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Notes
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Includes work by Helen Meany, Judi Morison, Maalika Jacobs, Sydney Khoo, Christine Afoa, Luka Skandle, Jocelyn Prasad, Lachlan Parry, Kylie Keogh, Ruth Armstrong, Benjamin Giles, Catherine Mah, Keely Fleming, Josipa Kosanovic, Erica Wheadon, Chloe Michele, Susie Newton, Zerene Joy Catacutan, Cameron Stewart, Sophie Chandler, Ivona Alavanja, Verity Borthwick, James Gardiner, Jane Sharman, Hanan Merheb, Moneera Mellick, Benjamin Lee, David Naylor, Carmen Vallis and Joanne Anderton.
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Content indexing in process.
Contents
- Loose Stones, single work short story horror
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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Harry Goddard Reviews Infinite Threads Ed. Alison Whittaker
2019
single work
review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , December no. 24 2019;
— Review of Infinite Threads : UTS Writers' Anthology 2019 2019 anthology poetry short story prose screenplay'Alison Whittaker begins her foreword to the 2019 UTS Writers’ Anthology with an image of infinite threads converging ‘through some tiny waterways and floodplains and mudflats’ (p.vii). She traces these pathways through the soles of our shoes as they melt onto a road, up through our tongues as ice disintegrates from body heat, and onto a train as we are carried deeper into the country of writing. As readers, we can escape to somewhere less sweltering.' (Introduction)
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Harry Goddard Reviews Infinite Threads Ed. Alison Whittaker
2019
single work
review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , December no. 24 2019;
— Review of Infinite Threads : UTS Writers' Anthology 2019 2019 anthology poetry short story prose screenplay'Alison Whittaker begins her foreword to the 2019 UTS Writers’ Anthology with an image of infinite threads converging ‘through some tiny waterways and floodplains and mudflats’ (p.vii). She traces these pathways through the soles of our shoes as they melt onto a road, up through our tongues as ice disintegrates from body heat, and onto a train as we are carried deeper into the country of writing. As readers, we can escape to somewhere less sweltering.' (Introduction)