Time For a Bedtime Story by Naomi

When your child reaches middle primary school and is reading confidently on their own, it's easy to think that the time for bedtime stories is over.  It's great for children to choose their own reading and to read themselves, but reading with them and to them is still valuable and important.

As well as providing a lovely, quiet, intimate time with your child, a bedtime story can provide lots of opportunities.  You can read slightly more challenging books, classics that may have language that would put a child off reading the book to themselves even though they will enjoy the story.  The Yorkshire accent in Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden, for example, looks difficult on the page, but comes to life when read aloud.
"And even if the worst does happen and you do get turned into a mouse, life is still good."


Some books for this age group raise issues and talking about those issues as you read the book together works a lot better than trying to discuss them at a different time.  Roald Dahl's The Witches brings up fears and how being prepared and informed makes them easier to overcome.  And even if the worst does happen and you do get turned into a mouse, life is still good.  Anh Do's WeirDo series uses humour to lighten issues about being different and creates a great starting point for discussion as well.

"There is nothing wrong with reading a book just because it's fun"
Even picture books can be read and understood on a different level.  Imagery that was taken literally by a four year old can now be understood metaphorically, especially when the book is quite familiar.  The metaphor and symbolism of classic fairy tales from Hans Christian Andersen or The Brothers Grimm become clearer as a child gets older.  And there is nothing wrong with reading a book just because it's fun.

Books that inspire imagination and creativity can be taken to any level.  Rebecca Cobb's The Something is a great starting point for imagining a whole world hidden beneath the garden, and Anthony Browne's Willy's Stories uses subtle references to classic stories to inspire the exploration of those tales or the creation of your own new ones.

Don't give up bedtime stories just because your child can read to themselves - they are just too good for both you and your child to miss!

By Naomi


Check out our Story Time with Naomi every Friday morning at 11am.  For more details ring
9331 6642 or email shop@pottspointbookshop.com.au

Q & A with Graeme Simsion, author of "The Rosie Project"

The Rosie Project has been a word of mouth phenomenon since it's publication in 2011.  The warmhearted and funny story of Don Tillman and his efforts to find a wife resonated with readers all over Australia and further afield, making first time author Graeme Simsion a bestselling author.
And now there is a sequel - The Rosie Effect.
Graeme Simsion was kind enough to take some time to answer some questions about his new book for us.  See what he had to say about The Rosie Effect.

PP:  The sequel to your bestselling book The Rosie Project, called The Rosie Effect has just been released.  Can you tell us a little about what to expect from the new book?

GS:  More of Don.  And Rosie and Gene and Claudia and Dave.  Plus, a few new characters.  Once again, Don will be under pressure, this time with a great deal more to lose - job, marriage, liberty.  and he'll tackle the problems in his own totally logical way.

PP:  So Rosie and Don are about to take part in a Mother and Father Project!  Does Don have a name for this new project?

GS:  The Baby Project.

PP:  We understand that Don is an amalgam of people who you have worked with.  Can you tell us a little more about how you found his voice?

GS:  You're right - Don was stitched together from fragments of people I know, with a little bit of myself, of course.  (There's a bit of me in every character, even Rosie).  There is no "Real Don" out there looking for a partner!  The voice began with the voice of a good friend, whose story also inspired the first draft of The Klara Project, which became The Rosie Project.  Much has changed since then besides the title.  My friend doesn't say greetings!   (But I have this other friend who does.....)

PP:  And Rosie?

GS:  Rosie too was stitched together from fragments of people I know, but less consciously.  Friends have since pointed out that she speaks a bit like X; she looks a bit like Y; she's got an attitude a bit like Z.  Where X, Y and Z are different people!


PP:  Don is a great writer of lists.  If you were to write a to-do list for aspiring authors, what would be on it?

GS:  Item 1:  Imagine your goal is to be a neurosurgeon or a professional tennis player or to play in a symphony orchestra (or a sucessful rock bank, depending on your taste).  Plan to do the same amount of work to get there (there are probably few jobs as bestselling authors and more aspirants).
You'll pick up the other items along the way.

