Friday 4 November 2016

Festival wrap - part media release, part feature story...

Writers’ Festival celebrates 10th birthday with the ‘unsettling’

The 10th Write Around the Murray Writers’ Festival was held on the weekend, showcasing 30 acclaimed authors and poets and musicians for general lovers of writing and reading from across the state.

Located in the cultural heart, and revamped arts precinct, of Albury-Wodonga, Write Around the Murray is a big-hearted festival that offers something for everyone: young, old, writer, reader, muso, or uni student.

The theme of this year’s festival Unsettling The Story – Memories and Imagination had the presence of a beating heart through every aspect of this very personal and intimate five-day event.

Big-time political journalist Barrie Cassidy set proceedings off with a bang on the first evening, discussing his memoir Private Bill – the remarkable story of a long-lost brother and heartbreaking secret his mother kept for 50 years. As well as being entertained with Cassidy’s full armoury of political tales and intriguing insight – he thinks Malcolm Turnbull’s leadership is in trouble – the audience was also treated with an incredible personal story that Cassidy (with permission from his family) felt compelled to tell. For a journalist, who started out as a cadet with Albury Wodonga’s Border Mail, getting to the truth appeared to be Cassidy’s greatest motivation, regardless of unpopularity or political consequence. Cassidy is certainly not afraid to ‘unsettle’ if it means getting to the truth. His honest account of both his personal family story and high-flying days as media advisor to Prime Minister Bob Hawke, and regularly rubbing shoulders with political powerbrokers as host of ABC TV’s Insiders, was both humble and insightful.

As a Bachelor of Arts student with La Trobe University student I, and a collection of other students, attended the festival for the Writers In Action program. This fabulous program provides an insider’s look into a writers’ festival and back stage access to authors and festival organisers.
At times this ‘outside your comfort zone’ experience was unsettling and true to the festival theme.
Early on the Thursday morning the ‘unsettling’ theme came to the fore during the curator’s Talk at the Murray Art Museum Albury (MAMA).
What I learnt from the curator's tour at MAMA, despite not being an art fashionado of any description, was the importance of storytelling - regardless of the medium. I was able to appreciate the collection of works in the Unsettling exhibition at MAMA in terms of narrative and the story behind the story.
Much of the art on display carried a strong theme of interpreted ‘unsettling’ and I found some of them difficult to admire for this reason.
Art, like great storytelling, means different things to the viewer and can be interpreted by our knowledge, our backgrounds and personal experiences. This session was a great example of the breadth of the Writers in Action experience, for which I was extremely grateful.

Solo Monologues, held at Wodonga’s Butter Factory Theatre, was a delightful couple of hours on Thursday evening where local performers read other people’s work.
The variety and talent – many of them students – who performed the stories was incredible and subject matter varied from crazy bus trips to the big question of ‘who am I?’ and the trappings of extending life.
This evening was another great example of storytelling through another medium and many of the monologues were personal and moving – and some quite unsettling. The artists filled the monologues with personality and emotion and it was a delight. This event was another first for me and it took me to a place of insight and storytelling where I had not been before.

‘Unsettling’ was again on the agenda for the Mother Lode panel, hosted by our talented La Trobe lecturer Dr Sue Gillett on Friday evening. Discussing their memoirs, Biff Ward, Helena Pastor and Benjamin Law delved into sharing their family stories (and secrets) and the associated joys and challenges.
Biff’s memoir discussed growing up with a mother who suffered from severe schitzopheana. She described how “she did 23 years of therapy and them wrote her book” and how she “wrote the book because she had to”.
She also described how “memory (and memoir) is a form of grief,” and how humour can help in this process.
The incomparable Benjamin Law discussed when writing his memoir about his eccentric Chinese-Australian family how he “wrote with the door closed and edited with the door open,” when considering what to leave of his memoir.
Helena Pastor wrote about her challenges with one of her sons and the pain and relief it had given her. She urged writers to “write your emotional truth as it’s what makes the story powerful”.
When discussing the problematic scenario of writing about family members, Helena suggested, “to pretend that everyone you’re writing about is dead”.

Probably the highlight for me during the festival was the Stereo Stories – A Song. A Place. A Time.
This incredible evening encompassed music and memoir, narrative, story and song – and delightful live music.
As described by Director of the Newport Folk Festival, Michael Stewart “Stereo Stories has emerged from a melting pot of writers and musicians to become one of the most interesting ways for people to enjoy, understand, and connect with the live performance of songs that have been pivotal in people’s lives”.
Billed on the program as an ‘evening to enjoy a superb night of storytelling and song as you drink, feast and chat with friends and festival guests’ Stereo Stories didn’t disappoint. The stories were poignant, moving, emotional, funny, often tragic and insightful.
The story and song of the night, for me, was the hilarious and very talented writer Anson Cameron, who had been one of our author mentors across the weekend. Anson had been open, honest and frank during the time we had spent with him, and very entertaining. However when he revisited a story about offending a friend in his regular column in the Age, Anson referred to this chapter in his life as ‘the death of a friend’ and the memory of him being his ‘new album’ friend or ‘new book’ friend: the guy you call when you hear a new song on the radio. This stereo story was moving and emotional and provided a window into the devastation this ‘loss’ of his friendship had delivered. It was truly unsettling and gave an insight into the challenges and potential damage of writing from the heart about the people you love.

The entire experience of Writers In Action was like being in a reading and writing bubble and was akin to falling down the long rabbit hole of literary learning. And by the end of the weekend I felt closer to being a writer than ever before. The world of writers seemed a little less foreign and more within reach than it did beforehand.

During my experience I wrote down an array of quotes and themes that were touched on, including:

Quotable quotes from the festival:

Anson Cameron:

“I write on trust and that a story will appear in front of me… let your writing effect you.”

“Everyone’s life is as valid as someone else’s when is comes to writing memoir.”

“You owe a debt of truth to the people in your memoir – and dignity.”

“You have to choose a ‘self’ to write about.”

On memory: “The writing of the event becomes the memory.”

On persistence with your writing: “Fire enough shots so you eventually hit the target.”

“Humour is a variety of wisdom.”

Benjamin Law:

“To see the world differently is a good prerequisite for being a writer.”

On humour: “If you’re going to tell someone the truth, make them laugh.”

Jen McDonald:

“The less you tell the reader the more they want to read on.”

Deborah Oswald:

“I pummel my characters into a terrible place and then I do my best for them.”

“I love the joy in creating a character that readers don’t like and the relish of turning this around.”

“I love character and I also love story, and the power of a moment in a plot.”

“Enjoy the process of writing and don’t worry about the outcome, otherwise it leads to madness.”


Themes from the festival:
·      The unsettling
·      Identity
·      Stereotypes
·      Memoir
·      Memory
·      Creativity
·      Music and words
·      Character
·      Being human and having flaws
·      The power of the story