Monday, June 30, 2008
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Cover: Silhouette in Scarlet by Elizabeth Peters
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
June Wright: A forgotten Australian crime writer
One of these writers - Melbourne-born June Wright - started writing in 1941, at the age of 22. Her first novel, Murder in the Telephone Exchange, was published in 1948 by Hutchinson, the result of a competition win.
It's said that most first novels are semi-biographical, and this one could well have been: Wright worked in a telephone exchange for the four years preceding the novel's publication.
Her novels aren't scarce, but are certainly not available in most second hand bookshops - not that I've seen, anyway. As far as I know, they have never been reprinted. I have only managed to find one: a hardcover first edition of So Bad a Death (1949, Hutchinson). This was her second novel, and it features the same female protagonist from the first. It's an enjoyable read, with a strong Mary Roberts Rinehart flavour to it, and an interesting setting: an outer suburb of Melbourne that is described rather like an English village from a Christie novel.
Wright wrote six novels in all, the last being published in 1966. According to Continent of Mystery: A Thematic History of Australian Crime Fiction by Stephen Knight (1997, MUP) Wright then retired from writing to assist her husband with his business. In her fourth novel, Reservation for Murder (1958, Long), Wright introduced a nun as her detective - Mother Paul. Said to be the female/feminist version of Chesterton's Father Brown, it's somewhat a disappointment that Wright decided to stop writing just when she'd created such an interesting character.
(Pictured: Make-Up for Murder, 1966 first edition by Long (UK), jacket art by William Randell.)
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Agatha Christie: old & new covers
My favourites? Definitely the early edition of The Murder at the Vicarage, and the UK edition of Evil Under the Sun. The voodoo doll with its twisted, misshapen limbs is one of my favourite Tom Adams' covers, period.
Friday, June 20, 2008
Ngaio Marsh cover story
Death at the Dolphin was first published in 1967. The cover above is the dust jacket from the Collins Book Club (UK) edition of the same year. The only clue to the artist's identity are the initials G.C. in one corner. This cover shows much more blatantly than the first two that the book is a mystery title. I don't like this cover, apart from that nicely shaped skull. The images of the corpse, skull and two masks seem to have simply been cut and pasted on.
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Cover: The Loner by Otto Friedrich
Cover artist unknown. 127p.
Otto Friedrich (1929-1995) was a US writer who worked as a newspaper journalist and editor on such New York institutions as The Saturday Evening Post, Time and Newsweek. He wrote many non-fiction works, a series of children's books and two novels (of which The Loner is one).
Friedrich continued to write on a Royal typewriter until his death from lung cancer; he was even given special permission by Time to do so, despite their conversion to computers.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Cover: The Bachelors by Muriel Spark
From the album: St Lawrence, Central QLD, 1989
Erik's hand-me-down BMX bike.
This was taken just after dad had lowered the seat so Erik's 6yo legs could reach the ground. He crashed the bike a couple of weeks later, and still has a scar on his knee from it. Great big sister that I am, I remember telling him he was going to die... and he believed me. He still likes to tell that story.
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Cover: Tiger Standish Does His Stuff by Sydney Horler
Monday, June 16, 2008
Cover: After the Funeral by Agatha Christie
First published 1953; cover shown is the 1954 Book Club (UK) hardcover dust jacket.
Cover artist unknown. 192p.
Cover: Dreadful Summit by Stanley Ellin
Cover art by Germano Facetti. 128p.
This is the diary of one night of brainstorm and violence in the life of a teenage boy - a night of initiation into sex and sudden death and heroism.
The lonely, introspective mind of George LaMain had been nourished on Kipling and Dumas. Seeing his father mercilessly flogged by a fashionable sports columnist, the boy simply picks up a gun and goes after the bully. To kill.
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Friday, June 13, 2008
A Staffordshire Bull Terrier smorgasbord
This is a rabbit's hind leg, complete with fur and skin. He'd never eaten a 'furry meal' before, and I thought he might balk at eating it... but he ate the lot and looked for more.
Two lamb hearts. Three of these make a full meal for him. At 80 cents each, it's an expensive meal compared to chicken or fish. Generally, I spend - in total - between $2.00 and $7.50 on his meals each week. I spend more on squeaky toys than I do on food for him!
A salmon head, bought from a local fresh fish shop for 50 cents. It's a big meal, with a lot of meat, a couple of fins, eyes, teeth etc. A fish head takes him half an hour to eat and leaves him with fish breath for another half hour.
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Found: 1970s flapper print shirt
The shirt features a repeated image of a 1920s woman in a cloche (hat) on an oyster pink background. Made from 100% Federated Fashion Fabrics polyester by Bon-Ton Fashions of Melbourne.
Slow Speedy Death
http://gladdog.blogspot.com/
Monday, June 09, 2008
From the album: Bundaberg, QLD, 1945
My paternal grandparent's wedding picture, taken at an Anglican church in Bundaberg, Queensland.
The groom, Vernon Richard Atkinson, was 30 years old. He had enlisted in Maryborough on 3 November 1939, aged 25, and served - amongst other postings - in Tobruk. He was discharged in 1944.
The bride, Jessie Evelyn Spencer, was 22 years old.
