Day's earliest writings appear in two Finlay Press titles:
Familiar Objects (2005), and
Goodbye Eggcup (2006). Scott McCulloch,
Australian Book Review, commented:
"Spontaneous in his approach, Day utilizes various bits of visual information: tables, lists, Shakespeare quotes, typography that verges on concrete poetry … it sounds messy, but the connection and slippages of these digression make for an intoxicating and dissonant piece of prose." Day has continued to write using 'connections', 'slippages', and 'digressions', evident in his
A Chink in a Daisy-Chain (2017), the first in a three-book series.
A Chink in a Daisy-Chain concentrates on the embattled nature of individual intellectual and creative autonomy. Fiona Capp (Sydney Morning Herald) comments: ''"In the spirit of the absurdist and playful logic that characterises the Alice books, A Chink in a Daisy-Chain takes us into the rabbit warren of Day's mind as he free associates, one thought leading to another in a stream of consciousness ..."'' Similar to his artist's books, included in
Chink in a Daisy-Chain is a drawing by Day illustrating
The Wasp in a Wig – the suppressed chapter from Carroll's
Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There. Day's illustration recreates the style of
John Tenniel's original illustrations.
Non-fiction books •
Lost Art: two essays on cultural dysfunction (with Julian Davies) (2012) •
A Chink in a Daisy-Chain (with a foreword by Anna Welch) (2017)
Contributions to journals and newspapers •
Beating Richie Knucklez: the making of a Space Invaders world champion, (Mon 12 Nov 2018) • ''Three Artists' Relationship to the Book'', Imprint, Volume 49 (2014) •
When a Book Becomes a Work of Art, Verso, 5. (2017) ISSN 2205-4405 ==Illustrated books==