© 2018 Greg & Sylvia RAY
Read more about the article Newcastle by Itself, 2000 – 2020
Nobbys sunset 2017 by Mark Goolmeer

Newcastle by Itself, 2000 – 2020

WHEN 2020 began with a storm of anxiety about fires, drought and the global pandemic, we found ourselves locked down and wondering what sort of book we should create this year. Sylvia had been talking for some time about putting together a book of contributed digital images - ever since a discussion about the potentially transient nature of digital data compared with the relative durability of old-school photographic negatives. I mean, in theory, digital data might seem more durable, but hard-drive failures, flash memory corruption and outright technological change suggests the opposite may be the case.…

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Mugshots: photos from the NSW Police Criminal Register

Among the strange books I've collected over the years is a melancholy volume of photographs, designed as a supplement to the 1944 NSW Police Criminal Register. It's a sad collection of mugshots of unhappy lawbreakers, accompanied by short descriptions, and some paragraphs about their known misdeeds. I've often thought the book would make a good source document for any novelist trying to create characters to populate the pages of their hard-boiled crime stories. Published in the war years, it reeks of the leftovers of The Great Depression, and features many uniformed service personnel as both perpetrators…

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Read more about the article Waterloo, the day after the battle
The Battle of Waterloo, by William Sadler II

Waterloo, the day after the battle

From time to time, in my reading, I encounter excerpts of descriptive writing that strike me so forcibly that I feel moved to share them. The following anonymous piece comes from a book titled With Fife and Drum, True Stories of Military Life and Adventure in Camp and Field, Told at First hand by Officers, Privates and Other Eyewitnesses, edited by Alfred H. Miles and published by Hutchinson and Co of London, perhaps around 1890. I'm not certain that every word of it is true. The ending, in particular, seems a little implausible, but the description…

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