“Sod the wine, I want to suck on the writing. This man White is an instinctive writer, bloody rare to find one who actually pulls it off, as in still gets a meaning across with concision. Sharp arbitrage of speed and risk, closest thing I can think of to Cicero’s ‘motus continuum animi.’

Probably takes a drink or two to connect like that: he literally paints his senses on the page.”


DBC Pierre (Vernon God Little, Ludmila’s Broken English, Lights Out In Wonderland ... Winner: Booker prize; Whitbread prize; Bollinger Wodehouse Everyman prize; James Joyce Award from the Literary & Historical Society of University College Dublin)


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12 June 2018

LEARNING YOUR ADELAIDE PLAINS

These cross-sections of the recent geology of the Adelaide Plains might be handy to those struggling to understand the layer cake of sands and clays, marine and riverine, in the recent geology of McLaren Vale. The Vale is much more complex than this, but you may begin to get the drift of how it worked. 

Quite sensibly, nobody has yet published an attempt at accurate transepts of McLaren Vale.  

This is one of the illuminating illustrations in this essential 1984 book, Geology and the Adelaide Environment:


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