PP:  A year and a half on from when The Rosie Project was published, it is still a huge bestseller in Australia and abroad.  Why do you think that your book has struck such a chord with readers?

GS:  It appeals to a very broad range of readers:  from people looking for a fun love story to those interested in what I hope is a commentary on the human condition.  It addresses a topic - the autism spectrum - that's currently attracting attention (and many people know someone on the spectrum).  And readers find it laugh-out-loud-funny.

PP:  You've said in the past that you wrote The Rosie Project very quickly as you had already developed the idea as a screenplay.  How then, was writing The Rosie Effect?  And is The Rosie Effect screenplay on the cards as well?

GS:  Easier.  I had the main characters, the voice and some experience in writing.  With The Rosie Project I was still learning the basics of the craft.  No news on the screenplay yet.

PP:  And a film of The Rosie Project - is that coming to our screens soon.....?

GS:  The screenplay is in development with Sony Pictures.  No casting or release date yet.

PP:  Are you reading anything great at the moment?

GS:  I'm about to pick up This House of Grief by Helen Garner, having just finished a very close read and critique of my partner's (Anne Buist) manuscript for Medea's Curse, to be published by Text in January.

The Rosie Project and The Rosie Effect are in store now.

Interview with Ceridwen Dovey, author of "Only The Animals"

Only the Animals by Ceridwen Dovey is a staff favourite at the moment and so we were incredibly excited when Ceridwen agreed to answer some questions about her book for our blog.

"Enthralling and sorrowful, Only the Animals is wholly extraordinary." Michelle de Kretser

PP:  Can you tell us a little about your new book Only the Animals?

CD:  Only the Animals is told from the perspectives of ten animal souls, all of whom have died in human conflicts in the past century or so - a cat in the trenches in WW1, or a dog on the Eastern Front in WW2, or the last surviving animal in the Sarajevo Zoo, a black bear, slowly starving to death during the siege of Sarajevo.  Each animal also pays tribute to an author who has used animals imaginatively in his or her fiction during that same time period - either by mimicking that author's style, or addressing the author directly, or describing an interaction with the author while they were both alive.

PP:  Each of the animals has a connection to a writer.  What was the reason for creating such relationships?

CD:  The year I wrote the first story (the parrot story, in a different form), I was reading Coetzee's The Lives of Animals, and while doing research for the story I went back to Julian Barnes' Flaubert's Parrot and the original Flaubert story about a woman's relationship with a parrot,  A Simple Heart - and I was searching for a way for the stories not to be relentlessly depressing; here's another animal that was killed, and here's how they died; and here's another and another..... so I decided that each animal's soul should also pay tribute to other authors who had worked in this symbolic space before - and in this way put a bit of hope and humour in the stories, to signal that along the way of human history, some of our best writers have tried to find a way to say something meaningful about animals, or conflict, or both.
There's something hopeful in this, an antidote to all the terror and pain.

"....in this way put a bit of hope and humour in the stories, to signal that along the way of human history, some of our best writers have tried to find a way to say something meaningful about animals..."

PP:  How did the idea of writing from the perspective of the souls of dead animals come about?

CD:  I was inspired by the final sections of J. M. Coetzee's novel Elizabeth Costello, where he imagines her arriving at the gates of some kind of Paradise - though one that Kafka himself might have imagined.  She is dead, but in limbo, in purgatory, and I loved the tone he takes in that part - half wry, half anguished.  I wanted to tell the death narratives of each animal rather than the life narratives, so that together they would add up to a powerful menagerie - or Book of the Dead - with a sort of ritual power due to what they have witnessed and related from the afterlife.

PP:  Was finding the voices of each animal difficult?

