Relics, Words and Other Things
In the end, it doesn’t matter whether Kenneth is telling the truth. The time travel exists as a hypothetical element to his friendship with Darius – the sort of late-night, end-of-a-party bonding where conversations edge towards the fantastical.
Safety Not Guaranteed reviewed for The Weekly Review
At once harsh and lush, the third album from British performer Natasha Khan is a striking, beautiful and, yes, haunting affair. It’s traditional to compare kooky songstresses to 80s iconoclast Kate Bush, but these comparisons feel less hollow than usual here. Not only is Khan prone to spiralling falsettos, but she manages to effortlessly fuse the pastoral with the cold, crisp lines of pop music. Opener Lilies contrasts a grunting, industrial electro beat with a lilting paean to scented flowers on a hill. The effect is something like a city commuter yearning for rural simplicity while her head bounces against a train window.
The album itself is a complex, layered beast. On first listen, its warmth is hidden behind a good dose of grey weather. There are immediate pop moments — such as recent single All My Gold — but often hooks lurk like ghosts behind blips and beats and sinister synths. As with the best albums, it’s one that rewards the persistent.
First single Laura remains the standout, mainly because it’s so utterly different to the electro landscape surrounding it. Pure and naked, the song soars on little more than Khan’s voice and a piano. Indeed, it draws its power from its simplicity, or naivety. Pop music often aspires to capture the adolescent experience, but this actually sounds like a heartbroken teen trapped in her room with nothing more than regret and keyboard. Stunning.
Reviewed for The Weekly Review
Over at my blog, I’m currently conducting a photographic tour of locations from my debut novel Fire in the Sea.
The tour starts here
It’s a deeply sensual, sometimes violent film that reflects the confusion and fury of its protagonists. Heathcliff and Cathy are two wild things, wrestling in the muddy moors, tearing out their hair and kissing each other’s sores.
Wuthering Heights reviewed for The Weekly Review

For most of us, a book is the first voyage we ever undertake. While TV and film can offer glimpses of foreign climes, it takes a book to sink your feet in strange sand or to waft the spiced scents of a market beneath your nose. Maybe this is why I was never very interested in reading books set where I was growing up. I knew what Australia was like. I’d spent a year travelling across and around it before I started school. (For those curious: it’s hot, dusty and very, very big.) Instead, I sought out books set in cold, crowded places. There was exoticism in snow and soot and underwashed masses.
It wasn’t until I left Perth that I started reading about it. As a leaving present, a friend gave me a copy of Tim Winton’s Cloudstreet — a book I’d had shoved in my direction for years. I was probably ungrateful. But, travelling around Europe, I became consumed by that book. I loved its crudeness, its poetry and, yes, its strong sense of place. Growing up, I had always felt that Perth wasn’t really part of the world. The world was over the horizon — that place ships and planes disappeared to, that place where adventures happened. Cloudstreet showed me that you could write about my small, isolated city with the same intensity and detail as you could London, New York, Hong Kong.
As a writer, that book was a turning point. Writing about Perth for Dumbo Feather, I said “Seeing my abstracted, forgotten town in the pages of a Penguin novel shrank that vast space between the world and my street.” I learned that stories — real, big, proper stories — could happen there, on those same hot pavements I grew up on. When it came to writing (Text-Prize-winning-onsale-now-novel) Fire In The Sea, I wanted to jam a big Hollywood-style narrative into those small streets. Because I felt those sort of stories didn’t have to always happen in the US.

Some years ago, I was warned by an American agent against setting stories in Australia. There was a perceived notion that Australian-based stories don’t sell. Being a contrary sod, I was determined to prove her wrong. But, in some ways, I wonder now if I took less risks with Fire in the Sea’s narrative because setting it in Perth already seemed like such a big risk. It’s certainly the most traditionally-structured story I’ve ever tried to write. I wanted its narrative to be big enough, strong enough, perhaps even familiar enough, to reassure a reader that Australia wasn’t an alien world. They knew this story, they knew these people, they could come to know this place.

There was also a great sense of excitement for me in writing about places I knew well. Places that few people had ever written about. Capturing Cottesloe in print, in a big, impossible story about mythological battles and exiled demigods, felt like a special sort of achievement. It was as if, by fictionalising these places, I had somehow made them a little more real. (Which tells you a little about how my brain works. The unreal is always more real.)
For that reason, I haven’t cheated much with the geography. I’ve used real street names and addresses, for the same reason you wouldn’t rename Fifth Avenue or Piccadilly Circus. The only real exception to this is Jacob’s house on Ocean Street. While the house is absolutely based on a house that stood derelict while I was growing up (it’s since been refurbished), I changed the name of the street. Everywhere else is where it should be. At times, I’ve described Perth as it was when I was 16. At other times, I’ve acknowledged recent changes. Sadie’s world is probably something of a compromise between reality and memory.

Two weeks ago, I popped back to Perth to visit family and thought I’d make the most of the opportunity to document the places of the book. For the rest of the week, I’ll be posting a guided tour of Fire In The Sea, in which I’ll revisit a few key scenes and, maybe, explain why they happen where they do. And, being my blog, I’ll probably throw in a few anecdotes and then draw a tenuous link to relevance.
On trial is a world in which the internet allows anyone, no matter how unhinged, access to the public sphere. We, as an audience, are exposed as complicit. Every time we watch something horrible, we generate a demand for something worse.
Black Mirror reviewed for The Weekly Review
A little glimpse into the damp past of my adopted city.
Rainy day, outside Flinders Street Station, December 7, 1965.
(Source: modmargie)
Ruby works as a playful parody of the “indie girl” stereotype embodied by Zooey Deschanel’s New Girl. She’s a little bit craaazy, wears “weird” clothes and shames us all with her effervescence. In other words, she’s the sort of girl who couldn’t actually exist.
Ruby Sparks reviewed for The Weekly Review
(Source: myke-bartlett)
The film is centred on this childish belief in interconnectedness. One wrong deed can unravel the universe and collapse ice caps. Here, everything is always precarious.
BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD reviewed for THE WEEKLY REVIEW