Becoming A Fiction Writer
One girl, one dream … and a whole lot of procrastination
April 9, 2008 by amanda

Oscar Wao’s brief wondrous life probably gets extended with Pulitzer win

Over on my travel writing blog, I reviewed The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao a couple of months ago. It’s a first novel by Junot Díaz that takes place mostly in the Dominican Republic, and was something my friend Katrina passed on to me because it was hyped up as being a great novel – one of my favourite novelists, Hanif Kureishi, had really said good things about it. Despite that, Katrina told me it wasn’t that great, but thought it might be interesting for me to look at it anyhow.

She was right, I think – in my opinion, it wasn’t so fantastic. Not bad, but sometimes confusing in the storyline and characters, riddled with footnotes (my strong opinion is that the author should decide whether or not something is important or not and then either include it in the main story or delete it – a novel is not an academic work!) and not compellingly page-turning. Not bad, but not great.

Well, who I am to judge. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao just won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Hmm. I’m curious now to read some of the other finalists, like Tree of Smoke by Denis Johnson and Shakespeare’s Kitchen: Stories by Lore Segal. The Pulizter winner gets $10,000 so it’s not as wealthy a prize as I’d expected – but obviously the prestige is priceless.

  •   •   •   •   •
April 7, 2008 by amanda

No Amazon.com.au so I’m trying Fishpond

It took me a while, on returning to Australia, to really believe that Amazon didn’t have an Australian version. I’d got quite used to buying books from Amazon.de and had really enjoyed their fast delivery (and free – no postage was charged if you bought books. Even just one cheap book!).

I don’t know the reason why Amazon doesn’t have an Australian branch – can anybody enlighten me? – but I’m now trying out Fishpond which claims to be Australia’s biggest online bookstore.

They’re obviously trying to build up their site because they offer you 20 cents in credit every time you review a book – yeah, I’ve reviewed a few and built up a bit of credit, so that my purchase today didn’t dent the bank balance too much. On top of that, they sent me a $10 voucher because I had books on my Wishlist – I’m obviously a marketing sucker because that sent me straight into a buying frenzy.

The pleasing thing about Fishpond is that often, postage and shipping is free too, and even better – you can pay by PayPal. I’ve just placed my order today so we’ll wait and see how their service works out. Watch this space!

PS: Before you ask, I ordered these two books (Getting Things Done because I’ve read so much about it online, and What Was Lost: A Novel after seeing Catherine O’Flynn at the Perth Writers Festival)

  •   •   •   •   •