CD:  The process of finding each animal's voice was the most fun part of writing the book!  Sometimes the animal's voice came first, sometimes the author's did, and sometimes it was only in researching an animal that I came upon an author who had written about animals in some form in his/her fiction that seemed relevant to what I was trying to say.  For example, I knew Colette had owned a cat, but I'd never read her work before, and it was only in reading her essays and fiction that I discovered that she really did visit her new husband at the front during WW1, and had often written from the perspective of her cat, and from there the cat's voice emerged.
Similarly, I wrote the dolphin story soon after I had my son, so I was interested in the nurturing side of dolphins, and by chance I was reading a biography of Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes's marriage, and through that discovered Hughes' animal poems for children - and it suddenly seemed natural for the dolphin to be writing directly to Sylvia Plath, and to be a little bit mad at Ted Hughes.

"....it suddenly seemed natural for the dolphin to be writing directly to Sylvia Plath, and to be a little mad at Ted Hughes."

PP:  What do you think are the major themes of this collection of stories?

CD:  The task I set myself for this book was to see if I could take these over-determined, already obsessively gone over experiences of horror, pain and suffering - these human conflicts from late colonial times at the turn of the last century all the way through to the aftershocks of 9/11 and the war on terror at its end - and, by gazing at the same conflict through the eyes of an individual creature, a non-human animal, shock myself (and anybody who might read the book) into feeling something authentic.
I wanted to short-circuit the rational retelling of these conflicts in history and avoid the usual dry focus on technology and leaders and outcomes and politics through the absurdity of a talking animal soul speaking from beyond the grave about the way he/she died in a particular conflict.  And perhaps - because you're not morally obliged to feel anything, as you would for a human - you can let yourself see that conflict from the oblique angle, this skewed perspective, this tiny window on such a massive painful mess; and maybe that helps you to understand what it might have been like, a quick insight into the lived experience of it, a jolt of experience.  It's that alienating effect of gazing through an animal's eyes that I think can be most powerful.

PP:  Do you have a favourite story or character in this collection?

CD:  The elephant story.  I think it's the most moving, in part because I was channelling my love for my sister in writing the story about sibling elephants caught up in the civil war in Mozambique in the 1980s.

PP:  You had had many careers outside that of being a writer.  Can you tell us a little about your background?

CD:  I grew up between South Africa and Australia - we moved back and forth a lot, and eventually I went to high school in Sydney, and then went overseas to study on scholarship at Harvard as an undergraduate, having never been to America before.
I studied Social Anthropology for many years as both an undergraduate and post-graduate student, and made ethnographic films in South Africa, before turning to fiction.
I moved back to Sydney from the States almost five years ago to be closer to my parents.

"I've also come to realise that every single project suggests its own form and seems to arrive in the imagination in a particular form for a reason."

PP:  You previously wrote a novel called Blood Kin.  Can you tell us why you chose to follow this up with a collection of stories and not another novel?

CD:  In some ways, Blood Kin is structured like a series of interlinked stories too, but it's defined as a novel because I circle back to the same characters and their alternating monologues.  The themes are similar in both books; in Blood Kin, I looked at power abuse from the perspectives of three men who had worked closely with a deposed dictator but in a non-political capacity (his chef, portraitist and barber) - an oblique approach to understanding power and it's workings.
In Only the Animals, writing from the perspective of animals is a similarly oblique take on human conflict and suffering; instead of approaching these themes head-on, my hope is that something else comes into view, something unexpected, when we look at well-known conflicts from another angle.
So there's not a huge difference between them even if one is technically called a novel and the other a collection of stories or a novel-in-stories or a themed story collection.
But now that I've been writing fiction for over 10 years, I've also come to realise that every single project suggests its own form and seems to arrive in the imagination in a particular form for a reason - just as it suggests the way you will work on it, the rhythm and pacing of how you write it.
So to answer the question, I didn't really think about form at all - it was simply a new idea, a new project, and I wrote it as it felt it had to be written.

PP:  Is it too soon to ask if you are working on anything new right now?

CD:  When Penguin Books took on this book they also took on a draft of a novel of an old man who gets involved in the Dying With Dignity movement in Australia.  We'll wait and see what happens from here!

