Iris Lavell's Blog, page 14

June 7, 2013

Book Length Project Group Member Charles Page Profile


Charles in his favourite spot
From Right Stuff to Write Stuff(Extract from Kristen Alexander’s Echat with Charles Page - click on link for complete article)
 In an interview with author Kristen Alexander, Charles Page said, 'I have been lucky enough to enjoy my three main passions – flying, travel and writing. All three are related, as the flying gave me travel, and then I wrote about the travel and flying. I have lived in the UK, South Africa, Canada, Hong Kong and Australia, and visited many countries'. Charles gained a private pilot licence in the UK, and then qualified as an airline pilot after he arrived in Australia as a Ten Pound Pom in 1963. ‘I wanted to see the world as well as fly, and the best way was to fly the big jets like the 707 and the 747 on international routes’. First off, he flew DC-3s with MacRobertson Miller Airlines. After his course was retrenched in 1968 he moved to Canada and joined Pacific Western Airlines. There he flew the DC-6, Electra and Hercules before moving up to the 707 in 1972. After 11 years in Canada, he and the family were on their way to Hong Kong, where he flew the 747 with Cathay Pacific. He retired in 1995 and returned to Perth.

Charles’ first published piece was a 5,000 word article about flying in Africa, and it was published in a Canadian aviation magazine in 1977. So he had started long before settling down to retired life. After retirement, Charles took a travel writing course, fully intending to write travel articles and books. Of course, well laid plans of mice and Charles... because, ‘when I returned from an overseas holiday, I saw an ad in a month old writers’ magazine asking for someone to write the story of a Vengeance dive bomber that crashed in the West Australian wheat belt. This crash occurred in 1944 in the Shire of Yilgarn, and they wanted the crash and search written up. I had to present before the Shire Council at Southern Cross, and after a few days I was surprised to hear I had been given the assignment. I think it was because I had flying experience and had written some articles.’ The next thing you know, Charles was researching his first book, Vengeance of the Outback. A Wartime Air Mystery of Western Australia.
It was a great experience for Charles because, not only was he the author, but he played a significant part in the production process, not an easy task for your first full length writing project. He ‘had all the publisher duties of selecting and working closely with the editor, book designer and printer. I organised every stage, and was at the printers when the first book came down the chute. The whole exercise was a great learning experience.’ And at the end, ‘I took some of the books home in my car, savouring the new book smell all the way’.
And that takes us neatly to Charles’ second book, the biography of  Wing Commander Charles Learmonth DFC and Bar. I asked him how he came to this story. ‘The name Potshot, in Exmouth Gulf, came up in the Vengeance book, and I was curious as to why it was changed to Learmonth. About that time, the Maritime Museum thought they had found Charles Learmonth’s crashed Beaufort underwater. I then interviewed his widow, and realised there was a good story there. Just then, Edith Cowan University advertised a course in biography, and that we would be expected to write a 6,000 word article. Well I wasted a whole day trying to find the classroom, only to find the course had been cancelled. I was so incensed, I decided to write the Learmonth biography anyway, and it grew from 6,000 words to 120,000 words, and I had the book, Wings of Destiny.’ This book was recommended by the Chief of Air Force in the Inaugural Reading List for the RAAF.
With two well received books in the bag, and on my bookshelf, I am naturally interested in Charles’ next project. ‘I am about half way through the first draft of The Kimberley Triangle. This non-fiction story describes a Tiger Moth forced landing, and a B25 Mitchell bomber ditching in 1945, and how their stories became entwined. The large number of incidents and accidents in the Kimberley region of Western Australia are brought into the story, as well as relevant aspects of the Kimberleys, and how the missionaries played a large part in search and rescue. It is a story of unbelievable coincidences, survival against the odds, and a ditched B25 with a rich cargo, guarded by raging currents and crocodiles. In my field research I have flown over and photographed the area at low level. I plan on another flight and possibly a search for the B25.’
But this fascinating story is not the only project Charles is working on. His other project is a search for the Boston bomber of Bill Newton VC. 'Together with my colleague, who has a boat and sidescan sonar, we hope to find the aircraft off Salamaua, Papua New Guinea. We have the search area down to about two square miles. Since the aircraft ditched, rather than crashed, it should be reasonably intact. We are awaiting delivery of a new boat, and for good weather and calm seas. I have also been given a memorial plaque to lower down to the Boston. This project should lend itself to a TV documentary, article, and possibly a book if the Boston is found.'
If you haven’t read Charles’ books, it is about time you did! There is nothing better than seeing how an author applies his or her own words of wisdom. Vengeance of the Outback has recently been reprinted and can be ordered from Shire of Yilgarn, PO Box 86, Antares Street, Southern Cross, WA, 6426, for $39.00 including postage, payable by cheque to Shire of Yilgarn, or tel (08) 90491001 with cc details. Wings of Destiny is out of print, but the ebook is available for $14.99 at the link provided here.Charles is on facebook at this link 
 
