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y separately published work icon Voiceworks periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2016... no. 105 Spring 2016 of Voiceworks est. 1988 Voiceworks
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2016 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
How to Occupy an Empty Tuesday, Kirsty Sier , single work short story

'My husband has to be one of the loudest breathers in the world. This sounds annoying, but it has its perks. For instance, when we are walking together, I am never afraid of losing him. Even if he is several metres behind me I can hear him gasping and sucking, trying to pull in all the air as though a standard serving size is not enough to sustain him...' (Publication abstract)

(p. 89-94)
The Red Months' Madnessi"so much depended", Emma Rose Smith , single work poetry (p. 95)
Tilting at Turbines, Jennifer Hauptman , single work essay

'East of Melbourne, 135 kilometres down the Bass Coast, is the town of Wonthaggi. It's a small town of about 4,500 people; it's where people from nearby, more picturesque holiday towns like Inverloch and Cape Patterson do their shopping. The town was established in the early twentieth century by the Victorian government to accommodate the families of miners who worked in the State Coal Mine. In the centre of Wonthaggi, or halfway down the main street - it's a one-street-one-set-of-traffic-lights sort of place - there is an old whistle tower that used to signal the start and end of the three shifts at the mine. It is silent now. In the 1960s, when Victoria's rail network switched to diesel, the mine closed; now it's a local tourist attraction. The railway track, which was used to transport the coal to Melbourne, is now a cycling and jogging track, and only goes as far as San Remo, twenty-five kilometres down the road. In 2002 a planning permit was issued by the State Government of Victoria for a wind farm three kilometres from Wonthaggi town centre. Today, the largest employer in Wonthaggi and the surrounding shire is Bass Coast Regional Health.' (Publication abstract)

(p. 101-106)
Kamin Street Blues, Simon Farley , single work short story

'WalkIng down KamIn street on a Whitday afternoon and it just gets hotter and hotter. This road is Drevnigrad's spine and today it feels fit to buckle. Jarveys squabble and beg for water and get under everyone's feet. The feathers on my mourning shawl start to wilt. I need a cigarette and I need a cigarette and I hold my fingers to my mouth and pretend I have a cigarette...' (Publication abstract)

(p. 107-110)
Inner Varnika 2i"yr a flthy ruby champion you are", Holly Friedlander Liddicoat , single work poetry (p. 111-112)
Body Worlds : An Exhibition of Flesh, Death and Plastic, Francesca Ohlert , single work essay

'In the centre of the room there was a man holding his own flayed skin. He held it up in one hand, like a thin, beige bath towel. All of his muscles were exposed; pectorals fanned out impressively, raw and almost cartoonishly red. The man was real though. I mean, he was really dead, and he was standing inside a Perspex case mounted on the gallery floor.' (Publication abstract)

(p. 113-117)
New Year's Eve, Shanghaii"I speak broken Mandarin, Liang ge ren?", Mindy Gill , single work poetry (p. 119)
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