Barry Charles Divola is an Australian journalist, columnist and author.[1]
Divola was born in Sydney, the first son of Kevin Divola. He was educated at Newington College.[2] He lives in Perth, Western Australia, with his wife and two young daughters.[3]
Divola is a regular contributor to The Sydney Morning Herald and was a columnist and feature writer for that newspaper's monthly publication, (sydney) magazine, where he presented the columns Street Life and Hole in the Wall. He was the music critic for Who, a senior writer for Rolling Stone and contributor to Madison and Entertainment Weekly.[4]
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (March 2016) |
| Album title | Artist | Reviewed in |
|---|---|---|
| Kindred | Passion Pit | Divola, Barry (May 2015). "Passion Pit's ecstatic pop". Reviews. Rolling Stone (Australia). 762: 90. |
| No Pier Pressure | Brian Wilson | Divola, Barry (May 2015). "The man who wasn't there". Reviews. Rolling Stone (Australia). 762: 92. |
| Beat the Champ | The Mountain Goats | Divola, Barry (May 2015). "[Untitled review]". Reviews. Rolling Stone (Australia). 762: 94. |
| Postcards from Paradise | Ringo Starr | Divola, Barry (May 2015). "[Untitled review]". Reviews. Rolling Stone (Australia). 762: 97. |
| Carrie & Lowell | Sufjan Stevens | Divola, Barry (May 2015). "Sufjan's quiet contemplation". Reviews. Rolling Stone (Australia). 762: 98. |
He won the Banjo Paterson Award for short fiction in 2004, 2005 and 2006 for his stories Nipple, Cicada Boy and Nixon.[6]
| General | |
|---|---|
| National libraries | |
| Other |
|
This Australian journalist biography article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
This article about an Australian writer is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |