(‘Narrative as Navigation Through the Self: Isobel Blackthorn’s Asylum’ by Ness Mercieca was originally published in the October 2015 edition of The Tertangala)
They say the mind does not create, and that it only cuts and pastes the stimulus it receives from the outside world.
...
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Narrative as Navigation Through the Self: Isobel Blackthorn’s Asylum
- Created by: Isobel Blackthorn
- Published: 23 October 2015, 12:20 PM
- 0 comments
Narrative as Navigation Through the Self: Isobel Blackthorn’s Asylum
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Getting acclimatised to horror
- Created by: Isobel Blackthorn
- Published: 26 May 2015, 04:52 PM
- 0 comments
Getting acclimatised to horror
PHOTO: For a country that values its commitment to human rights as does Australia, the silence in the face of Rohingya suffering is a humiliating moment. (AFP: Christophe Archambault)
Still, it’s easier to shut my ears and eyes to Eurovision and not be affected by it. Whereas hearing the latest spin on those asylum seekers languishing in South Asian waters is something I can’t disengage from. Julie Bishop has been told by Indonesian officials that the Bangladeshis on those boats... -
“Asylum” review
- Created by: Isobel Blackthorn
- Published: 26 March 2015, 01:13 AM
- 0 comments
“Asylum” review
I’m delighted to share another warm review of Asylum.
“Asylum by Isobel Blackthorn was a pleasure to read. Within pages of starting the book I was drawn into the story of Yvette and her relationships with the permanent women and transient men in her life. Capturing the inconsistencies in policy and disgust many feel about current politics around who is welcomed to Australia, the story travels across Australia. I have never been to Perth or Fremantle but I felt myself... -
Free Novel!!!! Asylum - Part Two
- Created by: Isobel Blackthorn
- Published: 18 November 2014, 03:57 AM
- 0 comments
Free Novel!!!! Asylum - Part Two
2.1
…in which Yvette confronts the squalor of her friend Thomas’ flat…
Yvette stood in the aisle beside her back-row seat. Behind her the other passengers jostled for a place in the tightly-packed queue. After a ten-hour bus ride, another hour in transit to Tullamarine airport, and a tedious three hour wait for a smooth four-hour flight across the desert guts of Australia, her skin felt dirty and Special and she hankered for somewhere, anywhere, quiet, cool and still.
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ASYLUM - a novel in weekly parts
- Created by: Isobel Blackthorn
- Published: 28 October 2014, 02:37 AM
- 0 comments
ASYLUM - a novel in weekly parts
I'm serialising on my blog my novel Asylum. Here's a taste. If you like what you've read please follow the link below for more.
Synopsis
Seeking asylum from the wreckage of her life, art-school graduate Yvette Grimm arrives in Australia on a holiday visa, reuniting with her English-born mother, Leah. Yvette applies for permanent residency with no hope of success. She resists Leah’s advice that she marry to stay in the country, investing her hopes in a palm-reader’s prophecy...
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(‘Narrative as Navigation Through the Self: Isobel Blackthorn’s Asylum’ by Ness Mercieca was originally published in the October 2015 edition of The Tertangala)
They say the mind does not create, and that it only cuts and pastes the stimulus it receives from the outside world.
...23 October 2015, 12:20 PM -
PHOTO: For a country that values its commitment to human rights as does Australia, the silence in the face of Rohingya suffering is a humiliating moment. (AFP: Christophe Archambault)
Still, it’s easier to shut my ears and eyes to Eurovision and not be affected by it. Whereas hearing the latest spin on those asylum seekers languishing in South Asian waters is something I can’t disengage from. Julie Bishop has been told by Indonesian officials that the Bangladeshis on those boats...26 May 2015, 04:52 PM -
I’m delighted to share another warm review of Asylum.
“Asylum by Isobel Blackthorn was a pleasure to read. Within pages of starting the book I was drawn into the story of Yvette and her relationships with the permanent women and transient men in her life. Capturing the inconsistencies in policy and disgust many feel about current politics around who is welcomed to Australia, the story travels across Australia. I have never been to Perth or Fremantle but I felt myself...26 March 2015, 01:13 AM -
2.1
…in which Yvette confronts the squalor of her friend Thomas’ flat…
Yvette stood in the aisle beside her back-row seat. Behind her the other passengers jostled for a place in the tightly-packed queue. After a ten-hour bus ride, another hour in transit to Tullamarine airport, and a tedious three hour wait for a smooth four-hour flight across the desert guts of Australia, her skin felt dirty and Special and she hankered for somewhere, anywhere, quiet, cool and still.
...18 November 2014, 03:57 AM -
I'm serialising on my blog my novel Asylum. Here's a taste. If you like what you've read please follow the link below for more.
Synopsis
Seeking asylum from the wreckage of her life, art-school graduate Yvette Grimm arrives in Australia on a holiday visa, reuniting with her English-born mother, Leah. Yvette applies for permanent residency with no hope of success. She resists Leah’s advice that she marry to stay in the country, investing her hopes in a palm-reader’s prophecy...28 October 2014, 02:37 AM