Friday, 26 July 2013

An island in time

Have just come across my first book with a QR code on its front cover.(http://www.jeremyrobinsononline.com/books/island-qr-code.html) It links to this blurb on 'Island 731' by Jeremy Robinson.

"The high adventure of James Rollins meets the gripping suspense of Matthew Reilly in Jeremy Robinson's explosive new thriller
Mark Hawkins, former park ranger and expert tracker, is out of his element, working on board the Magellan, a research vessel studying the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. But his work is interrupted when, surrounded by thirty miles of refuse, the ship and its high tech systems are plagued by a series of strange malfunctions and the crew is battered by a raging storm.
When the storm fades and the sun rises, the beaten crew awakens to find themselves anchored in the protective cove of a tropical island...and no one knows how they got there. Even worse, the ship has been sabotaged, two crewman are dead and a third is missing. Hawkins spots signs of the missing man on shore and leads a small team to bring him back. But they quickly discover evidence of a brutal history left behind by the Island’s former occupants: Unit 731, Japan’s ruthless World War II human experimentation program. Mass graves and military fortifications dot the island, along with a decades old laboratory housing the remains of hideous experiments.
As crew members start to disappear, Hawkins realizes that they are not alone. In fact, they were brought to this strange and horrible island. The crew is taken one-by-one and while Hawkins fights to save his friends, he learns the horrible truth: Island 731 was never decommissioned and the person taking his crewmates may not be a person at all—not anymore."
And this YouTube clip



I hope it is a bit more Matthew Reilly than James Rollins' formula, and not a splatter pulp fiction.

For the really ancient (who may recognise what I'm on about) the mention of - deserted tropical island; decades old military fortifications - immediately brought to mind an episode from the tv series 'The adventures of the Seaspray'.  Loved that theme music, so the YouTube opening credits are below. Also I wanted to live on that boat and sail around the Pacific - didn't happen strangely.

Saturday, 20 July 2013

Author haunts


50 Places Every Literary Fan Should Visit

For any excuse to travel - if you’re in an area that is home to a place that has some literary historical significance, you have to go and visit it. Well, Favorwire compiled this list of literary places all over the world that you should visit if you happen to be in the neighbourhood.