Author Interview - Emily Bitto, author of "The Strays"


The Strays by Emily Bitto is an exciting new book set in 1930s Australia that has just hit our shelves.  We are very excited that the author, Emily Bitto agreed to answer some questions for us.  Here is what she had to say.

PP:  Tell us a little about your novel The Strays.

EB:  The Strays is set in the avant-garde art world of Melbourne in the 1930s.  It tells the story of a group of artists who attempt to create a sort of utopian community as a way of escaping the conservatism of both the art world and Australian culture in general at the time.  But it's told through the eyes of an observer, a young girl, Lily, (now looking back as an older woman) who is befriended by one of the artists' children.  So it's also the story of her friendship with Eva, the daughter of one of the artists, and of Lily's desire to be part of this exotic world.

PP:  What inspired you to tell this story?

EB:  I've always been very interested in the idea of groups of people who try to separate themselves off, in various ways and for various reasons, from mainstream culture.  And I've also always been interested in art.  My aunt and uncle are artists, though obviously they didn't live through this era.  But I'm fascinated by the figure of the artist as someone almost inevitably on the fringes of society, and particularly by the era of Modernism in Australia, when there was this incredible mixture of genuine newness and innovation in art and at the same time real conservatism in our culture.  There were consequences for going against the grain, both personal and legal, that artists today (in Australia at least) just don't have to face.  On a narrative level, I wanted to write an "outsider" novel - one that viewed this world from the perspective of a narrator who is in turn on the periphery of this peripheral group.  And it's also, at heart, about female friendship, which I think is sadly neglected in literature in general.
"I decided quite early on that what happened in that circle was actually almost too dramatic for fiction - it would have read like melodrama."

PP:  How closely are the characters based on those artists who created and lived at Heide?

EB:  The characters themselves are not at all based on the specific artists who lived and worked at Heide.  If you read the book looking for the "Sidney Nolan" character or the "Sunday Reed" character, you won't find them.  But I was definitely inspired by the stories of the Heide circle, and there are some little details from their stories that have made it in to the novel.  I did read a lot about those artists, but I decided quite early on that what happened in that circle was actually almost too dramatic for fiction - it would have read like melodrama.  So I've created my own entirely fictional artist colony, but placed it within the context of Melbourne as it was at the time - although even then I have not written a strictly historically accurate novel.  It's fiction, ultimately.

PP:  I think your novel challenges the ideas of "family", "community" and "domesticity", particularly in regard to the conservatism of the times in which the novel is set (1930s).  Do you agree?

EB:  Yes, I'm happy you read it in that way, because I was definitely trying to explore those ideas and the way in which these kinds of artistic communities of the time implicitly challenged conservative mainstream ideas of family and community.  But at the same time, I suppose I wanted to highlight the fact that there is a really deep-seated gender inequality when it comes to ideas of artistic merit, genius etc.  So although I think that many of the dominant views about culture and censorship and freedom of expression were being challenged by the avante-garde artists of the time, in most cases it was only the men who got to occupy that position of the radical, anti-establishment, genius artist, while the women had to play the supporting role.  And I think there are still elements of that in the way the trope of the "genius artist" is represented today.  I wanted to situate the artist within the context of the family, which is often, like female friendship, a neglected topic.  Of course, I hope I have created an engaging novel in the process, not a polemic, which it might seem like from reading this.

"...some of what Lily feels is drawn from my own experience..."

PP:  Many of the relationships in the book, including Lily's relationship with the Trentham's daughters are bridled with envy which ultimately leads to quite damaging consequences.  It almost felt like envy was another character undoing everyone's good intentions and feeding on their insecurities.  Was that an intentional theme of the novel?  What other themes did you want to explore?

