AustLit logo

AustLit

Justine Hyde Justine Hyde i(11272775 works by)
Gender: Female
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Works By

Preview all
1 Consider the Library Justine Hyde , 2020 single work essay
— Appears in: Meanjin , Summer vol. 79 no. 4 2020;

'September 2020. Melbourne is strangely quiet, streets nearly deserted. We are suspended in lockdown. All the libraries are closed. Parcels of new books stack up inside; the usual whirr of air conditioning and photocopiers is silent. The spaces normally packed with students, the elderly, readers, children and city workers sit empty. The book-return chutes are closed, overdue fines have been waived. Library staff are working from home or have been redeployed to other jobs. Librarians are a resourceful bunch; they have adapted to lockdown by moving children’s story-time sessions and English-language classes online. Library budgets have been shuffled to buy more ebooks, films and streaming audio content to answer the exponential surge in demand. Books have been posted out to eager readers stuck at home.' (Introduction)

1 Sofie Laguna, Infinite Splendours Justine Hyde , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 14-20 November 2020;

— Review of Infinite Splendours Sofie Laguna , 2020 single work novel

'Sofie Laguna has established herself as a writer who renders the world in vivid detail through the eyes of children. She skilfully shows how childhood can be punctured by brutality: the first-person protagonists of her two previous novels are betrayed by the adults who should protect them. Jimmy, the narrator of her Miles Franklin award-winning novel, The Eye of the Sheep, is autistic, and his struggles to understand the adult world are exacerbated by domestic violence. In Laguna’s next book, The Choke, Justine is in danger, surrounded by male aggression and menace. Both children are buffeted by chaos, failed by their families, and abandoned to navigate life in the aftermath of trauma.' (Introduction)

1 Tegan Bennett Daylight, The Details Justine Hyde , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 18-24 July 2020;

— Review of The Details Tegan Bennett Daylight , 2020 single work autobiography

'Novelist and short-story writer Tegan Bennett Daylight’s first nonfiction collection, The Details, is a book about paying attention: to words in books; to life’s patterns and paradoxes. The author credits her mother, a voracious reader, with teaching her to notice details: “When I read, I am still in conversation with her.” This reading lineage is passed down from Daylight to her own children.' (Introduction)

1 Felicity Volk : Desire Lines Justine Hyde , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 7-13 March 2020;

— Review of Desire Lines Felicity Volk , 2020 single work novel

'British nature writer Robert Macfarlane describes desire lines as “paths and tracks made over time by the wishes and feet of walkers … contrary to design or planning”. Felicity Volk’s second novel traces such a contrary path in the unconventional love story of Evie Waddell and Paddy O’Connor: theirs is a grand passion that winds its heady course across continents over five turbulent decades.' (Introduction)

1 Wayne : Marshall Shirl Justine Hyde , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paeper , 8-14 February 2020;

— Review of Shirl Wayne Marshall , 2020 selected work short story

'Wayne Marshall’s debut collection of short stories is a book that can be wholly judged by its cover. On it, a burly bloke embraces a kangaroo who wears a Carlton footy vest – a queer romantic scene that is backlit by the gentle glow of a telly. Marshall’s schtick is injecting Australian tropes with fabulist twists: everything is not what it first seems.' (Introduction)

1 [Review] Act of Grace Justine Hyde , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 12-18 October 2019;

— Review of Act of Grace Anna Krien , 2019 single work novel

'Anna Krien is highly regarded for her deeply researched and incisive long-form journalism. Her books Night Games and Into the Woods, along with two Quarterly Essays, have cemented her as one of this country’s leading voices on contemporary sociopolitical and environmental issues, and an advocate for fairness and reason.' (Introduction)

1 The Most Natural of Things Justine Hyde , 2019 single work autobiography
— Appears in: Growing Up Queer in Australia 2019; (p. 51-56)
1 Samia Khatun : Australianama Justine Hyde , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 24-30 August 2019;

— Review of Australianama : The South Asian Odyssey in Australia Samia Khatun , 2019 multi chapter work criticism poetry prose biography

'Bangladeshi Australian author Samia Khatun’s Australianama is a book of books, a survey of divergent modes of historical storytelling, and a search for truth in the face of cultural erasure. It opens with Khatun visiting her mother, Eshrat, in a mental health ward in Sydney’s suburbs. Plagued with terrifying visions in Bengali, Eshrat is locked each night in a shared room with a uniformed Australian soldier – recently returned from Afghanistan – who she believes will murder her in her sleep. With the hospital refusing to relocate her mother, Khatun comprehends an irresolvable dissonance: “Western states cannot bomb, exploit, drone, invade and kill South Asians andhave us as part of their citizenry at the same time.” She laments, “The migrant story I had inhabited for much of my life buckled, and eventually collapsed.” This acts as the catalyst for Khatun’s expansive history of the South Asian diaspora in colonial Australia.' (Introduction)

