Between the Word and the World

by Anna MacDonald

“Ferociously intelligent and compelling…
at once attentive and luminous.”
Lucy Treloar, author of Wolfe Island

Paperback: £9.99

Is it possible for an experience of literature to be an experience of life? Can we think of words as existing in three dimensions, as things we move through, in much the same way that we move through the world? And how can we account for their effects beyond the page as we carry them with us, in our bodies, in our selves, holding on to them over the course of our years?

In Between the Word and the World, Anna MacDonald sets out on an eloquent exploration of these questions and the issues they raise. Drifting with ease from fiction to philosophy, from digital ephemera to psychogeography, from archival voyages to personal correspondence, her essays repeatedly probe the mysteries of writing and its power over our moods, our perceptions, and our sense of being. Whether turning her attention to the poetic musings of Esther Kinsky, the sinister imagery of Cynan Jones, or the fragmented politics of Valeria Luiselli, MacDonald enacts new and provocative ways of thinking about reading, writing, and living, so that “the worlds dreamed on and beyond the page bleed into one another.”

About the Author

Anna MacDonald is a writer and bookseller based in Melbourne, Australia, and a Splice masthead contributor. She has previously reviewed for 3:AM Magazine and the Sydney Review of Books, and she also writes for the Australian Book Review. Her début novel, A Jealous Tide, is also available from Splice.

Bonus Content

Watch Anna MacDonald’s Q&A with Daniel Davis Wood at the launch event for her novel A Jealous Tide, where she also discusses the essays in Between the Word and the World:

Praise for Anna MacDonald

Deeply reflective… digressive in its examination of authors such Woolf, W.G. Sebald, Teju Cole, and Deborah Levy, and structured thus so that the work of these writers is set against reflections on the vagaries of walking and interacting with the world.

Thuy On
Sydney Review of Books

Anna MacDonald is a writer’s reader with a wide-roving attentiveness that appreciates the world, all things, as palimpsest. Through this superb collection, we might hope not only to go where she goes, but to inherit the generosity and acuity with which she sees.

Josephine Rowe
author of Here Until August

Ferociously intelligent and compelling. In writing that is at once attentive and luminous — of the mind but full of heart — Anna MacDonald draws connections between reading and life, philosophy and art, past and present. The result is exhilarating, filling this wonderful work with dimension and resonance.

Lucy Treloar
author of Salt Creek and Wolfe Island

Elegant and deeply thought. Essays on writing and reading. And life. And landscape. And love. And emotion. And intellect. A beautiful collection.

Robert Lukins
author of The Everlasting Sunday