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…what happens next?


Ten Mile River : Is America broken?

Ten Mile River is a novel written by Paul Griffin, who portrays America in a different light to what we see in movies and television shows.

Homeless group by Franco Folini.

‘Homeless Group with Dog’ by Franco Folini

Homeless people are a prevalent fact in America, but Jose and Raymond are different. They choose to be homeless because they can. They go through what no teenage boy should go through, killing dogs, stealing, moving bodies, falling in frozen rivers and getting arrested.

“Yo Ray! Let’s get us that Lincoln then I can get my bike!” is some of the unusual American colloquialism used by Raymond and Jose, in their strange yet amusing lives.

Ten Mile River is an interesting book that breaks some of the teen-writing barriers, such as dead bodies and murder. Griffin portrays Jose as tough and strong, the leader and strength of the two. He portrays Raymond as intelligent, lost in a world that isn’t his, wanting the freedom to do whatever he wants to be intelligent.

Reading the blurb makes you think of a classic river story of young boys, Huckleberry Finn. Although there is only that one similarity between the two, I believe that it was written as a comparitive study for Huckleberry Finn, as the original publishing of 1884 is too long ago for a sequel to be written.

This book is good at most points, but it just gets under your skin in others so that you don’t want to read it anymore, yet sometimes you get sad when you must put it down to go do another menial task. Overall, this is an interesting novel to read because it stirs your emotions, gives an insight into American Life and shows how misguided troubled youths can be.

I Strongly recommend this book to avid readers, but if you struggle with reading a whole book, The American slang and troubling events will make it hard for you to not finish it.

Rated: 8.5/10

Mankind Is No Island

Did you know that Sydney’s short film festival, Tropfest, has a New York version?

Tropfest originated at the well-known Tropicana Café in Sydney in 1993. Over the past fifteen years, it has evolved into the “Olympics of Short Film” and into an Australian cultural phenomenon with the festival screening live via satellite to over 150,000 people in eight cities across the continent. Tropfest NY

This year Tropfest NY was won by an Australian made film “Mankind Is No Island”. Made using a mobile phone and filmed on the streets of Sydney and New York for a budget of $57 (obviously they didn’t count the airfare) this film also topped the people’s choice voting.

Made using footage of street signs the film-maker tells a story which is a meditation on the homeless people of our cities. See what you think.

You can listen to an interview with the director, Jason Van Genderen, on The Media Report (there is also a transcript).