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Issue Details: First known date: 2020... no. 421 May 2020 of Australian Book Review est. 1961 Australian Book Review
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'What a difference a month makes! Happily, the outlook looks so much brighter than when we published the April issue – here in Australia at least. In our May issue, the Editor updates readers on how ABR is responding and laments the Australia Council’s non-funding of ABR and other magazines. ABR Laureate Robyn Archer reflects on what Australia might look like after the crisis. ABR Behrouz Boochani Fellow Hessom Razavi writes from the frontline – as a clinician in Perth. He interviews senior clinicians, reflects on his family’s Iranian experience, and also prepares to become a parent. David Fricker – Director General of the National Archives – responds to Jenny Hocking’s attack on the Archives over the ‘Palace letters’ in our previous issue. We have reviews of novels by James Bradley, Polly Samson, Ronnie Scott, and Chris Flynn – and new poetry by Lisa Gorton, Gig Ryan, and Paul Kane.' (Publication summary)

Notes

  • Contents indexed selectively.

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2020 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
'I Spoke to Many People and Listened' : On Living in a Time of Covid-19, Robyn Archer , single work column

'Closeted but not isolated, everyone will have a story, so there’s nothing special here. But the common difference is clear. When it’s about Brexit or Trump there, it’s us to them; when it’s bushfires here, it’s them to us. We have been globally entwined for decades, but the economic and political truths are mostly covert. It’s taken Covid-19 to put us all overtly at the same risk at the same time.' (Introduction)

(p. 11-13)
In the Luxembourg Gardensi"The languid water of a fountain", Paul Kane , single work poetry (p. 16)
Outliers : Intersections in Australian Literature, Kerryn Goldsworthy , single work review
— Review of Friends and Rivals : Four Great Australian Writers Brenda Niall , 2020 single work biography ;

'Armed with more than half a century’s worth of knowledge, experience, the fermentation of ideas and approaches in literary history and criticism over that period, and her own formidable reputation as a scholar and teacher of Australian literature, Brenda Niall returns in her latest book to the territory of her earliest ones. In Seven Little Billabongs: The world of Ethel Turner and Mary Grant Bruce (1979), Niall broke new ground not just in writing a serious and scholarly full-length treatment of Australian children’s literature, but also in departing from the orthodox biographical tradition of focusing on a single figure.'  (Introduction)

(p. 28-29)
Fortune's Favoursi"Two birds scoop white sky", Gig Ryan , single work poetry (p. 29)
A Vernacular Intellectual : A Probing, Gentle Personality, Nicholas Brown , single work review
— Review of I Wonder : The Life and Work of Ken Inglis 2020 anthology biography essay ;

'I am ashamed to recall that when our high-school history class in the late 1970s was set K.S. Inglis’s The Australian Colonists (1974), I – and I don’t think I was alone – didn’t quite know what to do with a text that focused on ‘ceremonies, monuments and rhetoric’, one that began as a study on 26 January 1788 but worked back as an historical enquiry from 25 April 1915.' (Introduction)

(p. 31-32)
Virtual Vacation : Expatriates on Hydra, Kirsten Tranter , single work review
— Review of A Theatre for Dreamers Polly Samson , 2020 single work novel ;

'For or anyone feeling stir-crazy after weeks cooped up in self-isolation, A Theatre for Dreamers offers an appealing escape, a virtual vacation on the Greek island of Hydra. Dive into these pages and you can swim vicariously in a perfect horseshoe-shaped bay, dry off in the summer sun, admire countless young, scantily clad men and women, and end the day with a glass of retsina while you watch the moon set and listen to a young Leonard Cohen enunciate profundities about life and art.' (Introduction)

(p. 34)
'Five Minutes into the Future : A Work of Ecological Grief, J.R. Burgmann , single work review
— Review of Ghost Species James Bradley , 2020 single work novel ;

