Arrived in Hobart yesterday afternoon, and shortly after was reunited with Amanda.
We saw Amanda's Lexington friend (and, these days, my friend) Ron Nordin, and my Tasmanian friends (and, these days, Amanda's friends) Dianna and Mark for a drink.
They all drank wonderful things like honey martinis with honeycomb in them while I drank English Breakfast tea in the hope that it might keep me awake. Then Amanda and I went off and had the first meal together we'd had since we've been married, while I tried to stay awake and enjoy it all properly.
I woke at 6 am to the patter of rain on the hotel roof with a new wife fast asleep beside me, and I was amazingly happy. I let her sleep until I decided, a couple of hours later, that unless I had breakfast the world would end, and then I woke her.
Went for a walk together. I love Hobart. First came here in '98, for an Australian National Convention, and decided it was one of the fine, secret places of the Earth. And I'm still convinced that this is true.
I came back in 2008, and loved it again. We got back to the hotel to hear Amanda being interviewed on Triple-J, and dedicating The Magnetic Fields song "The Book of Love" to me, because it was played, by Daniel Handler, at our wedding.
I know. It's all sort of sweet and a bit melty over here in my blog-land right now. It'll go back to normal soon enough, I expect.
Tonight Amanda plays a secret midnight practice gig as a rehearsal for her new Australian band (it's at the Brisbane Hotel. You didn't hear it from me), and she's invited me along to do something onstage, but I suspect that if I've been up since 6 am, I may not feel like performing or even feel like being awake at midnight. We'll see.
Tomorrow both Amanda and I play at the Mona Foma Main Stage (it's on the other side of the white building in the photo). I go on at 8 pm to read THE TRUTH IS A CAVE IN THE BLACK MOUNTAINS, with FourPlay accompanying me, and Eddie Campbell paintings (and, I hope, Eddie Campbell there too, but am not yet certain about Eddie: he's coming from flooded Brisbane, after all).
Amanda goes on at 9:30pm.
We get to grab a couple of days of honeymoon, then to Melbourne for a couple of days to see friends, and then on to Sydney for a concert.
Amanda's playing Sydney Opera House Main Stage on the 26th of January, and she's decided she wants other people up on the stage, for guest spots, and, because I loved playing the Opera House last year, I've agreed to be one of them.
Not sure what I'll do yet -- either some "Best Of..." moments, or something completely new.
Either way, it's bound to be an extremely unlikely evening. Details and ticket info at
http://www.sydneyoperahouse.com/whatson/amanda_palmer_goes_down_under.aspx
Then I go home to the snow and to the dogs.
Amanda goes to work, once I've gone, and will play gigs in Brisbane, Melbourne, Byron Bay, Adelaide (at the Fringe, as herself and, with Jason Webley, an Evelyn Evelyn show), Perth, Canberra, Newcastle and, in New Zealand, Wellington, Christchurch, Auckland.
http://www.amandapalmer.net/afp/upcoming-shows/Hang on. I'll cut & Paste from
an interview at The Vine.01-26 Sydney, Australia - Sydney Opera House [w/Neil Gaiman] 02-01 Canberra, Australia - James O. Fairfax Theatre 02-04 Perth, Australia - Fly By Night 02-10 Byron Bay, Australia - Great Northern 02-12 Brisbane, Australia - The Old Museum 02-17-18 Wellington, New Zealand - Webstock 02-19 Wellington, New Zealand - Bodega 02-22 Christchurch, New Zealand - Al's Bar 02-23 Auckland, New Zealand - Kings Arms Tavern 02-26 Melbourne, Australia - The Forum Theatre 03-02-03 Adelaide, Australia - Adelaide Fringe Festival
(If you are in Australia and you are sad that I am not with her, your best bet is to make her feel very happy and loved. Then she will decide to come to Australia to live whenever it gets cold in the USA, and I'll come here with her.)
...
Interesting article
over at Locus Online by Graham Sleight, and an extract from an interview they did with me about ebooks at
http://www.locusmag.com/Perspectives/2011/01/neil-gaiman-on-ebooks/And there is a huge backlog of questions to answer on the FAQ line. I'll try and do some of them next blog.
Also, I'm writing a story about Lettie Hempstock. Who may be distantly related to Daisy Hempstock in
Stardust and Liza Hempstock in
The Graveyard Book.
Right. Off to rehearse with a string quartet. (You can buy their version of
The Doctor Who theme over at
http://shop.fourplay.com.au/Catgut.php)
Labels: Tasmania,
Sydney Opera House,
amanda palmer,
The Truth is a Cave in the Black Mountains,
Is Tasmania Secretly Cool?
And of course Lemony Snicket was at your wedding! You lead (as I know you know) a charmed existence. I can't think of a better fellow to be living it.