 
 
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on June 07, 2013 18:15

June 4, 2013

Episode Thirteen




Travelling Back

The two men arrived back at the road just past sunset. They uncovered the vehicle, lit a fire by the side, and prepared to cook the evening meal. Terry pulled out a metal box in which there were synthetic containers of various shapes with small blue lettering identifying the various contents.

‘We have earned our meat tonight,’ he said, and Bob grunted his approval. ‘There is a fine stew mixture remaining.’

Bob located a bottle of confiscated spirits under the front floor mat, and took a drink. Terry heated the food and boiled a small quantity of water for tea. They sat on the back of the vehicle, eating in silence and contemplating the brightening stars through a high cloud.

After the meal they lifted their bicycles into the back of the vehicle. Terry took out a mirror and combed his hair. He took a shoe brush from under the driver’s seat and polished the dust from his shoes.

Bob took another swig from the bottle and tucked it back under the mat, before he set about removing the solar panels from the roof. He wrapped them in a length of yellow-stained cloth, and stored them carefully in a compartment that was hidden under the bikes. Terry killed the fire and climbed into the driving seat and Bob climbed into the passenger seat. Terry put on his seatbelt and waited, looked at Bob, who looked back at him, considered his options, then counted to twenty inside his head and engaged his seatbelt. Terry pulled out onto the road, taking care to check in the rear vision mirror. There were no other vehicles in sight, and it was unlikely that there would be any that passed along the way. None had been scheduled as far as they knew. Any such event would be unusual enough to be cause for celebration or concern, but Terry, as always, kept to his rituals. Bob slumped down as far into the seat as the seatbelt would allow, folded his arms, and prepared to fall asleep. Several hours would pass before Terry tapped him on the shoulder for some refreshment, and instructed him to take over the driving.

They had one more house to visit on the way back. They anticipated arriving at the start of this track around the first light. An intersex infant of around six months had somehow slipped off the system and needed checking. It was probably fine. This one appeared unremarkable, but time would tell. Some such children had shown themselves to have viable breeding potential. At the very least each unusual child provided useful additions to the pool of potential behavioural responses, any one of which might ultimately provide the survival edge needed to conserve the species, or its evolution. If not they could simply be put into the normalization program and trained for physical or monitoring work. Nothing should be wasted. All should be conserved and investigated for usefulness. Humankind was growing stronger all the time, but it wasn’t out of the woods yet. Pun intended.

This idea of isolating families in the middle of the bush had been Mother Griselda’s. She theorized that humankind had strayed too far from nature in the past, resulting in its near-destruction. Her plan seemed to be to give each family enough space to be able to recover some of its animal instinct, and for the results to be interrogated and implemented. In the process one might stumble across idiosyncratic solutions to sticky problems that had ultimately brought the human species to the brink of extinction. Hence she came upon the idea of isolating one from the other. It was, said Mother Griselda, a type of in-vivo experiment. ‘Don’t put all your eggs in one basket,’ she said. Terry pondered that one for some time before letting it go. Sometimes the Great Mother spoke in riddles.

This kind of lifestyle, she explained, provided the time and freedom for new methods of problem solving to emerge, which could then be harvested to benefit the community as a whole. At the same time, the families could not be given completely free reign. That would only lead to anarchy. They must realize that they belonged to and were beholden to the whole society to avoid the problems created by the individualistic society that peaked in the late twentieth and early to mid twenty-first centuries. Eventually all would be brought back into the fold. Those who survived the experiment would be brought back home.

