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Festival focuses on books that afford 'time to reflect'

“Dark Emu” author, Bruce Pascoe. PART of the burgeoning arts scene on the far south coast, the new Headland Writers Festival kicks off this weekend at Tathra, with talks, workshops, readings and performances. It’s a labour of love for creative director, singer/songwriter Myoung Jae Yi, who urges would-be visitors to “be inspired by the sublime beauty of Tathra and see the world anew”. There’ll be conversations with authors, talks, workshops, performances, live music and readings, but the main focus is on books themselves which, he believes, “afford us precious time to reflect and reconsider what is important to us, rejuvenating our minds with new ideas and time-worn truths”.

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Suffering of a Viet vet, 30 years after the war

Arts editor  HELEN MUSA has another week’s worth of “Arts in the City”. Here it is… NEW play “Foxholes of the Mind” looks into the lives of Vietnam veteran Frank, suffering from PTSD, and his wife Trish, 30 years after the war. It’s written by Bernard Clancy, author of the Vietnam war novel “Best We Forget” and directed by Wolf Heidecker, producing on behalf of the Geelong sub-branch of the Vietnam Veterans’ Association. At Courtyard Studio, May 12-14. Book at canberratheatrecentre.com.au THE Art Gallery of NSW celebrates 100 years of Australia’s portrait award with a new major exhibition, “Archie 100: A Century of the Archibald Prize”. The show will unearth the stories behind more than 100 carefully selected artworks. The good news is that it’s coming to the National Portrait Gallery, spring/summer 2023-24.

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The 11 Australian books everyone should read now

The 11 Australian books everyone should read now We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss April 23, 2021 7.23pm Normal text size Advertisement From an Australian classic by Peter Carey to an urgent call to arms on domestic violence, these are the books our authors are turning to right now. Melissa Lucashenko recommends Credit:Renee Nowytarger My favourite fiction of 2021 is a compelling short story collection from Tasmanian Pakana man Adam Thompson. When I encountered him at a First Nations Writing conference in Canberra in 2018, I felt like I was meeting a long-lost writerly brother. I was attracted by his vision for sculpting his Country in story, and his seriousness about that project. When

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The 11 Australian books everyone should read now

The 11 Australian books everyone should read now
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The 11 Australian books everyone should read now

The 11 Australian books everyone should read now
smh.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from smh.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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