Friday, October 18, 2024

Josh Bornstein, Working For The Brand

 




- This is so damn good. It's comprehensive, enlightening and global in reach. Bornstein, an award-winning Australian lawyer who specialises in employment and labour-relations law, digs deep into the underside of corporate operations and how they treat their staff. He sees through their bullshit. If you’re not a leftie you’re gonna hate this book. If you are, you’ll love it!

- If you've been awake and alive over the last few decades you will recognise the multitude of awful instances of corporate and institutional stupidity that Bornstein covers in detail. Here are some of them: Scott McIntyre and SBS cowardice; Yassmin Abdel-Magied and the ABC (‘Like SBS, the ABC sacked Abdel-Magied in order to placate a right-wing mob’); Israel Folau and his immature treatment by Rugby Australia; the appalling treatment of Antoinette Lattouf and Laura Tingle by an ABC management terrified of the Murdoch press. 

- He provides us with an excellent background to these current employer-employee woes - the neo-liberalism agenda of the 80's onwards, the disaster of Howard's WorkChoices, the huge drop since then of union membership, and the development of corporate cancel culture. I relished his destruction of Alan Joyce and Qantas and their sackings of thousands of staff represented by unions. 

- Academic freedom also comes under the microscope. The Roz Ward case was an example of ‘serious misconduct’. She posted, satirically, a photo of a red 'communist' flag on social media on Anzac Day and was persecuted by her university. Universities have become corporate institutions over the last three decades, and we've witnessed a rapidly shrinking minority of tenured academics. The ugliness of the system in its underpayment of casual academics on short term contracts is horrendous. Bornstein provides lots of examples of unbelievably stupid and immature behaviour by university administrations.

- He also digs deep into the current status of news outlets. 'The ideals of fairness, objectivity, and impartiality are invoked in support of the rules that severely restrict the human rights of their journalists...and like other businesses, the rules are often selectively enforced, in response to dubious online shaming campaigns'. 

- And what about consensual sexual relationships? That freaks corporates out. So 'morals clauses' are now common in employment contracts. Corporations have amassed far-reaching powers over the private lives and opinions of their employees. 

-Bornstein’s dream corporate statement closes the book and it says it all. If only!

We sell goods and services for profit. We employ many people who harbour a range of values and views. We support our employees' fundamental right as citizens to participate in debate and other forms of civic life, including by expressing unpopular views. Their views are their own. They don't speak for the company. We will not censor, sack, or discipline them for exercising their rights.


- (This book has no index, which is intensely annoying. It also has no author photo. This cheapness is common in the Australian publishing community unfortunately.)


Thursday, October 10, 2024

Tim Winton, Juice.

 




- A man and a girl traverse a deserted, isolated terrain in a post-apocalyptic world. He tells his story to a ‘comrade’ they meet along the way, a story about his father, mother, wife and child, and their very rustic lifestyle. 

- Over generations what is left of humanity has suffered extreme and highly dangerous weather. Their summers were spent in underground bunkers to escape the mid-fifty degree days. Even winter days averaged mid-thirties. Huge storms, floods and bushfires were common, and hailstones were fist-sized, frequently destroying houses, sheds and crops. 

- A few hundred years ago the world suffered 'The Terror' brought about by fossil fuel caused climate change. What remains of humanity lives in diminished cities and small communities, referred to as 'hams'. There is no money or commerce, only trading in goods and services. Homes and vehicles are rare and powered by home-made batteries. 

- He was captured by an eco movement of disruptors (the Service) at the age of 17, and trained in the way of the real world to operate against the 'Dirty World'. He becomes an ‘operator’, sworn to secrecy. Their job is to destroy the wealthy inheritors of fossil fuel corporations, kill all of them and their children and servants. It's a murderous agenda, fuelled by anger and revenge. 

- The operations were alway dangerous, and many of his colleagues died. Winton describes them in graphic detail. The Utah, Exxon, and Gulf of Oman eliminations were highly dangerous, highly risky, and many of his colleagues were killed.  

