James Halliday Retires

James Halliday has retired from his Halliday Wine Companion and has retired as a wine writer. That's a sad sentence to write, and a sadder sentence to think about.

A few days after James Halliday announced his retirement from wine writing he called me from his hospital bed, eager to talk about his final writing project. James and I have discussed this final project many times but still I was humbled and disbelieving that he’d called. This project will be a book about his journey in wine, through the lens of a series of great, unrepeatable wine dinners. The life James Halliday has had in wine is incredible. Indeed, in its own way, it’s historic.

The announcement of James’ retirement, it goes without saying, was a day that I never wanted to arrive. I said on social media, on the day of the announcement, that no one has given more to the wine community, which anyone who knows anything about anything knows to be true. But there are a couple of other reasons why I never wanted this day to arrive, and the first is that every week, of every year, as I read the words that James has written, I learn something new, or I see a new angle, or I gain a new insight.

The other reason is yet more personal. James has been the ‘head’ of Australian wine for all the time I’ve been involved in it. I’m tethered to him. He’s my marker and my guide. When I heard that James had announced his retirement I felt sad but more than that, I felt empty.

James Halliday was effectively the Halliday guide’s chief editor from the guide’s inception until 2020, though he mostly operated under the title of author. There have been three chief editors of Halliday in four years: Halliday, Tyson Stelzer (2020-2022) and myself (2022-2024). The chief editor seat is now, fittingly, vacant. Halliday is irreplaceable.

James Halliday announced his retirement as a wine writer in May, 2024.

Campbell Mattinson

This article was written by Campbell Mattinson, former chief editor of the Halliday Wine Companion book, former editor of Halliday magazine, former editor of Australian Sommelier Magazine and founder of the highly respected The Winefront site.

Mattinson has been an independent wine critic and photo-journalist since 1987. He’s the only Australian to have won the Australian Wine Communicator of the Year Award more than once. He’s a past winner of a Louis Roederer International Wine Media Award; is the author of the award-winning book The Wine Hunter; and is the author of the best-selling novel We Were Not Men. He’s also a winner of a St Kilda Film Festival Award (as writer-director) and is a former winner of the prized Best Australian Sports Writing Award.

Mattinson, who is 100% independent, puts a score out of 100 on every wine that he reviews. But what he’d rather do, is tell you the wine’s story.

https://www.campbellmattinson.com
Previous
Previous

Gentle Folk Onkaparinga Sangiovese 2023

Next
Next

Cape Mentelle and Chevrolet in a context of Cabernet