As per my last post, I will be participating in the 2015 Australian Women Writers Challenge this year.
Anita Heiss’s Black Book Challenge has been of great assistance in finding books by Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander authors (via Mindy at Hoyden About Town).
Here are the 10 books I’m planning to read. Except for Eileen Chong’s Peony, they are all at my local library, and now on reserve, although if any don’t come through in time I might have to substitute alternatives:
(1) MumShirl: an autobiography (Genre: Autobiography)
(2) Busted Out Laughing: Dot Collard’s Story, as told to Beryl Hackner (Genre: Memoir) Busted Out Laughing is unavailable so I am replacing it with Maxine Beneba Clark, Foreign Soil (Genre: Short Stories)
(3) Terri Janke, Butterfly Song (Genre: Fiction – maybe chick lit? Literary fiction is a better description – thanks Mindy)
(4) Marie Munkara, Every Secret Thing (Genre: Short Stories) Melissa Lucashenko, Too Flash (Genre: YA) (I wanted to go with Mullumbimby but I already have a Literary Fiction)
(5) Maralinga, the Anangu story (Genre: Children/History)
(6) May O’Brien and Sue Wyatt, The Legend of the Seven Sisters: a traditional Aboriginal story from Western Australia (Genre: Children/traditional story)
(7) Kate Forsyth, Bitter Greens (Genre: Speculative Fiction/Fairy Tale)
(8) Joan London, Gilgamesh or The Golden Age, depending which arrives from the library first! (Genre: Historical Fiction)
(9) Annie Hauxwell, In Her Blood (Genre: Crime) (I have also reserved her other two books but looks like they are all available so I’ll probably read them chronologically)
(10) Eileen Chong, Peony (Genre: Poetry)
So, how am I going with my criteria?
(1) There are no repeat authors.
(2) I have not read any of these books before – or any books by any of these authors, in fact! ETA: Turns out I had read Every Secret Thing before. Oops! This is what happens when one is terrible at remembering book titles and then relies on blurbs which don’t actually provide much information. So I am enjoying the re-read, but I have substituted it for the challenge.
(3) No repeat genres. I know I’m cutting it fine with a couple, but I think I’ve done pretty well here.
(4) This is an ongoing criterion.
(5) Mum Shirl was Black, of course. Dot Collard is Noongar, from Western Australia. Terri Janke has family connections to the Meriam and Wuthathi peoples (Torres Strait and Cape York respectively). Marie Munkara is of Rembarranga descent, from the NT. The contributors to Maralinga are from the Yalata and Oak Valley Communities. May O’Brien is a Wongatha woman from Western Australia and a member of the Stolen Generations, and it appears Sue Wyatt is also a Wongatha woman. Melissa Lucashenko is of mixed European and Goorie (Aboriginal) heritage.
(6) Eileen Chong and Annie Hauxwell and Maxine Beneba Clark are first generation Australians. None of the others seem to be. The aim of this criterion is for cultural diversity. This time, I have looked for books by browsing Anita Heiss’s page (referred to above) and reviews from the 2014 AWW challenge instead of bookshop shelves, as I did last time. I found it not only difficult to find non-Anglo names (as per last year) but also difficult to find immigrant/first generation Australian authors. Once again, this is telling.
(7) Several of the books by various Indigenous authors apparently have rural settings, so I think I have this one covered.
(8) This is an ongoing criterion. But as I have all of the books reserved at my local library, I think I’m on track with this!
As I was going through past AWW reviews to find books, I realised I had left out an important diversity category: disability! The Golden Age falls into this category, but I might not be able to get it in time. MumShirl: an autobiography might also get in here.
I will be posting reviews here as well as on Goodreads, so stay tuned. When I have finished the challenge, I will re-post the list of books with a sentence or two about each one.
If any of you have read, or will read, any of these books, I look forward to hearing your views, too.
Just a final note: there were quite a few books I found and wanted to read which were not at my local library. I have put suggestions in for the library to purchase them, in part inspired by Anita Heiss’s suggestion (although I have not only requested Black authors). I bought Eileen Chong’s book because I was drawn to this review and I have my doubts about the local library purchasing a poetry book. We’ll see! I might purchase some of the others if I come across them, too.
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