keywords: Cassandra Golds
-
ARTS AND CULTURE
- Cassandra Golds
- 27 October 2017
2 Comments
As the credits came up, my companion looked at me and said, 'Scary.' I turned from the screen and shook my head. My voice wouldn't quite come. 'Life,' I said. It was the character of Joyce Byers who most captivated me. I, too, have been so anxious that I forgot how I looked to other people.
READ MORE
-
ARTS AND CULTURE
- Haley Joray Arnold and Cassandra Golds
- 01 August 2017
2 Comments
You used to have feet like a Russian ballerina/Arches (like ones plebeians would stand under, lose their breath for a moment)/The weight they carry remarkable for the/Tiny bones inside ... Despair stalks the house/Outside, like weather/Inside, like air/It has no form ...
READ MORE
-
ARTS AND CULTURE
- Cassandra Golds
- 15 July 2015
5 Comments
'You are stronger than you know.' To scroll through Facebook is to meet such exhortations constantly. Often circular, and strangely unhelpful. Some, at a time of rising concern about violence against women, are downright alarming. 'A strong woman is one who is able to smile this morning like she wasn’t crying last night.'
READ MORE
-
ARTS AND CULTURE
- Cassandra Golds
- 19 December 2012
16 Comments
It started with a fight. By the time the fight happened, my mother and grandmother were the sole survivors of a small, intense and insular family, and I was almost grown up. Things were said, their partial estrangement began, and increased, and our many years of bad Christmases began.
READ MORE
-
MEDIA
- Cassandra Golds
- 19 May 2010
11 Comments
You never read anything good about Facebook. A headline in the Sydney Morning Herald this week declared there are no
rules. It has a reputation for superficiality and promiscuous over-sharing. But I haven't had so much fun in years. And I have never felt less alone.
READ MORE
-
ARTS AND CULTURE
- Cassandra Golds
- 15 May 2009
1 Comment
Jones' working life has been devoted to stories. In Through A Glass Darkly, she tells of her father's death. Her account questions the experiences behind modern medical miracles, and acts as a guide for understanding suffering and grief.
READ MORE
-
ARTS AND CULTURE
- Cassandra Golds
- 24 April 2009
1 Comment
That Dostoevsky is said to have developed a 'theology of writing' does not mean he arrives forearmed with a set of dogmatic truths. Rather, he practises the narrative and spritual discipline of allowing each character to be heard.
READ MORE
-
ARTS AND CULTURE
- Cassandra Golds
- 28 November 2008
Much of classic Australian literature concerns itself with deepest frustration — the still birth of hopes and dreams, the futility of aspirations, a yawning emptiness at the heart of things. Louis Nowra’s new novel joins this tradition.
READ MORE