Mark Twain's house with Tiffany-designed walls & ceilings and a Twain made from Lego!
  1. Mark Twain House & Museum, Hartford, CT
  2. Ernest Hemingway’s birthplace & Museum, Oak Park, IL
  3. Herman Melville’s grave, Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, NY
  4. Willa Cather’s childhood home, Red Cloud, Nebraska
  5. Oscar Wilde’s childhood home, Dublin, Ireland
  6. Baruch Spinoza’s house, The Hague, Netherlands
  7. Emily Dickinson Museum, Amherst, MA
  8. Yasnaya Polyana (Leo Tolstoy’s home), Russia
  9. The Mount (Edith Wharton’s home), Lenox, MA
  10. William Faulkner’s ‘Rowan Oak’, Oxford, MS
    Love the look of 'Rowan Oak'
  11. Scribner Building and Charles Scribner’s Sons Building, New York, NY
  12. Tennessee Williams lived in the windmill at the Stony Brook campus, Southampton, NY
  13. O. Henry house and museum, Austin, TX
  14. Friedrich Nietzsche-Haus, Sils-Maria, Switzerland
  15. Jorge Luis Borges’s Buenos Aires, Argentina
  16. Margaret Mitchell House & Museum, Atlanta, GA
  17. Bronte Parsonage Museum, West Yorkshire, England 
  18. Flannery O’Connor’s childhood home, Savannah, GA
  19. Charles Dickens Museum, London, England
  20. Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library, Indianapolis, Indiana
  21. Truman Capote’s apartment, Brooklyn, NY
  22. Nikolai’s ‘Gogol House’, Moscow, Russia
  23. Dorothy Parker’s birthplace, Long Branch, NJ
  24. H.P. Lovecraft’s Providence, Rhode Island
  25. Honoré de Balzac’s residence Maison de Balzac, Paris, France
  26. Karl Marx House, Trier, Germany
  27. Mark Twain’s boyhood home and museum, Hannibal, MO
  28. Turkish Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk created the Museum of Innocence, Istanbul, Turkey
  29. Henry Thoreau’s Walden Pond, Concord, MA
  30. City Lights Books, San Francisco, CA
  31. Edgar Allan Poe Museum, Richmond, VA
  32. Virginia and Leonard Woolf’s Monk’s House for Bloomsbury Group in East Sussex, England
  33. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s birthplace, St. Paul, MN
  34. Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris, France (final resting place of Oscar Wilde, Honoré de Balzac, and many great authors)
    Joyce, still on the streets of Dublin
  35. Walking around James Joyce’s Dublin, Ireland
  36. Harry Ransom Center, Austin, TX
  37. Franz Kafka’s grave, The New Jewish Cemetery, Prague
  38. Les Deux Magots, Paris, France (Parisian café where Simone de Beauvoir, Jean-Paul Sartre, Ernest Hemingway, Albert Camus, Pablo Picasso, James Joyce, and many others hung out)
  39. Edward Gorey House, Yarmouth Port, MA
    The surely inspirational Williams windmill
  40. John Updike’s home, Shillington, PA
  41. Vladimir’s Nabokov House, Saint Petersburg, Russia
  42. L.M. Montgomery’s Green Gables, Cavendish, Prince Edward Island, Canada
  43. Chekhov Library, Taganrog, Russia
  44. Henry Miller Memorial Library, Big Sur, CA
  45. Edgar Allan Poe’s grave, Baltimore, MD
  46. Jane Austen’s House & Museum, Hampshire, England
  47. Poetry Foundation, Chicago, IL
  48. Arthur Rimbaud’s House, Harar, Ethiopia
  49. Washington Irving’s grave, Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Sleepy Hollow, NY
  50. The Algonquin Hotel, New York, NY meeting place of a group of New York writers, critics, actors and wits including Dorothy Parker, Harpo Marx and Harold Ross.
OK, it is extremely American (which would be an excuse to fly to the U.S.), so we need to compile the definitive Australian one. I'll make a start -  number one has to be Nutcote the home of May Gibbs.
'Nutcote' on the shores of Sydney Harbour
Re graves, it would be Waverley Cemetery now home to Henry Lawson, Dorothea MacKellar and Henry Kendall...
The white marble forest of Waverley Cemetery, Sydney
The Shaw Neilson's cottage
Locally - that's John Shaw Neilson's home originally near Penola, S.A., now at Nhill.
Then there's Chauncyvale in Tasmania, the whole town of Gulgong (Henry Lawson's hometown), the Durack's Lake Argyle homestead in W.A. Kylie Tennant's Hut above Kylie's Beach at Diamond Head, N.S.W. Dingley Dell Cottage & Museum to Adam Linsday Gordon. The Colin Thiele sculpture (with Mr Percival) at Eudunda, S.A., the Norman Lindsay Gallery & Museum in Faulconbridge in the Blue Mountains. That's ten, I could go on & on

So who else would you add?

Sunday, 14 July 2013

Worlds will collide


A bit excited about the film version of City of Bones. The film is based on the first book of the Mortal Instruments series: City of Bones.
Set in contemporary New York City, a seemingly ordinary 15 year old teenager, Clary Fray (Lily Collins), heads out to the Pandemonium Club, she hardly expects to witness a murder—much less a murder committed by three teenagers covered with strange tattoos and brandishing bizarre weapons. Clary knows she should call the police, but it’s hard to explain a murder when the body disappears into thin air and the murderers are invisible to everyone but Clary.
Equally startled by her ability to see them, the murderers describe themselves as Shadowhunters: a secret tribe of half-angel warriors locked in an ancient battle to protect our world from demons.
After the disappearance of her mother (Lena Headey) - and Clary herself is almost killed by a grotesque demon - Clary must join forces with a group of Shadowhunters, who introduce her to a dangerous alternate New York called Downworld, filled with demons, warlocks, vampires, werewolves and other deadly creatures.
The movie was filmed in Toronto and New York and is due for worldwide release on August 21, 2013. (Australia 22nd). The movie has its own site where you can check out the trailer. There is also a Mortal Instruments Facebook page, and the Shadowhunters website.