- He eventually suffered severe depression, taking a major toll on his young family. 

- I've read most of Tim Winton's books over the decades and was frankly getting tired of his focus on seashores and surfers. But this novel is absolutely a radical and passionate departure from that homey terrain. It is brilliantly written in prose full of inventive and imaginative descriptions. And it is unsparing in its condemnation of our current global heating denial.


(This would make a great TV series)

Sunday, September 29, 2024

Sally Rooney, Intermezzo

 



- An Intermezzo is an interlude: a short period when a situation or activity is different from normal. So it's a very apt description of the story Sally Rooney brings to life in her new and hugely enjoyable novel. 

- It's about two brothers and their love lives. And the interlude is the period after their father's death, during which their never really close relationship descends into anger, resentment and deeper separation.

- Peter is older than Ivan by ten years. In alternate chapters Rooney tells their stories. Peter's in short, sharp, sentences, mostly without verbs. He's nearly thirty-three years old and is a successful barrister. His love life is complicated. His ex, Sylvia, is a literature professor of the same age, and their relationship was upended by an accident she had that destroyed her ability to have sex. They are still very much in love though. Peter frequently walks the streets of Dublin as in Joyce's Ulysses.

- The younger brother Ivan's chapters are in standard sentences. He's a twenty-two year old chess champion, who meets a divorcee, Margaret, the program director of an arts venue. They become attached despite her being fourteen years older than him. When Peter finds out about this relationship he condemns Ivan for his immaturity, and they argue aggressively. 

- However Peter has also met another woman, the young and beautiful Naomi, who, ironically, is ten years younger than him and a former sex worker.  

- Rooney’s focus on likeable young people and their love lives in microscopic detail is her familiar terrain. In Intermezzo however she digs a lot deeper and brings sex to the forefront. What part does it  play in deep loving relationships? There are many detailed descriptions of the sexual acts, and she explores the conflicting human emotions involved in all their complexity. Few novelists do that with Rooney’s level of intensity. This is by far the most erotic of her novels. 

- But interspersed throughout are rich conversations about art, culture, history, and religion. So on all levels the novel is deeply immersive and satisfying. 



Monday, September 23, 2024

Don Watson, Quarterly Essay: High Noon: Trump, Harris and America On The Brink




  • This Quarterly Essay by well known author and respected political insider Don Watson is not just about the upcoming US election. It’s essentially a sociological read of today’s America. Watson imbeds the campaign in the nation’s history, its full political and cultural character, and how so much has changed for the worst for so many people over recent decades. Detroit being so representative of all that has happened to the struggling working class. ‘If you want to know America, know Detroit. If you want to fix America, fix Detroit’.  


  • The central focus is on Trump and why he appeals to so many of the disaffected class.  


  • Kamala Harris barely gets a mention until the last few pages. The essay ends with Biden’s resignation and Harris’s official nomination at the Democratic National Convention. Then, obviously, Watson had to submit his manuscript. Unfortunately the turning point, the debate, came afterwards. 


  • However Watson absolutely nails what Harris’s weakness is, and how she needs to do a lot more than offering ‘joy’ to win the election. ‘…keep the love but temper the joy. The people whose votes [Democrats] need see nothing to be joyful about. Stop talking about the middle class, as if working people have only themselves to blame for low wages, and rents and mortgages they can’t afford’.


  • ‘Once the Democrats allow themselves to be defined by their opposition to Trump, the fight is as good as lost.’ 


  • Watson continually demonstrates his insightfulness. He talks to a number of people he meets on the streets, and visits various towns and cities to assess their economic circumstances. 100 miles west of downtrodden Detroit is Kalamazoo, a city of 75 thousand people, which is absolutely thriving. 


  • ‘Sometimes the hoopla makes you wonder if Americans will ever grow up, and if we don’t have more in common with the village people of Albania, or Mars. What is it about their longstanding love of marching and mass rallies? Their hand-on-heart, flag-waving patriotism?’ 