Mother Griselda said that the process of increasing specific characteristics and extinguishing others in the population was as much an art as it is a science. Bob and Terry had seen that for themselves. Some went a bit stir crazy in the woods and some inexplicably died, like the woman they had just buried. Others were more robust.

There shouldn’t be a problem with this next one. In this case the woman seemed sensible and pliable. She had raised three girls and a boy who was unfortunately sickly and died before its second birthday. It wouldn’t take long for the detour. Later they would have to deal with the missing boy called Dalyon. Bob was not concerned. The system would pick him up. Terry would think it through and come up with an answer. As irritating as he was, Terry was exemplary in the role because of his remarkable attention to detail. Bob did not take the job so seriously. Things changed. They always had. What did it matter what the future held? In his unsatisfactory sleep Bob turned to images of home and his comfortable bed.

Terry was thinking of the compound and of the satisfaction of a job well done. He was going through a mental checklist as he drove away from the forest and its uncertainties. He knew exactly what awaited him upon his return. Back home, in a low grey building that sat neatly in a compound of low grey buildings, rows of women in grey suits would be staring at a rows of grey screens, and their fingers would be tapping away, keying in the necessary information. The screens showed the minutiae of daily life as small families and groups went about their daily business, chatting, arguing, collecting eggs, growing vegetables, and raising small children. The families and groups varied in composition apart from the complete absence of adult males. On one screen tucked away at the back corner, an indifferent woman was watching a group of children in an ancient bunker, giggling together and enjoying a tea party. A decision would be made in due course.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on June 04, 2013 17:19

May 29, 2013

Words and Point of View

Point of view
A friend of mine recently commented on the media's continued use of the term 'comfort women' in relation to women who were forced into having sex with soldiers during the Second World War. While the assumption of the reporters might be sympathetic to the women involved, the mere use of such language embeds certain assumptions about the default point of view or subjective position from which one views reality. In the more responsible Australian media words which imply other points of view have been challenged  in recent years, with some success - illegals - boat people - refugees - asylum seekers. Prostitutes - sex workers. But others remain - victim (a word raised in a writing workshop I recently attended) places the onus on the person targeted rather than the person who commits a crime against that person, and changes the way a person feels about him or herself, and about the way others view that person.

Words used might have unintended consequences for many of those using them, but not everyone who uses them is unaware of their power. Any speech writer for  any politician, regardless of political persuasion, is very much aware of how words position people, and the relative advantage (or disadvantage) to which those words place them. The oldest trick in the book is to shore up one's own position by contrasting it against that of 'the other' regardless of who that is. We have all been put in the position of 'the other' at some time, and it is not nice to be the foil against which the desirable is made manifest. For some, though, the position becomes so entrenched that those advantaged by it do everything they can to maintain their relative advantage at the expense of 'the other' who is then... where? How demoralising to be raped and labelled a 'comfort woman', to be attacked and called 'a victim', to be labelled in any way that takes responsibility away from the person acting unethically and places it on the person who has behaved to the best of their ability.

As writers we need to be conscious of this in the words we use.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 29, 2013 20:09

May 28, 2013

Episode Twelve


Bob and Terry

Bob and Terry were exhausted with the heat and the job they had just completed. They packed up some of the smaller things to take back with them and completed an inventory of the rest. It was likely that another family would be placed in the house once a decision had been made in relation to the boy’s relocation. He might be established with the new family in the old house, with a surrogate in another area, or remain feral to see if something new could be turned up that way. Any final decision would be a matter for later consideration around the compound table.

