Right now, the book that has pushed so many to three different kinds of edges (the financial edge, the page’s edge, and the edge of the harbour at the Sydney Dance Cafe) is now also on the edge of a counter or shelf at the following stores:
Gleebooks on Glebe Point Rd, Glebe
Better Read Than Dead on King St, Newtown
Ariel Books on Oxford St, Paddington
Title Music and Film on Crown St, Surry Hills; Whilloughby Rd, Crows Nest; Gertrude St, Fitzroy; Sydney Rd, Brunswick, and High St, Northcote.
Modern Times on King St, Newtown
Cream on King St, Newtown
The Brunswick St Bookstore on (yep) Brunswick St, Fitzroy
Metropolis Bookshop on Swanston St, Melbourne
Polyester Records on Flinders Lane, Melbourne
And if you live no where near these places, you can buy your copy at our online store, here, and we will post it to you.
Our other exciting news is that our app is now available for download. If you search for PPR in the app store, you can not only carry the book around inside your iPhone or iPad, but you can hear the writer (or, in two cases, someone else) read the stories to you.
With the book, the app is free. Without it, it costs a mere $5. A bargain so low it’s a highway to receivership.






March 26th, 2012 → 10:28 am
[...] My editing experience has included assistant editor at RealTime arts journal, and commissioning editor for their film and digital media section, OnScreen; editorial and web manager at the Australian Film Commission (now Screen Australia); web manager at Sydney Film Festival; assistant editor at Sydney University’s Power Publications where I copyedited two books on visual arts: Asian Modernities – Chinese and Thai Art Compared, 1980 to 1999 and Images of the Pacific Rim – Australia and California, 1850 to 1935; transcript editor for Australian Biography Online; and copy editor on the recently released book of dynamic emerging Australian writers, Penguin Plays Rough Book of Short Stories. [...]