I'm absolutely thrilled that an essay I wrote back in April, during NZ's lockdown, is published on The Clearing today. Ostensibly about hedgehogs' colonial history, it also includes a mention of my darling rabbit Thunderstorm, who was tragically killed by stray dogs in October, so it brought back some bittersweet memories. I've long admired The Clearing and enjoyed the essays in particular. My sincere thanks, therefore, to Jon Woolcott and Little Toller Books for helping me realise a little writing dream of mine. You can read 'On Entering the Wrong Carriage' here.
Thursday, January 28, 2021
On entering
Tuesday, January 12, 2021
Everywhere is now
In 2018, I was commissioned to write a Comic about war. The editor ended up being replaced and my piece didn't see the light of day, so I'm publishing it here because it seems pertinent to the current period. It was after all written in response to Trump. I had been in America for the first weeks of Trump's inauguration in 2017, researching my Mary Taylor biography, and
saw first hand the women's marches protesting against his presidency and
the clap-back of MAGA advertisements on TV.
Labels:
comic,
Everywhere is now,
feminism,
global peace index,
graphic biography,
graphic memoir,
graphic non-fiction,
greyhounds,
Mary Taylor,
politics,
presidency,
Trump,
war,
war tourism,
women's marches
Tuesday, January 5, 2021
It's not agatha christie
Thanks to Dr Jonathan Taylor for including my review of Nigel Pantling's It's Not Personal (Smith | Doorstop, 2020) over on Everybody's Reviewing, not least because I got to indulge my love of mystery writing. If you want to know what Miss Marple has to do with Hannah Gadsby, you may only find it in this review!
Friday, January 1, 2021
Dregs
My thanks to Editor Christopher Fields for including my 'Dregs' at the end of this thoughtfully curated issue of Neologism Poetry, technically the last of 2020 spilling into the new year.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)