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Belinda Castles

๐Ÿ‘ค Speaker
173 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

Hi, Kate.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

Happy to be here.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

Well, I think in editing this book, I realised that there were a lot of answers to that question and they were not the same as mine.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

But I think the first thing that comes to mind when I think about reading as a writer is a particular attentiveness to method and effect.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

I think that you've always got one eye on...

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

How this book is making you feel and whether there's something there that you want to replicate.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

I mean, this is reducing the method, but I think there's something, there can be something quite cold in the eye of a writer reader, a little bit mercenary that holds

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

hold some kind of respectful awe, but also you're always thinking about whether there's something you can steal.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

I chose Oscar and Lucinda by Peter Carey.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

I chose it because in a way it was my introduction to Australian literature.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

I think it's clear from my accent that I'm not born and bred here, but I have had a lot of contact with Australia through my childhood because of family history and

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

And it became clear to me as I got older that I wanted to live in Australia, Sydney specifically.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

I was completely in love with Sydney.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

And Oscar and Lucinda is a book of 19th century colonial Sydney, and it conjures this city in all its sensory splendor and aggressive moods, as well as in its historical setting.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

It seemed so alive to me.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

I read it in my early 20s several times, and the textures of the language seemed to conjure just how visceral the experience of being in this city can be, particularly to me, perhaps,

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

That feeling is strongly evoked to somebody who's grown up in England and you're always used to what you know.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

I was used to greenness, gentleness, steady rain.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

And this was something wilder and brighter and the light was vivid to me and the smells of the harbour.

The Bookshelf
How to read like an Australian writer

And it was a novel that I just...

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