The Aurealis Awards winners for 2009 were announced a few weeks ago (oh yes, always up-to-date news on this site): lots of Australian SF/F books to add to your reading list if you hadn’t got to them yet, and it’s always interesting to read the judges’ comments on the almost-winners.
The February Bullsheet and other Australian SF organisers are doing a big push for Australian authors this year. If you’re eligible to nominate someone for a Hugo Award, why not make it an Australian? To help you get started, Twelfth Planet Press is letting you try some of their publications free.
The Perth Writers Festival line-up is out. Lures for me include Saturday afternoon’s It’s Not Just the Cover… and From Cyber to…?, Sunday’s Escaping the Pigeon Hole, and, weirdly enough, the Haircuts by Children, which is exactly what it says it is. Surrender to an 8-year-old with scissors…
A great set of tips [from Book Thingo] for writing Australian characters — add your own tips in the comments. And they also have an Aussie Authors challenge for the year too [hosted by Book Lover Book Reviews, as per the clarification in the comments].
And via that site, I discovered that ebooks.com, one of the oldest ebook retailers, is actually based in Western Australia (their prices in are in US dollars though).
And, lastly, this article exactly encapsulates why I’m puzzled as to why Amazon was so universally vilified in last weekend’s Macmillan debacle, especially by authors. Yeah, it behaved like a dick, but authors — you (generally) won’t see a single extra cent when publishers put their ebook prices up…you might even lose sales as readers turn to the cheaper options. The whole situation smacks of things the big companies know that we the reader don’t, all related to the iPad/iBook release.
In personal news, I got a very nice email from a very nice reader who really enjoyed my latest book, The Frog Prince’s Daughters. Readers: make an author’s a day — email them to let them know you like their work.

Wendy -
Thanks for the mention of my article about the Amazon – Macmillan debacle.
Since I wrote it, I’ve read several other major publishers have followed Macmillan’s lead and are demanding that Amazon give them the same terms they’ll receive in Apple’s iBook store, too. In no time at all it seems, most new release and bestseller ebooks will cost $12.99-$14.99.
As I predicted in the article, more lose for everyone. =’[
Thanks for the link love, Wendy! I just wanted to mention that the Aussie Authors Challenge is being hosted by Book Lover Book Reviews.
Also, the Aussie character tips have been a source of much amusement for me, particularly the YouTube clip of Eric Bana. I’m glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks for the update, April — that is bad news for ebook readers…but maybe good news for the independent authors and publishers who are keeping their prices under the magic $10 mark
(cough *www.winterbournepublishing.com.au* cough)
And thanks for the clarification there, Kat, I’ve edited the entry to make it clearer.
Aaaaaah, Eric Bana…poor guy probably wishes YouTube had never been invented.