The two men partook of some food and drink, and a longer rest than was warranted. They could have been heading back sooner, but were reluctant to leave the place and face up to the discomforts of the route ahead. They sat in silence and gazed through the window at the small mound of earth that covered the woman and the cat in the pillowcase. They would later reflect on the old adage that timing is everything, but the circumstances that led to that reflection would not come for some time yet. In its absence they delayed their departure until the light had decided the matter for them.
When they saw that there were no more than two hours of light remaining in the day, they mounted their motor-assisted bicycles and headed off on the familiar route that for two years had taken them backwards and forwards between the road and the house of the woman Jenna, and the boy Dalyon.  This was the track that led to somewhere; not the one that Ma took, the one that ended in a clearing before burrowing deeper and deeper into a tangle of heavy bush. The track Bob and Terry were taking was narrow and uneven, but it had been kept reasonably clear by their weekly visits. It would take about an hour and a half of assisted riding with a tailwind before they reached the road where their vehicle waited. 
            They were just half an hour from the road when they saw tracks indicating that a small family of Listers had recently passed this way. These creatures, the result of a failed experiment with dynamic genomics in the days of the call for innovations for the war effort, had been all but eradicated. Listers always suffered from breeding difficulties, and the likelihood was that the remaining population posed no real threat, but Bob, with the cat’s struggles still exciting his imagination, convinced Terry to make the detour. They followed, only to find that the trail faded away to nothing. Bob and Terry looked around for a while, but could find no new tracks and were just about to turn back when Terry spotted the juveniles, a male and a female. They were playing just a short distance away by a small grove of trees. Bob signaled to Terry to stay put, and crept back to where they had left the bikes. He lifted the flaps of the saddle bags, taking care not to make any sudden movement or sound, and extracted two short-nosed rifles from the saddle-packs.
These were super-light mid twenty-first Century models, originally discovered in a cache hidden  in a bunker deep underground. The two men had argued the case for self-defence on these trips, and were granted special permission by the committee to keep them. The weapons had been stored well, and were still in excellent working condition when they were brought into the compound. Bob, with too many hours of spare time on his hands these days, made sure they were kept that way.
He handed one to Terry, gesturing to him to go for the female juvenile. Terry took a clean shot, dropping it where it had been playing, and Bob got the young male, as it is moved to attack. They had sauntered up to check that they had finished the animals when the mother leapt at them from behind a tree. Terry fired again, grazing its side, and it bolted back into the bush. By then the light was starting to fade and they needed to get on, or risk having to spend the night. They decided to keep going rather than to follow. The animal would die soon enough, a slow-suffering death, but it couldn’t be helped.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 28, 2013 19:48

May 26, 2013

A meaningful life

Continuing the theme of kindness, I came across this site today. Great article, worth reading.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 26, 2013 21:49

May 25, 2013

Beautiful story by Patricia Johnson


AT THE HOUSE OF THE VIRGIN
Ephesus, Turkey

We are on our way to the House of the Virgin Mary. I feel sceptical about any shrine, icon or acts of intercession as the religious part of my youth was spent in a Congregational church; the austere side of Protestantism where one’s relationship to God is direct, personal, without the Catholic practices of confession or praying to saints, apostles or any intermediary. On arrival, we find we have only half an hour. I photograph the house; it is square, stone, flat topped and obviously much restored. I also take photos of the many candles burning outside in the open fronted glass cases.
It is small  inside with a statue of the Virgin at the front. I pick up my allotted couple of candles, drop a donation in the box and sit on one of three chairs at the back. Suddenly I start to weep. Unexpectedly I am crying and crying, praying for my daughter who died eleven years ago. In the chair to my left is a veiled woman reading a religious text. Beside me, I press my hand to the stone wall. People enter, stand for a while, and leave. I cannot leave because I cannot stop crying. The tears spill down my cheeks. I feel ashamed. ‘Please look after her,’ I pray repeatedly. I hear peaceful music and the stones against my hand are cool and rough.
I leave and take my thin white candles out to the sandboxes. Someone has emptied each box except for two candles at each end. I light one candle and stand it in the box for Jessie. To whom should I dedicate the other candle? It is no good: I have to give both for her. I am crying once more.
As place and I light the second candle a voice beside me asks ‘Are you alright?’ I turn to see an attractive young woman.
‘Do you need a hug?’ she continues. I am unable to answer yet we embrace. This is a very long hug; her head, covered its fine white cotton scarf is on my shoulder as she says over and over, ‘It’s alright, it’s alright.’
I want to thank her in Turkish, tesekkur ederim, but stop myself, as there are so many nationalities here that she may easily not be Turkish. Instead, I ask, ‘Are you a Christian?’
‘I am a Muslim, but the Virgin Mary is important to us too.’
I nod, trying to control my tears, groping for words. ‘Where are you from?’
‘My husband and I,’ she gestures towards a young man, ‘are from Pakistan, but now we live in Toronto.’
She is slim and petite with large dark eyes and a wide smile. Her name is Saniyah. I tell her my name and that I am from Australia but originally from Connecticut. I tell her this because Connecticut is close to Toronto, though they are in different countries. She continues to smile at me as I say, ‘I didn’t expect this to happen.’
‘I was the same yesterday at Topkapi Palace,’ she replies. ‘I was so was so close to the Prophet’s Cloak I could almost touch it. I was over (her English stumbles as she pauses), overcome with tears because I knew that this would never happen again.’
I thank her as much as I can and we part. I wash my face and go sit in the tour bus, exhausted. I wonder if anything will change; if I will change, if shame can disappear. I only know that love and kindness are real.
 