EB:  Yes, I'm really interested in the idea of envy.  One of the strands of the novel that was there from the start was the relationship between an only child and a child with siblings.  I essentially grew up an only child.  Although I have a half-brother and half-sister I'm very close to, I didn't grow up with them.  So some of what Lily feels is drawn from my own experience: the longing to be part of a big, rowdy family and to feel like you'll never ultimately be alone.  You're right - I think many of the choices that the characters make in the novel are based on envy of another character and desire to either have what they have or deprive them of whatever it is.  And I suppose there's also the related theme of the desire to be "remarkable" or "unconventional" that I see as being at the centre of the novel.

"Hopefully if what you're writing is good enough you will make it past the slush pile anyway, but I fear that's not always the case."

PP:  You were shortlisted for the Victorian Premier's Literary Award for an Unpublished Manuscript for your manuscript of The Strays.  How important do you believe these types of awards are for unpublished authors?

EB:  I think they are really valuable, as a way of getting your name out there and getting your work read.  Because there are so many people writing that just getting an agent or a publisher to read your work is a difficult thing these days.  These awards give you a "way in" to approaching publishers and agents, and I suppose they probably frame the way those people then read your work.  Hopefully if what you're writing is good enough you will make it past the slush pile anyway, but I fear that's not always the case.  Of course, looking at it from another direction, these kinds of awards potentially have the power to influence the direction of what's published too - to draw attention to work that is maybe risky of goes against publishing trends.  So I think they're really important in that way too.

PP:  This is your first novel.  Can you tell us about the experience of having your book
published?

EB:  It's been a long road, but an incredible one.  The novel initially started out as one half of a PhD project at the University of Melbourne.  It took me 3 and a half years to finish the PhD (the novel  had to be shelved for a while during that time so that I could finish the research component of the thesis, which I'd been neglecting), and then I was fortunate enough for the manuscript to be picked up by Affirm Press, and then I went into another round of revisions and editing.  I got to work with Aviva Tuffield as my editor, which was an absolute privilege, so the editing process was a great experience, but I did feel like I'd been working on the book for a long time already by that point.  As I answer these questions, it's still about a week until the book is in store, so I think that's when it will really hit me that it's published.  I'm pretty excited for that!

PP:  Is it too soon to ask if you are working on another project?

EB:  I've got lots of ideas, but I haven't started the next novel yet.  Because I was still working on The Strays until quite recently, I didn't let myself start anything else, even though I was really itching to get going on something new.  I felt like I needed to keep my head in this book, and in these characters, to do the best job I could of editing it.  But now I can start something, and it's just a matter of deciding which project to work on.  I can be very indecisive, and I need to settle definitively on one before I start, otherwise I'll just flit around between different ideas and won't get anything finished.  It's amazing how appealing that other idea can suddenly seem when you're stuck at a certain point in writing.  I don't want to give myself that out.  But I'm very excited to start the next book once I've made the decision.

Author Interview with David Hunt, author of "Girt: The Unauthorised History of Australia".



David Hunt won the Non-Fiction category of the Indie Awards last week for Girt, which is a hilarious and unusual history of some of the lesser known facts about our colonial history.
We asked him some questions about Girt and here is what he had to say.

PP: Tell us a little about your award winning book Girt?

DH:  Girt is a book that stirs Australia's cultural melting pot with the wooden spoon of schadenfreude, adds a dash of rum, and then garnishes the resulting historical feast with the crushed stems of tall poppies.

It's volume one of a narrative of Australia, from Megafauna to Macquarie, and is dedicated to all those kids who hated Australian history at school and who are now adults who have better things to hate.

PP: Girt is quite an unusual history book.  Can you tell us a little about how you approached researching it?

DH:  I read lots of the usual history books, biographies, diaries, letters and other bits of papery goodness stashed away in Sydney's Mitchell Library.  I even spoke to some academics.  And of course I used Wikipedia.

The footnotes gave me an opportunity to wildly digress from the main narrative, enabling me to talk about coconuts, Star Trek, Jesus' circumcision, John Farnham, the dodo, American coffee (the worst drink in the universe), tobacco enemas, the French language, Alan Bond, Short Man Syndrome, a rhyming recipe for potato salad, deja vu, deja vu, mad racist skull collectors, Irish boy bands, Lindsay Lohan, cross-dressing, and what Justice Einfeld would have done before the invention of the motor car.

