Tim’s
Comments
(group member since Jul 12, 2008)
Tim’s
comments
from the Kiwi Readers group.
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34 authors donated stories to this book - there are a mixture of New Zealand and overseas authors, the best-known of the latter being Neil Gaiman.
You can find out more about the book here:
http://timjonesbooks.blogspot.com/201...


Patricia: Welcome aboard!


My understanding is that most book groups are all-woman, but I know of an all-male group as well.

http://homepages.mcs.vuw.ac.nz/~rarno...
At each meeting, we pick a book for the following meeting - then we all go away and read it (if we can acquire copies in time!), bring it back to the next meeting, and discuss it. Some groups are very structured in their discussions - we aren't, but we usually end up giving the book in question a good going-over. Books we all like, or all dislike, provoke the least interesting discussions - it's those about which we're ambivalent, or which some of us love and others loathe, that get the best discussions going.
Hope this helps!

My blog (no harm in mentioning it twice!) is:
http://timjonesbooks.blogspot.com

Toni, I'm immodest enough to recommend my own work - see the books listed on http://timjonesbooks.blogspot.com - but you can find out lots more about NZ writers and their work at the New Zealand Book Council web site,
http://www.bookcouncil.org.nz/Writers...
Tamatai, are you submitting work for publication, here or overseas? If overseas, http://www.ralan.com is a good source of info for horror and dark fantasy fiction, if that's what you're writing.

Have you found Goodreads useful for finding books by New Zealand authors?

Good to hear from you. Re my books - there are 5 of them in Canty Uni library and plenty in the Christchurch library system - there are lots of "Tim Joneses", but a search on "Jones, Tim, 1959 June 15-" should find them in the catalogue.
Regards
Tim

Marisa Maepu - '88: I enjoyed this - nicely told and the right length for the material it covered. Maybe the ending is unrealistic, but I didn't have a problem with it while I was reading it.
Sue Wootton - Virtuoso: This was very well written - my only reservation is that "the harried businessman who's alienated from his own life" is something of a stock character in New Zealand fiction. Sue Wootton is a very good poet & I think this story shows that she is a good short story writer as well.
Aroha Harris - Write Poetry: I like poetry, and I enjoyed these poems, especially "Rain Again". One of the things I like most about the Six Pack series is that they include poetry as well as prose.
Ian MacKenzie - Mirror Mirror: While it's good to see a genre story included, the scenario of this story is almost exactly the same as a prominent plot element of the first season of the TV series "Heroes". Although Ian MacKenzie has definitely got talent, this story was a miss for me.
David Geary - Gary Manawatu: This was by far my favourite story in the collection. Such a mixture of humour, art-world satire, sly political comment and verbal exuberance is all too rare in New Zealand fiction. This makes me want to read more of David Geary's work.
Kate Duignan - Swallow: Yet another in the long list of "sensitive young artist struggles with difficult family which doesn't appreciate his/her genius" stories by New Zealand authors. Katherine Mansfield did it first and best. Kate Duignan puts words together beautifully but I'd prefer a story with more oomph to end the collection.



Landings 2 votes
The Jigsaw Chronicles 0 votes
Whale Rider 2 votes
Mister Pip 1 votes
The Six Pack Three 5 votes
So, The Six Pack Three is the winner!
The Six Pack Three consists of five short stories and a mini-collection of poetry. It's 156 pages, so shouldn't take long to read. I suggest we aim to finish it by the 20th of March, and that people taking part can choose to either post their comments on the whole book when they've finished, or post comments on the individual stories/poems as they go.
Does that sound OK?