Review: Vociferate 詠 by Emily Sun
Reading and Book Reviews Jess Gately Reading and Book Reviews Jess Gately

Review: Vociferate 詠 by Emily Sun

Emily Sun storms onto the poetry scene with this bold and intelligent debut filled with rage and wit. Inspired by Asian-American feminist writers, Sun resists Orientalism and explores what it means to belong across geo-political and social boundaries. From its bright cover to every emotion evoked by this collection, Vociferate demands your attention and won’t let you go once it’s got you.

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Review: Windfall by Ketan Joshi
Reading and Book Reviews Jess Gately Reading and Book Reviews Jess Gately

Review: Windfall by Ketan Joshi

Why, with all evidence pointing in the same direction, do climate denialists still exist? Why, when renewable alternatives exist, are we still building coal and gas plants? Why, when scientists have been begging for action since the seventies, have we been so slow to engage in meaningful change? Joshi sets out to answer these questions in Windfall, looking at the social, political, and economic factors that have led to our current climate crisis and, more importantly, how we can ensure a stable climate for future generations.

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Review: Little Jiang by Shirley Marr
Reading and Book Reviews Jess Gately Reading and Book Reviews Jess Gately

Review: Little Jiang by Shirley Marr

I have a little bit of a soft spot for cursed kids; there’s something about them that just makes my heart sing. So of course, this book started on great legs when it began with Mei Ling Pang who was ‘born at an inauspicious time on an inauspicious day in an inauspicious month’ after a black cat jumped over her mother’s belly while pregnant with her. Mei is, according to her extended relatives, a magnet for misfortune and she’s struggles to challenge this label when her family’s restaurant is empty (despite having the world’s best Kung Pow Chicken), her parents are both in need of medical attention (they can’t afford), and now the evil Dr Heckyll from the Mega Morgue next door seems to have brewed up a concoction that could spell the end of their little town.

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7 Journaling Activities to Improve Your Writing
Writing and Editing Jess Gately Writing and Editing Jess Gately

7 Journaling Activities to Improve Your Writing

Journaling is a popular way for writers to improve their skills and practise their craft on a daily or regular basis. The concept is simple enough; it’s like writing a diary—you write in it every day (or near enough), and you only write as much or as little as you want. Like a diary, no one else is ever meant to read it. It’s a safe place for you to write, to experiment, to muse, and to explore. Sometimes the words you write in your journal may make their way into other pieces or poems that you do intend to share but that happens when and if you want it to.

This list is a series of activities you can use regularly to help develop your skills and ideas. They’re designed to be flexible and reusable so that you don’t have to come up with a new concept every day.

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Review: The Salt Madonna by Catherine Noske
Reading and Book Reviews Jess Gately Reading and Book Reviews Jess Gately

Review: The Salt Madonna by Catherine Noske

‘Faith has preconditions in need and hopefulness. It doesn’t re-quire actual hope, just willingness for it, and the need for change. We all of us had need.’

Written with a distinct Australian Gothic bent, The Salt Madonna also embodies elements of literary fiction with its lyrical prose and careful consideration. Just as the story itself is multilayered, so are the themes that Noske explores within them. Faith, family, masculinity and colonialism are just some of the ideas explored in this tale of an isolated community caught up in collective mania.

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Creative Spaces Coming Soon
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Creative Spaces Coming Soon

A blog series about where creatives work, what they surround themselves with, and how creating the right environment can help boost your work.

Keep an eye on my social media for new installments in this series!

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Should I Use a Pen Name?
Writing and Editing Jess Gately Writing and Editing Jess Gately

Should I Use a Pen Name?

There are many reasons why writers may choose to use a different name to associate with their work. Across history, pseudonyms have been used by writers to get published, to encourage different readers to pick up their books, and to avoid confusion across genres. While we all know the stories of women in Victorian times using male pseudonyms to be published, and the great William Shakespeare conspiracy still captures avid readers, there are many valid reasons why authors today choose to write with a pen name.

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6 Australian Book Awards to Follow if You’re Not a Literary Fiction Reader
Reading and Book Reviews Jess Gately Reading and Book Reviews Jess Gately

6 Australian Book Awards to Follow if You’re Not a Literary Fiction Reader

Awards like the Miles Franklin Award, The Prime Minister’s Literary Awards, The Premiers’ Book Awards, and the Stella Awards all showcase incredible literary talent, but these awards often have a strong focus on literary fiction. So if you’re looking for ways to find what the best new books are in your own favourite genre, I proudly present six book awards to follow if you’re not a literary fiction reader.

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Overcoming Shiny Object Syndrome
Writing and Editing Jess Gately Writing and Editing Jess Gately

Overcoming Shiny Object Syndrome

We’ve all been there. You’re down to the nitty gritty bits of your manuscript. You’re not quite sure how your character gets from A to B, you’ve written yourself into a corner and don’t know how to get out, and your enthusiasm just seems to have stalled.

And then, lo and behold, this other idea starts turning over in your mind. The more you think about it, the more your new idea looks better than the one you’re currently working on. It’s exciting and bold! You start to wonder whether you should leave your current manuscript and work on this new idea. It’s got you excited, it’s got your brain working again, clearly it’s better… right?

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