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 25, 2013 23:20

May 22, 2013

Sydney Writers Festival Guest with Advice on How to Write a Novel

The picture today features pages from my novelRadio National's Books and Arts Daily has been interviewing some interesting writers lately from the Sydney Writers Festival.
With regard to the craft of writing a novel, Michael Cathcart recently interviewed  Scarlett Thomas about her book Monkeys with Typewriters: How to Write Fiction and Unlock The Secret Power of Stories. The interview can be streamed or downloaded from the RN site on the link provided. I haven't had a chance to read the book yet, but the reviews are good and it might be one to look out for, especially for students of the craft.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 22, 2013 18:50

May 21, 2013

Episode Eleven




Thaan
Thaan opened her eyes, lifted her head from the ground, and sniffed the air. There was nothing. The wind had stopped dead, the temperature was rising, and everything was away, or in hiding. She dropped her head down onto the pillow of leaves that she had swept together, and closed her eyes again. The sun would be low in the sky before she came to her hands and knees, stood, and stretched her body in preparation for the hunt.  
This quest for survival was becoming more difficult. She was feeling older than her seasons, and the wound in her side had started to fester. Before she set off, she would remove the bark that she had tied to her body, dig a hole, and bury it deep, covering the place with earth, leaves, twigs and feathers. She would drag her body to the river where she would wash the wound until it was raw. She would strip the soft bark from the weeping river tree and tie it in place. She would heal herself. She would make herself strong again for the sake of her children, and do what she must do. Finally, when the job was done, she would prepare a hollow in the ground, fill it with soft, fragrant branches, lie down on top of them, and cover herself with them.  There would come a time for the long forgetfulness.
For three nights she had lifted her head at dusk only to let it fall again, down into that other world where loss could be recovered. Here she was with her children, alive, sleek and strong, playing on the river bank. Here they crept through the long grasses where a small herd grazed, ready for picking. She showed them how they must take the old and save the young to keep the herd strong. Here, they had eaten their fill. She slept with one eye open while they played at her back, tumbling over one another and laughing. When they were strong enough to travel, they would leave this place and track along the river towards the sunrise until they reached the ocean.  Perhaps they would find the others.
It was a hot day. They flattened their bodies at the river and drank thirstily. Tdu fell in. She grasped his leg and pulled him out. He shook the water from his fur. She took a stick and combed it through. Va tumbled and rolled around on the grass for her attention. She sat back on her haunches. The sound of the river water trickled by and the scent of mud hung in the air.  There was something else – the smell of man. She signaled to her children to stay back as she ventured forward, moving soundlessly into a close stand of trees from which she would find a vantage point. She had miscalculated. Something was dreadfully wrong. Slowly, as if pulling herself through thick mud, she turned to see what she must see.
Here were her children playing in silence, and there, the two men watching. Something that was long like a stick and hard like black stone was held at their shoulders. Lightening cracked and the world exploded. Her children jerked back as if they had been struck. They slumped to the ground. The men walked slowly towards them and placed the sticks on their bodies. Another lightening crack. And another.
Here were her still and silent children. One of the predators moved them with the stick that had just exploded into their bellies and backs. This one leant back and bared its teeth. It was making a noise that jerked from its body between gulps of air. It bent over, holding onto its sides, making that noise. The larger one stood still and stretched out to its full length. She leapt out, but this one was too fast, and the stick exploded again. There was a searing fire in her side. Her body took over and bounded away.
The men left. She circled back and fell across her children. It was too late. Their blood had fed the earth. She howled for them through the night. They grew cold and hard in her arms. At last she rose and gently laid them on the earth. She dug a hole and lined it with the softest of the branches from the fragrant tree, placed her children there, and covered them.  She lay down beside them, feeling nothing but exhaustion, and asked the earth to take her.
Now the hunger had begun to gnaw at her belly and overtake her longing for sleep. This time it gave her the push that she needed. She knew that if she didn’t rise this time, she would not rise at all. Her need for revenge battled with her desire for sleep. She would find the children of men and cause their herd to grow weak, before she allowed herself to rest. Her compass was set to the sound of young human voices that she had heard blending together in a mockery of birdsong. She had work to do.
 
