It's a few years since I read it. I recall it just being a little over the top in its praise of The Doc.Sainternist wrote:I still haven't got around to getting a copy of Peter Lyons' biography of Darrel Baldock: The Incomparable Mr Magic.
Has anyone here read it?
Saints in Literature/ Books
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- kosifantutti
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
Macquarie Dictionary Word of the Year for 2023 "Kosi Lives"
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
Yes Loris it was me that went to the island of St Kilda back in 2013.loris wrote:Aaah Bratty, pleased I'm not going senile. I've found the other thread about St Kilda in Scotland. I just was a little jumbled about who was the original poster, what year the thread was in.
At least I was spot on about me & Gershwin having a chat about appropriate music to accompany his boat trip. It's just the You tube videos he linked to were not his trip to St Kilda. It was clip of tourists going to Fingals Cave inThe Inner Hebrides- another place he had been to. Great sound track of Mendelssohn's Overture - Fingal's Cave to accompany the video.
And the original poster of the thread was 'Yours Truly'!!! Fancy that eh?
I posted the thread on Sat 29 Dec 2012. The thread title was 'St Kilda................ here we come with Monty.'
And it had nothing to do with Joey. It was just alerting posters that the program on SBS1 about the Isle of St Kilda was being shown the following week . The presenters name was Monty Hall.
After a number of us watched the doco on St Kilda, there was a good discussion on it. Apart from the usual suspect St Kilda llooked a rather bleak, but stunning island. It's World heritage listed.
Gershwin said he was travelling there the following year. White Winmar, had attempted to get there, but the the boat was cancelled for a few days due to the wild weather. I think he valued his life & eventually decided not to do the crossing!!
Gershwin posted a link to a You tube of 'The St Kildan's Song'. Not that rousing, don't think it would push off our theme song 'Oh When The Saints.................
Can't work out how to do a link to the thread tho' Bratty. From Gershwin's link to the YouTube video on St Kilda you can See plenty of other videos on the Isle of St Kilda.......... A unique, quirky place with an interesting but at times difficult history, not a place for the feint hearted to live or visit. Just like our beloved Saints, not the run of the mill AFL team, unique, has a tendancy to take a road more difficult at times, and definitely not for feint hearted supporters.
Actually the island is called Hirta and it is in the group of islands called St Kilda.
We had lovely weather which is unusual as at least half of the time trips are cancelled because the sea is too rough. The National Trust look after the islands and apparently there is a St Kilda scarf in their bunkhouse. When I moved to Scotland earlier in 2013 I didn't take over any of my many St Kilda scarfs but my wife did a great job of knitting one in the weeks before we went to St Kilda. It was a nice moment to display it and have a photo taken.
I'm still living in Scotland but will return to Australia to live in the near future.
summertime and the living is easy ........
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
Coincidentally my wife and I are going on a cruise of the Hebrides in late June this year. And we go to St Kilda. Have seen many photos and TV shows about the place, so I know exactly what it looks like. Really looking forward to it. Will take a scarf! And hope for good weather.Gershwin wrote:Yes Loris it was me that went to the island of St Kilda back in 2013.loris wrote:Aaah Bratty, pleased I'm not going senile. I've found the other thread about St Kilda in Scotland. I just was a little jumbled about who was the original poster, what year the thread was in.
At least I was spot on about me & Gershwin having a chat about appropriate music to accompany his boat trip. It's just the You tube videos he linked to were not his trip to St Kilda. It was clip of tourists going to Fingals Cave inThe Inner Hebrides- another place he had been to. Great sound track of Mendelssohn's Overture - Fingal's Cave to accompany the video.
And the original poster of the thread was 'Yours Truly'!!! Fancy that eh?
I posted the thread on Sat 29 Dec 2012. The thread title was 'St Kilda................ here we come with Monty.'
And it had nothing to do with Joey. It was just alerting posters that the program on SBS1 about the Isle of St Kilda was being shown the following week . The presenters name was Monty Hall.
After a number of us watched the doco on St Kilda, there was a good discussion on it. Apart from the usual suspect St Kilda llooked a rather bleak, but stunning island. It's World heritage listed.
Gershwin said he was travelling there the following year. White Winmar, had attempted to get there, but the the boat was cancelled for a few days due to the wild weather. I think he valued his life & eventually decided not to do the crossing!!
Gershwin posted a link to a You tube of 'The St Kildan's Song'. Not that rousing, don't think it would push off our theme song 'Oh When The Saints.................
Can't work out how to do a link to the thread tho' Bratty. From Gershwin's link to the YouTube video on St Kilda you can See plenty of other videos on the Isle of St Kilda.......... A unique, quirky place with an interesting but at times difficult history, not a place for the feint hearted to live or visit. Just like our beloved Saints, not the run of the mill AFL team, unique, has a tendancy to take a road more difficult at times, and definitely not for feint hearted supporters.
Actually the island is called Hirta and it is in the group of islands called St Kilda.