The book was about 75% research and 25% writing and editing.  I loved the research side of things.  I probably need to get out more.

PP:  It's well known that Australians have a bit of the larrikin about them, but we are also quite a nationalistic bund.  Do you think Australians will enjoy your "romp" through our colonial history?

DH:  Why do you have romp in inverted commas?  What are you implying?  Are you suggesting that it's not a romp?  Or that it's a pseudoromp?  I contend that it is 100% true blue Aussie romp, with no cheap foreign romp substitutes.

Any Australians that don't enjoy my book should be stripped down to their Bonds, smeared with a mix of lamington and Bundy Rum, and staked out on the nearest bull ant nest.

PP:  Was there an historical personage or incident that you just couldn't find anything to laugh about?

DH:  It's hard to laugh at Aboriginal history, but I put my black armband away in my closet and gave it a red-hot go.  Bennelong, Pemulwuy, Arabanoo and Andrew Snape Hammond Douglas White are all great Aboriginal characters.  I try to use humour to make serious points about the impact of British settlement/invasion on Aboriginal community and culture.

PP:  When you're not writing and researching award winning books, what do you read?  Is there something on your bedside table right now that you can't put down?

DH:  Science Fiction and Fantasy and are my guilty passion, but my favourite authors are John Irving, Kinky Friedman, Bill Bryson, Joseph Heller and Iain Banks ( read The Wasp Factory, if you haven't). I'm currently reading Brandon Sanderson's The Way of Kings, David Gilbert's & Sons and Hanif Kureishi's The Last Word.  Richard Flanagan's The Narrow Road to the Deep North and Hilary Mantel's Fludd are next on my list.

PP:  I've heard rumours that you are working on something else right now.  Can you tell us about it?

DH:  I'm just starting out on True Girt, volume two in the Girt series.  True Girt is the story of the wild southern frontier, where the men were men and so were some of the women.  Think Henry Reynold's Forgotten War meets Banjo Paterson's The Man From Ironbark, crossed with Ruth Park's The Muddle Headed Wombat, written on Keith Windschuttle's stolen laptop.

David Hunt accepting his Indie Award for Best Non-Fiction.


Upcoming Event - John Baxter in conversation with Chris Hanley @ Potts Point Bookshop



Join us for a special bookshop event with Francophile and author, John Baxter, who will be talking with his great friend, Chris Hanley, the founder and chair of the Byron Bay Writers Festival about all things parisienne and his new book Paris at the End of the Word: The City of Light During the Great War 1914 - 1918.  A lively and anecdotal foray into the heart of Paris during the First World War.

Bookings essential. Tickets $10 each.



Potts Point Bookshop Pin-Ups - Here, There, Somewhere, Everywhere......




We are absolutely delighted to have the McSweeneys & Cargo Publishing collaboration Elsewhere in store at the moment.  Elsewhere is a collection of four books Here, There, Somewhere and Everywhere that brings together some of the most influential and acclaimed writers in the world today to explore what it means to them to be elsewhere.
Contributors include David Vann, Alisdair Gray, Alan Bissett, Don Paterson, Amy Bloom, Roddy Doyle, Michael Faber, Margo Lanagan, Michael Morpugo and Julia Donaldson.

"Elsewhere is entirely new.  Elsewhere is a world we dream of visiting.  Elsewhere is all the places we have ever been."

And the jacket treatments are gorgeous.  Check them out in store now!  Only $13 each.

Interview with Robert Wainwright, author of "Sheila: The Australian Woman Who Bewitched British Society"

Robert Wainwright visited us in February to talk about his new book Sheila, which is an extraordinary story about a little known (not for long) Australian beauty who bewitched and influenced British society in the 20th century.

Her conquests included royalty, peerage, Hollywood stars and billionaires and she included heads of state amongst her friends.

What a woman!

Click here to listen to our interview with Robert Wainwright.