigs herself and so I was intrigued at how she would treat this world that seems so strange from the shore. Immediately with Zainab we come to understand that this is a man’s world. Her position as a tool pusher should give her some authority but there are men on board who would still demean her as par for the course. The novel works to understand this dynamic as both a moral problem, but also a product of the hyper-real world of a perilous lifestyle. Zainab grapples as much with her own ability to answer disrespect and violence in kind, as she does with any absolute morality of the actions. Life on the rigs is contrasted with the world Kareema offers; life on land, life with family. It’s the kind of world that Zainab has been avoiding. We see that Zainab, along with many of the men on the rig struggle with the demands of these separate lives. But why are these demands so disparate? The plot and the action of At Sea is gripping and I found myself drawn into the claustrophobic spaces and the alien vocabulary of drilling. While I understood very little of the processes involved in these mammoth endeavours to pull oil out of the ocean, the storytelling is such that the precision and the danger is never far from the character's, and therefore the reader’s mind. This is a mystery but not in the conventional sense. While Zainab is tasked with uncovering some sort of conspiracy or coverup, it is tantalisingly obtuse and she is never sure if the danger is real. Within the cauldron of life on a floating petrol bomb she must grapple with whether it is better to continually rock the boat in the name of safety, or to maintain an unexamined conformity for the sake of group cohesion. The trick is knowing and the wrong choice may not be discovered till too late. The twinned tensions of Zainab’s role as a woman with authority, and the possibility of impending catastrophe are constantly stoked. Zainab feels obligated to speak up but cursed not to be believed. Much like Cassandra, Zainab can only watch on as her situation deteriorates. At Sea sets out to achieve a lot, and broadly meets this aim being smart and pacey, technical and philosophical. It asks a lot more questions than it answers but that’s perhaps more a reflection on the world which also refuses to listen when it doesn’t want to hear.

    5 min
  3. 9 juin ·  Bonus

    Book Club - Brendan Colley’s The Season for Flying Saucers

    Brendan Colley’s first novel was the much feted The Signal Line and introduced us to his wild and wonderful world within a world of Hobart. Brendan’s new novel The Season for Flying Saucers promises to deliver just as much of a ride. When the lights appear on the first night of summer Hobart is abuzz. Locals and paranormal pundits alike agree, it’s shaping up to be a good season. Noah is skeptical. His life is spiraling more than a little; estranged from his family, his wife has left and he’s just been fired from his job. Noah’s sure if he can make payments on the family home he’s bought back and not sure if there’s much of a family to fill it with. Truthfully there’s really nothing to leave behind if they do come to get him. Weird has followed Noah ever since the night twelve years ago when his father disappeared in the lights. Since then he’s been infamous, inseparable from the lights and this Season for Flying Saucers is shaping up to be a doozy. Of course with the lights comes the scrutiny. Now Noah is thrown into a too close for comfort version of his childhood as both his mother and sister move in and try to sort out the mystery and their fraught family dynamic. Brendan Colley has crafted a wickedly fun and far out exploration of the lengths we will go to for family. Within the double brick of Hobart’s northern suburbs we are shown the possibility of a universe much larger than we imagine and yet still not big enough to escape your mum's disapproval. Noah has hung on to the possibility of his father being a part of something bigger. That his disappearance might have some meaning. It’s coloured his world and now his family must come together and try to figure out all the things they left unsaid all those years ago. The novel plays with our own need to discover and to believe by dangling hooks and misdirection as we watch the world watch Noah and the lights that seem to be fixed on his house. While we wonder at the possibility of the impossible we see a group of people coming together and working their way through a different type of impossible.  I really loved both Brendan’s first novel and now The Season for Flying Saucers. Both novels understand that our need to believe moves in both directions and even as we look out to the fantastical in the world there is so much about our inner lives that is equally surprising when we take the time to pay it the attention it’s due. This is the kind of sci-fi and spec-fic that is exciting me in Australian writing today. It understands that as we continue to live in a world that might generously be described as sub-optimal we are looking for answers large and small. I won’t tell you if the lights in the sky turn out to be real but I can tell you that in The Season for Flying Saucers, the time spent looking for them is well worth your while.

    4 min

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Great conversations with authors from Australia and around the world.

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