Sunday, September 22, 2024

Andre Dao, Anam


 

  • This novel was recently announced as the winner of the Prime Minister’s Literary Award for 2024. 


  • It is certainly not a work of fiction in the usual sense. The people and events described are historically real. It’s more a bio infused with imaginative elements to bring the story alive, a blend of memory and history, and an intellectual journey. The narrator makes no concessions. As an undergraduate he read Derrida, a founding father of postmodernism and poststructuralism, and Husserl and his phenomenology.


  • The Vietnamese war is the central focus. His family forbears were South Vietnamese and his grandfather an active supporter of the resistance to the Communist revolutionary forces under Ho Chi Minh. After the war ended in 1975 his grandfather was imprisoned for ten years for being a ‘non-communist intellectual’. The narrator spends a lot of time reflecting on his grandfather’s thoughts, friends, and experiences. He also takes us to Manus island camp, under Australia’s control. It has closed and the ‘boat people’ are being forced out. He became a migration lawyer, defending them. 


  • But the narrator eventually realises he’s not retelling the story of his grandfather, he’s questioning it and interrogating it. And what about the contradiction presented by the Vietnamese refugees to Australia - after the war what were they fleeing from? Were they angry about the end of French colonialism and the retreat of the Americans? He now sees he’s writing a story about a story.


  • There is a lot more to the novel than what I’ve described here. Dao delves deep into the family’s history - the grandmother, the aunts and uncles, and the narrator’s own relationship with his partner, Lauren, and their baby daughter Edith. All these elements add immense depth to the story, and increase the pleasure of reading it. 





Sunday, September 15, 2024

Nina Kenwood, The Wedding Forecast

 




  • This wonderful new novel by former bookseller Nina Kenwood is a delightful and emotionally deep romcom. I loved her first two YA (Young Adult category) novels but this one is fully adult and is undoubtedly her best.
  • It’s about family, friends, partners, mothers, babies, parents, and relationship failures - multidimensional in a real way. But it’s mostly about love, how hard it is to find, the wrenching life-changing depth of it, and the sacrifices it demands. 
  • There’s high drama on every level, and absolutely invigorating dialogue. What I particularly liked was Kenwood’s brilliant comic touch. You can’t help but be absorbed and captivated. The more you read the more you’re sucked in. 
  • And as Nina admits in the Acknowledgements: ‘As well as being a romcom, this book is something of a love letter to bookshops and bookselling…’
  • Buy this book and you’ll love it so much you’ll buy more copies for your family and friends. It’s that good. 

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Malcolm Knox, The First Friend

 





  • This is not an enjoyable book to read at all. You’re immersed in the ugly history of the Soviet Union since the October Revolution in 1917 until 1938, just prior to the beginning of the Second World War. 


  • Post Lenin the Union was led by two murderous, abusive bullies, Josef Stalin and Lavrentiy Beria. They were merciless in their enforcement of Communist Party rule, and murdered hundreds of thousands of citizens in the process. Their egos were huge and their self-entitlement knew no bounds.  


  • The central focus of Knox’s novel is on Beria and his years as the Governor of Georgia. He’s a vicious liar, manipulator and rapist, and has no respect for his staff or colleagues apart from his childhood friend and ‘brother’ Vasil Murtov, who is his driver and assistant. 


  • I found it difficult to fathom Knox’s fundamental intent in this novel. Is it just a fictionalised history of a rotten autocracy, or does it have a deeper meaning? It can’t be claimed that it offers any insight into today’s Russia under Putin because the two states are vastly different. There is a contrasting narrative though. Murtov is married to Babilina and has two young daughters Ana and Melo. Their love for each other is real, and in the oppressive and brutal society they must survive in, inspiring. They are courageous and define what it actually means to be human. 


  • Another aspect of the tale that enlivens it dramatically is Knox’s comic touch. The dialogue is frequently crude and funny, often blokey in an Aussie way.