1 Fiona McGregor : A Novel Idea Justine Hyde , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 22-28 June 2019;

'In her work as a performance artist, Fiona McGregor is no stranger to physical and psychological endurance, often sitting uncomfortably still for hours on end. However, it is the more challenging act of endurance – writing a novel – that she documents in this photo essay, A Novel Idea. In the epilogue, McGregor laments that novel writing “is mystified, romanticised or, conversely, trivialised”. She says, “Let this document then show how banal, gruelling and lonely it really is.” And so she does.' (Introduction)

1 Emotional Support Justine Hyde , 2019 single work short story
— Appears in: We'll Stand in That Place and Other Stories : Margaret River Short Story Competition 2019 2019; (p. 127-138)
1 Silence, Power and Gender Equality in the Arts Justine Hyde , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: Meanjin Online 2018;
1 How the Stars Travelled to Earth and Abandoned the Moon Justine Hyde , 2018 single work short story
— Appears in: Meanjin , Summer vol. 77 no. 4 2018; (p. 126-129)

'That first night, he reached up into the winter dark. His hand drifted past Sirius, flashing like a huge diamond, a star without equal. He selected Aldebaran and plucked it straight out of the sky. It was effortless the way he pinched the star between his thumb and forefinger, brought it down to Earth and held it dazzling in his palm. The starlight beamed bright between the gaps in his fingers, making us squint as it refracted off the knit of quartz and feldspar in the western granite mountain range. We stood in awe of its beauty. But what to do with a star pilfered from the night sky?'  (Introduction)

1 Books Roundup : Speaking Up, The Fragments, The Butcherbird Stories Ellen Cregan , Freya Howarth , Justine Hyde , 2018 single work review
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings [Online] , October 2018;

— Review of Speaking Up Gillian Triggs , 2018 single work autobiography ; The Fragments Toni Jordan , 2018 single work novel ; The Butcherbird Stories A. S. Patrić , 2018 selected work short story
1 Books Roundup Flames, A Superior Spectre, One Hundred Years of Dirt Ellen Cregan , Justine Hyde , Chloë Cooper , 2018 single work review
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings [Online] , July 2018;

— Review of Flames Robbie Arnott , 2018 single work novel ; A Superior Spectre Angela Meyer , 2018 single work novel ; One Hundred Years of Dirt Rick Morton , 2018 single work autobiography
1 Australia in Three Books Justine Hyde , 2018 single work review
— Appears in: Meanjin , Winter vol. 77 no. 2 2018; (p. 21-24)

— Review of Loaded Christos Tsiolkas , 1995 single work novel ; Suck My Toes Fiona McGregor , 1994 selected work short story ; The Monkey's Mask Dorothy Porter , 1994 single work novel

'Literature is a reflection of the culture that spawns it. As a queer teenager growing up in Sydney’s outer western suburbs, my access to literature was limited to the books we had at home—airport novels—and the small collection at my high school library, mostly classics. So far as I knew, old white men wrote books; Ruth Park, Ursula Le Guin, Virginia Andrews and Danielle Steele were the exceptions.' (Introduction)

1 ‘From the Wreck’ Author Jane Rawson Justine Hyde , 2018 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 23-29 June 2018;

'Combining a real-life shipwreck and an alien octopus doesn’t seem an obvious way to explore the impact of mankind on the environment, but, for author Jane Rawson, the message in From the Wreck couldn’t be more imperative. “We’re very keen to look elsewhere and say, ‘Oh, this is terrible in developing countries’ … We seem to be blissfully unaware that some of the worst deforestation in the world is happening in Australia … We have one of the worst extinction records in the world.”'  (Publication abstract)

1 Dangerous Femaleness : S.A. Jones’ The Fortress Justine Hyde , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings [Online] , May 2018;

'A walled matriarchal society forces self-reflection and radical growth in a speculative examination of power, sex and gender.'

1 Layers of Now : Jennifer Mills’ Dyschronia Justine Hyde , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings [Online] , February 2018;

'A looping, surrealist vision of a small town wracked by climate change lays bare our collective myopia about the future.'

1 Everything Is Not Fine in Libraries Justine Hyde , 2017 single work essay
— Appears in: Meanjin Online 2017;
1 Elizabeth Tan : Rubik Justine Hyde , 2017 single work essay
— Appears in: The Newtown Review of Books , June 2017;
'Rubik is a wonderful experiment in fiction, exploring a vast landscape within the contained borders of a novel.'
X