Cover: Forensic Medicine by Bernard Knight
* This book should come with a warning. It contains colour photographs of every kind of death (violent, suicide or natural) that you can think of. I was only able to look through it once. Now it sits with my other reference books (though just why I'll need to reference it in the future remains a mystery).
Sunday, June 08, 2008
At the moment...
I'm cooking... Lamb & Mushroom Casserole, roasted lamb chops with vegetables and gravy, Florida Chicken Drumsticks, Oxtail Stew - warm and comfortable winter foods.
I'm dreaming... of a trip to Canberra in early August to visit my brother and my friend Ali (hard to believe it's been over five years since I was last there), and a pet friendly coastal holiday in the not-to-distant future so Bean can run on the sand, swim in the sea and chase seagulls for the first time in his life.
I'm wearing... workwise, my favourite item of clothing: woollen man-style trousers that are so comfortable and warm, teamed with my ever-increasing range of brightly coloured long-sleeved 70s shirts and a blazer or cardigan; and cargo pants and four layers of jumpers for early morning and nighttime dog walks (with beanie and mittens if it's really cold).
Q & A Time.
What is your favorite food? Milk chocolate. Roast meals. Milkshakes. Queensland mangoes straight from the tree.
Which schools did you go to? Capella Pre-school, followed by Capella Primary School, followed by St. Lawrence Primary School, followed by Flora Hill Secondary College, followed by Bendigo Senior Secondary College.
What is your favorite color? Green or blue or brown.
Who is your celebrity crush? Vincent D'Onofrio.
Dream vacation? Europe.
What did you want to be when you grew up? An author. A fashion designer. A mother. A librarian.
What makes you happy? Simple things, like seeing a beautiful sunset, sitting in the sun and reading a good book, or watching my dog play.
Beggar's Choice by Patricia Wentworth
Wentworth interspersed first-person diary entries with straight third-person narrative in this glamorous late-1920s novel of social status, drugs, high intrigue and more twists and turns than you can poke a stick at.
In three long, lonely years Carthew Fairfax ('Car' to his friends) has gone from wealthy heir to impoverished gentleman, with no food in his stomach and barely any leather left on the soles of his shoes. Since the suicide death of his swindling employer, Car has been shunned by his friends and - through the machinations of his scheming cousin, Anna - disowned by his uncle.
When he is down to his last few pence, a piece of paper is shoved into his hand in the street. "Do want 500 pounds? If you do, and are willing to earn it, write to Box Z. 10, International Employment Exchange, 187 Falcon Street, N.W."
So begins a roller coaster of an adventure for Car, who soon meets up with the love of his life, the beautiful Isobel, and with Anna, who has many things in store for the man who once spurned her - and absolutely none of it is nice.
This was a little over the top in some places, but great escapism. I love how Wentworth took the time to describe little details - such as a woman's cocktail dress, or Car's first real meal in weeks. I really enjoyed this.
Saturday, June 07, 2008
Castlemaine book sale
My finds: The Crime at Honotassa by M. G. Eberhart (1962 Collins hardcover, with dust-jacket); Bloomsbury Good Reading Guide by Kenneth McLeish (apparently an 'indispensable companion for all book lovers'); 100 Ghastly Little Ghost Stories edited by Dziemianowicz, Weinberg & Greenberg (1993 hardcover with DJ, with great jacket art by Jack Eckstein); Ludmila's Broken English by D. B. C. Pierre and three magazines, one of which is the Winter 2007 issue of Stiletto, the Australian crime fiction magazine published by Sisters in Crime.
After fighting my way to the little old ladies manning the make-shift cash registers (and fighting off a little man who wanted to carry my books for me), I loaded my books into the car and drove to a local sports reserve, so Bean could have a run off lead. I'd brought along a squeaky toy (shaped like a bone with an American football in the middle - he loves it) and we spent ages running around, chasing each other. When we both couldn't run another step, we headed back to the car.
There was enough time left to visit two nearby op shops. I didn't find much: two long-sleeved 70s blouses for $1.00 each, one red and the other cream, Margaret Fulton's Book of One Pot Cooking, a collection of Erin Pizzey essays, and a first edition copy of E. R. Braithwaite's Paid Servant.
Tuesday, June 03, 2008
Cover: Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
First published 1915. 124p.
"Turn-of-the-century social critic Charlotte Perkins Gilman (author of 'The Yellow Wallpaper') employs humour to engaging effect in a story about three male explorers who stumble upon an all-female society isolated somewhere in South America. Noting the advanced state of the civilization they've encountered, the visitors set out to find some males, assuming that since the country is so civilized, 'there must be men'.
A fantasy vision of a feminist utopia, the story enables Gilman to articulate her then-unconventional views of male-female roles and capabilities, motherhood, individuality, privacy, the sense of community, sexuality, and many other topics."
Sunday, June 01, 2008
From the album: Melbourne, VIC, 2005
Bee and I ended up paying for three lots of photos (the one pictured is Attempt No. 2) because Attempt Nos. 1 and 3 just show four photos exactly like the bottom photo pictured.
Second to the bottom is our 'serious face', which led directly to a complete loss of control three seconds later when the bottom photo was taken. We both fell off the stool straight afterwards, with me banging my head on the opposite wall of the booth.
And this was before we had all those drinks with dinner.