*
The three days of sleep and hunger had sharpened her senses and Thaan felt ready to travel again. She was moving slowly, emerging from the sleep world, where touch and smell and taste were dead. In this other-world, floating images of the already done and the yet to come, stirred her fear. Now she moved softly on all fours, stopped and felt the heavy earth descending, the life that moved in its body, the long fingers of trees, the slow expansion of fungus, the scuttle of small prey and of those insects and spiders too small for her to bother. She felt the shapes of the leaves and seeds that had dropped and burrowed down beneath her feet, the way the ground made subtle changes beneath her. She felt the changes that told of who had passed this way, and showed what they were doing.
The trace of the two men was cold now. It led her to a place where the endless hard strip that smelt of pungent resin and fire, ran between the trees. Beside it, in the soft dirt, were furrows left from the thing that had carried them away. The filthy stench of smoke lingered where it had forced its way into the edges of the vegetation.  The tracks of men and their atrocities passed through whatever could be torn.
These children that she now followed were changelings. They would grow to become this kind of atrocity. It was in their nature. For now they were creatures of the forest. They stopped, they sensed, they played. In their tumbles she felt the vibrations of her own children in life. It sharpened her anguish and pushed her onwards.  
*
The torn silver threads of a web showed her the way when she lost the scent. These children were learning to take on the smells of the birds and the forest, to walk through water, to disappear into the trees. In other ways they left their traces so carelessly – the broken threads and branches, the disrupted patterns that she read so effortlessly. She tracked on, lifting her head to sniff the wind and to listen.
There it was again. She stopped, confounded by the response in her body which simultaneously drew and repelled her. The children had joined their voices together and lifted the air. There was something heart-wrenchingly familiar and sacred in that sound. It rooted her there. She found herself unable to move forward, unable to move. When the song ended she found that the hair on her back was standing on end, and that the will had drained from her gut.  A crow broke the spell with its gaw-aw-graw-aw.
She shook her head, opened her eyes, and saw again the empty place where her lifeless children should have been. In its place was the flash of that first image. She registered again the predator’s disdain as it pushed at Va with its foot. She heard again the ugly sound it made, a fractured howl, as it held its sides and shook to produce that cruel sound. These children who brought her to her knees with their sweet voices, were of its kind.  She drew her lips back and pressed on in the direction of the sound.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 21, 2013 19:34

May 17, 2013

Good post on Brain Pickings site


If you are interested in what drives some writers to keep writing, it is worth taking a look at the post on the Brain Pickings site regarding George Orwell titled Why I write

The post will lead you to insights by other great writers on the same general topic.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 17, 2013 18:16

May 15, 2013

Motivation to keep going on a big project


Thinking of this as a kind of refocusing exercise to finish a big writing project... What do you think?My Staying on Track Plan
Three things that work for me: 1.

2.

3.

Three things that sabotage my efforts: 1.

2.

3.
 Following group discussion -
Things that work for others that I can use:

 


Three things I commit to do, to keep on track (i.e.  à la My friend the Chocolate Cake I got another plan, and this time it'll work!):

1.2.3. 
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 15, 2013 19:30

Iris Lavell's Blog

Iris Lavell
Iris Lavell isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Iris Lavell's blog with rss.