We had lovely weather which is unusual as at least half of the time trips are cancelled because the sea is too rough. The National Trust look after the islands and apparently there is a St Kilda scarf in their bunkhouse. When I moved to Scotland earlier in 2013 I didn't take over any of my many St Kilda scarfs but my wife did a great job of knitting one in the weeks before we went to St Kilda. It was a nice moment to display it and have a photo taken.
I'm still living in Scotland but will return to Australia to live in the near future.
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
That will be an awesome trip. Enjoy.Verdun66 wrote:Coincidentally my wife and I are going on a cruise of the Hebrides in late June this year. And we go to St Kilda. Have seen many photos and TV shows about the place, so I know exactly what it looks like. Really looking forward to it. Will take a scarf! And hope for good weather.Gershwin wrote:Yes Loris it was me that went to the island of St Kilda back in 2013.loris wrote:Aaah Bratty, pleased I'm not going senile. I've found the other thread about St Kilda in Scotland. I just was a little jumbled about who was the original poster, what year the thread was in.
At least I was spot on about me & Gershwin having a chat about appropriate music to accompany his boat trip. It's just the You tube videos he linked to were not his trip to St Kilda. It was clip of tourists going to Fingals Cave inThe Inner Hebrides- another place he had been to. Great sound track of Mendelssohn's Overture - Fingal's Cave to accompany the video.
And the original poster of the thread was 'Yours Truly'!!! Fancy that eh?
I posted the thread on Sat 29 Dec 2012. The thread title was 'St Kilda................ here we come with Monty.'
And it had nothing to do with Joey. It was just alerting posters that the program on SBS1 about the Isle of St Kilda was being shown the following week . The presenters name was Monty Hall.
After a number of us watched the doco on St Kilda, there was a good discussion on it. Apart from the usual suspect St Kilda llooked a rather bleak, but stunning island. It's World heritage listed.
Gershwin said he was travelling there the following year. White Winmar, had attempted to get there, but the the boat was cancelled for a few days due to the wild weather. I think he valued his life & eventually decided not to do the crossing!!
Gershwin posted a link to a You tube of 'The St Kildan's Song'. Not that rousing, don't think it would push off our theme song 'Oh When The Saints.................
Can't work out how to do a link to the thread tho' Bratty. From Gershwin's link to the YouTube video on St Kilda you can See plenty of other videos on the Isle of St Kilda.......... A unique, quirky place with an interesting but at times difficult history, not a place for the feint hearted to live or visit. Just like our beloved Saints, not the run of the mill AFL team, unique, has a tendancy to take a road more difficult at times, and definitely not for feint hearted supporters.
Actually the island is called Hirta and it is in the group of islands called St Kilda.
We had lovely weather which is unusual as at least half of the time trips are cancelled because the sea is too rough. The National Trust look after the islands and apparently there is a St Kilda scarf in their bunkhouse. When I moved to Scotland earlier in 2013 I didn't take over any of my many St Kilda scarfs but my wife did a great job of knitting one in the weeks before we went to St Kilda. It was a nice moment to display it and have a photo taken.
I'm still living in Scotland but will return to Australia to live in the near future.
summertime and the living is easy ........
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
Cheers!Gershwin wrote:That will be an awesome trip. Enjoy.Verdun66 wrote:Coincidentally my wife and I are going on a cruise of the Hebrides in late June this year. And we go to St Kilda. Have seen many photos and TV shows about the place, so I know exactly what it looks like. Really looking forward to it. Will take a scarf! And hope for good weather.Gershwin wrote:Yes Loris it was me that went to the island of St Kilda back in 2013.loris wrote:Aaah Bratty, pleased I'm not going senile. I've found the other thread about St Kilda in Scotland. I just was a little jumbled about who was the original poster, what year the thread was in.
At least I was spot on about me & Gershwin having a chat about appropriate music to accompany his boat trip. It's just the You tube videos he linked to were not his trip to St Kilda. It was clip of tourists going to Fingals Cave inThe Inner Hebrides- another place he had been to. Great sound track of Mendelssohn's Overture - Fingal's Cave to accompany the video.
And the original poster of the thread was 'Yours Truly'!!! Fancy that eh?
I posted the thread on Sat 29 Dec 2012. The thread title was 'St Kilda................ here we come with Monty.'
And it had nothing to do with Joey. It was just alerting posters that the program on SBS1 about the Isle of St Kilda was being shown the following week . The presenters name was Monty Hall.
After a number of us watched the doco on St Kilda, there was a good discussion on it. Apart from the usual suspect St Kilda llooked a rather bleak, but stunning island. It's World heritage listed.
Gershwin said he was travelling there the following year. White Winmar, had attempted to get there, but the the boat was cancelled for a few days due to the wild weather. I think he valued his life & eventually decided not to do the crossing!!
Gershwin posted a link to a You tube of 'The St Kildan's Song'. Not that rousing, don't think it would push off our theme song 'Oh When The Saints.................
Can't work out how to do a link to the thread tho' Bratty. From Gershwin's link to the YouTube video on St Kilda you can See plenty of other videos on the Isle of St Kilda.......... A unique, quirky place with an interesting but at times difficult history, not a place for the feint hearted to live or visit. Just like our beloved Saints, not the run of the mill AFL team, unique, has a tendancy to take a road more difficult at times, and definitely not for feint hearted supporters.
