Oh yes – I started tumblr site.

Printrun #2 and a few new REVIEWS
6 JulWell well well … I had 500 copies of The Long Weekend printed in March of this year … my initial thoughts was, well that should keep me going for about 2 years or so, its such an obscure book that it’ll be a slow-burner at best.
But then I sold out in 2 months.
Which took me somewhat by surprise … a GOOD surprise … but a surprise nonetheless.
So I have now printed 1000 copies for the second print-run, again at a Hobart-based printer (gotta keep printing skills in the local neighbourhood, less and less books are being printed in our local community which is really sad). This time, it’ll be sent to some bookstores, rather than sell them just myself at booklaunches and whatnot so perhaps a different buncha people will get to the books, hope so!
Recent Media reviews and spots from June/July 2013
Australian Newspaper Review Magazine
Readings Boostore – review ComicOz review
Warp Magazine – Tasmania
Older Media stuff
A really beautifully written review at Alice Springs News

The Comic Spot interview
Framed Magazine
Alice Online article
Review in The Australian Newspaper
6 JulI woke up to this article this morning – it’s a picture of ME.
An amazing review of The Long Weekend written by Ronnie Scott in the Australian Review.
What a coup for San Kessto Publications!! (Is that a correct use of the word “coup”)
If you can’t be bothered buying The Australian – then just read the article HERE.

quote of the week
1 Jul“I believe that the major challenge today is to stay with the uncertainty, the chaos and confusion, and not to want or expect firm answers, complete systems, or clear models. We must attempt to explore our own confusion, examine it, and not rush back to the past for a bygone order, nor move sideways to completely embrace (in often uncritical or romantic ways) the religious systems of other cultures. We have to learn to remain in the present with an attitude of what Keats called ‘negative capability’, which is the ability to be in doubts, uncertainties and mysteries without any irritable search after fact or reason. We live in ‘interesting times’ and the temptation is always to wish that things were otherwise, that life were simpler, more basic, with less tension. These times require a certain courage or openness since we are forced to live on the wild side, to questions and doubt so much, to walk over the rubble of the past while at the same time encountering the raw and informed energies that will become the archetypal foundations of a future world-view. We owe it to the future to ensure that culture moves forward in an authentic manner, and that the ‘solutions’ discovered for our spiritual crisis are not spurious or false.”
– David J Tacey (Edge of the Sacred, published by Harper Collins, 1995, pages 195-6)