The author of the Mortal Instruments series - Cassandra Clare was born to American parents in Teheran in Iran, and spent much of her childhood travelling the world with her family. She lived in France, England and Switzerland before she was ten years old.
Since her family moved around so much she found familiarity in books and went everywhere with a book. She spent her high school years in Los Angeles where she used to write stories to amuse her classmates.
After college, Cassie lived in Los Angeles and New York where she worked at various entertainment magazines before writing City of Bones in 2004 and becoming a full-time writer.


Don’t miss your opportunity to read the books, listen to the books on CD or electronically, and then explore the Shadowhunters world with the Mortal Instruments reader before the movie is released in August.

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Wanted: Royal Librarian


The Royal Collection is advertising for a librarian to operate the Royal Library at Winsdor Castle for £53,00 a year.
Windsor Castle mharrsch on Flickr
According to The Telegraph, it is a bookworm's dream job to look after the Queen's 125,000 titles. 


They are seeking an exceptional scholar and bibliophile to run the Royal Library which contains one of the world's finest collections of Old Master drawings (including the largest group of Leonardo da Vinci drawings); a unique collection of over 4,500 military maps & documents spanning the 4 centuries from Agincourt to Waterloo; coins, medals & insignia; and of course books & manuscripts.

The Librarian would work with the Royal Collection Trust curating exhibitions & displays for State Visits & themed receptions, and with the Royal Archives researching & interpreting material on the history of the monarchy.

The requirements are
- a strong scholarly background
- in depth knowledge of history (especially British)
- bibliography and a record of publishing, lecturing & academic research 
- possess advanced IT skills with an understanding of & experience in digitisation

Thursday, 4 July 2013

The real Tom Kruse


The Birdsville Track is one of the best known, and loneliest, tracks in Australia, and for twenty years Tom Kruse was the mailman, battling the searing heat, floods and mechanical breakdowns. He made the run every fortnight, and was a lifeline to the isolated settlements and stations along the way, delivering everything from letters to essential supplies.  He made running repairs of his truck, he loaded and unloaded tons of stores to ferry his cargo across flooded creeks. He kept people in touch with the outside world, and was sometimes caught up in the grief of a lonely death.

'Tom the Outback mailman' by Kristin Weidenbach  is a children's version of Kristin Weidenbach's bestselling 'Mailman of the Birdsville Track' and is illustrated by Timothy Idle who has a feel for the beauty and hardship of life in the Outback. And he also has a touch of whimsy as showcased with the double-page spread of Tom's efforts to conquer the sandhills by building up speed doing circle work on a claypan then gunning the truck up the sand slope.


The book  is a reconstruction of life on the Birdsville Track in the early 1950s.  Parts of the book are a faithful recreation of the original story complete with the armchair and dressmakers dummy.
It has been shortlisted for the Children's Book Council of Australia's Eve Pownall Award for Information Books. The winners will be announced on Friday 16th August, the eve of this year's Book Week (Saturday 17th to Friday 23rd August 2013). The theme this year is "Read across the universe".
 Tom Kruse was the Birdsville Track mail-man from the 1930's to the 50's, he was born in Waterloo in the Clare Valley in 1914 as Esmond Gerald Kruse and died in Adelaide in 2011. His Leyland Badger truck was reconstructed and driven from Sturts Stony Desert near Birdsville to the Birdwood motor museum in 1999.
 
Tom's story was first chronicled in the iconic John Heyer film 'The back of beyond' - the film won the Absolute Grand Prize in the Venice Film Festival in 1954 and was nominated for the1955 BAFA for Best Documentary Film.

The film encompasses a period between the exploration and opening up of the country and the contemporary -  the Afghan Bejah in the film was the cameleer on the Madigan Expedition into the Simpson Desert in 1939.

Of the stories within the film, the most moving has to be the re-telling of the two young sisters Sally & Roberta who left their home on the Track to walk to the nearest neighbour with only their spaniel dog and billy-cart with a demi-jar of water. The sequence when they come across their own tracks, dreamily accompanied by Roberta playing a flute, is made all the more wrenching by Sally concealing the significance of their disorientation as they continue into unending dunes. Later their father returns and searches for them till their tracks disappear under the windblown sand.