Actually the island is called Hirta and it is in the group of islands called St Kilda.
We had lovely weather which is unusual as at least half of the time trips are cancelled because the sea is too rough. The National Trust look after the islands and apparently there is a St Kilda scarf in their bunkhouse. When I moved to Scotland earlier in 2013 I didn't take over any of my many St Kilda scarfs but my wife did a great job of knitting one in the weeks before we went to St Kilda. It was a nice moment to display it and have a photo taken.
I'm still living in Scotland but will return to Australia to live in the near future.
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
Not so much a story about the club, players or the suburb,
however the namesakes of several players feature for better or worse in the novel, The Siren of Seoul.
Available for the cost of a cappuccino at the usual online purveyors.
however the namesakes of several players feature for better or worse in the novel, The Siren of Seoul.
Available for the cost of a cappuccino at the usual online purveyors.
" If thought corrupts language then language can also corrupt thought."
Politics and the English Language George Orwell
Politics and the English Language George Orwell
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
Bratty............ The new Jack Irish series starts on ABC1 tonight at 8.30pm.saintbrat wrote:
Other Books with saintly References
"Jack Irish" series by saints supporting Peter Temple.
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
got it - but no note of anything saintly really- without letting you know the plot it is a bit removed from previous
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
I downloaded the sample. Gehrig, Loewe, Hamill. Did I miss any?sendmehomehappy wrote:Not so much a story about the club, players or the suburb,
however the namesakes of several players feature for better or worse in the novel, The Siren of Seoul.
Available for the cost of a cappuccino at the usual online purveyors.
What have you got against defenders?
Macquarie Dictionary Word of the Year for 2023 "Kosi Lives"
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
This guy, a friend of Ian Fleming's, was a St. Kilda supporter, and served as the inspiration of a colourful character, Dicko Henderson, in a James Bond novel, You Only Live Twice, and the James Bond movie of the same name. He was also a good mate of the writer John Le Carre who wrote The Spy Who Came In From The Cold, and who also used him as a character, Old Crawford, in his books. He was a reporter and allegedly a spy - or at least a person who knew his way around in spy circles. His son and daughter became famous musicians. When he was on This Is Your Life, before his son came out (before the guests came out they would always say something so that the person being honoured would know at once who it was, like a private joke) he said "Carna Saints!"
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
not literature but the arts
The painting Full Back, St. Kilda by arguably Australia's greatest ever painter, Sidney Nolan, of Keith Miller.
Nolan grew up in St. Kilda.
The painting Full Back, St. Kilda by arguably Australia's greatest ever painter, Sidney Nolan, of Keith Miller.
Nolan grew up in St. Kilda.
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
The Hellbound Heart, by Clive Barker. Not so much about the saints, but a useful guide for saints' supporters. It is considered one of the greatest fictional works on the subject of masochism.
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
The ultimate saints book.
"The Point of it all."
by Jules Feldmann and Russell Holmesby.
"The Point of it all."
by Jules Feldmann and Russell Holmesby.
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
These are great!!!mcadam05 wrote:always a great read the St Kilda fanzine
Thanks for putting these up.
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Footballer_(Nolan)samuraisaint wrote:not literature but the arts
The painting Full Back, St. Kilda by arguably Australia's greatest ever painter, Sidney Nolan, of Keith Miller.
Nolan grew up in St. Kilda.
-----------
St.Kilda Forever!
St.Kilda Forever!
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
There is now a podcast version of Saturday Afternoon Fever. Well worth a listen.kosifantutti wrote: ↑Mon 25 Jan 2016 6:15pm Oval Dreams by Bruce Matthews? Is worth tracking down.
Also Saturday Afternoon Fever by Matthew Hardy.
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
that was a great re-read
good work
good work
.name the ways , thought manipulates the State of Presence away.
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
Plugger - The Tony Lockett story
Cricket's unsung legend (The Jimmy Matthews Story) by James Brear( his 1907 season is mentioned)
Cazaly the Legend by Robert Allen
Football by Dave McNamara (original impossible to get , thankfully reprinted in 2014)
Cricket's unsung legend (The Jimmy Matthews Story) by James Brear( his 1907 season is mentioned)
Cazaly the Legend by Robert Allen
Football by Dave McNamara (original impossible to get , thankfully reprinted in 2014)
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Re: Saints in Literature/ Books
These to me are the two classics.kosifantutti wrote: ↑Mon 25 Jan 2016 6:15pm Oval Dreams by Bruce Matthews? Is worth tracking down.
Also Saturday Afternoon Fever by Matthew Hardy.
Matthew Hardy's I've read twice -- just for the sheer pleasure of it.
To add to the list here there's also Yvette Wroby's Siren's Call. It's really her own personal memoir of 2015, but paced and interlaced throughout with the Saints' hopeful but futile season. Easily identifiable with in the way footy helps you through the Melbourne year, no matter how badly we end up doing.