'James Bradley’s Ghost Species arrives at a time when fiction seems outpaced by the speed with which we humans are changing the planet. Alarmingly, such writerly speculation has been realised during Australia’s tragic summer, when the future finally bore down on us. And there are few writers of climate fiction – or ‘cli-fi’, the term coined by activist blogger Dan Bloom and popularised in a tweet by Margaret Atwood – who so delicately straddle the conceptual divide between present and future as Bradley.' (Introduction)

(p. 35)
Man Verses Beast : A Witty Exploration of History and Humanity, Astrid Edwards , single work review
— Review of Mammoth Chris Flynn , 2020 single work novel ;

'Everything about Chris Flynn’s Mammoth – the characters, plot, and structure – should not work. But it does, and beautifully so. Mammoth is narrated by the fossilised remains of a 13,354-year-old extinct American Mammoth (Mammut americanum), who likes to be addressed as Mammut. On 24 March 2007, the eve of his sale at the Natural History Auction in New York, Mammut finds himself in a room with Tyrannosaurus bataar (who prefers to be called T.bat).' (Introduction)

(p. 36)
Days of Our Grindr : Wordswarms and Quiet Observations, Alex Cothren , single work review
— Review of The Adversary Ronnie Scott , 2020 single work novel ;

'One of the few details we learn about the unnamed narrator of Ronnie Scott’s début novel, The Adversary, is that he is fond of Vegemite. Although only a crumb of information, this affinity for the popular breakfast tar reveals much about our hero. Just as Vegemite ‘has to be spread very thin or you realised it was salty and unreasonable’, his human interactions give him a soupçon of a social life, a mere taste that never threatens to overwhelm his senses.'  (Introduction)

(p. 37)
A Babble of Strange Voices : An Absorbing and Affecting Debut, Ben Brooker , single work review
— Review of The Animals in that Country Laura McKay , 2020 single work novel ;

'Talking animals in fiction have, for the most part, been confined to children’s or otherwise peripheral literature. Yet they often serve a serious purpose. Aesop’s fables, with their anthropoid wolves, frogs, and ants, have been put to use as moral lessons for children since the Renaissance. The ‘it-narrative’, fashionable in eighteenth-century England and perhaps best exemplified by Francis Coventry’s History of Pompey the Little: Or, the life and adventures of a lap-dog (1752), saw various animals expatiate their suffering at human hands.'  (Introduction)

(p. 38)
Transgressions : A Character-Driven Novel, Daniel Thompson , single work review
— Review of Sweetness and Light Liam Pieper , 2020 extract novel ;

'Connor is a thirty-something Australian who bides his time grifting in India. His targets are Western female tourists, whom he describes as ‘talent’, and whom he seduces and fleeces. Connor seems to be escaping something, most likely the upbringing in which his masculinity and personal safety were constantly called into question.' (Introduction)

(p. 39)
Ties That Bind : Three New Australian Crime Novels, David Whish-Wilson , single work review
— Review of The Long Shadow Anne Buist , 2020 single work novel ; Torched Kimberley Starr , 2020 single work novel ; In the Clearing Joshua Pomare , 2019 single work novel ;

'Some years ago, a crime-writing friend of mine was at a writer’s festival with Lee Child. After a few drinks, my friend asked Child how he’d gone about preparing to write his Jack Reacher novels. Child’s reply was something along the lines of not putting pen to paper before he’d spent six months reading all of the successful crime novels he could find, and before parsing out exactly what made them popular with readers. Once this was done, he sat down to write. The rest, of course, is history.' (Introduction)

(p. 39-40)
Say's Who? Sailing Close to the Rocks of Self-Pity, Jacqueline Kent , single work review
— Review of She I Dare Not Name : A Spinster's Meditations on Life Donna Ward , 2020 single work autobiography ;

'The confusing aspects of this book begin with the title, She I Dare Not Name. Instead, there is a whole book about this person, a self-described spinster. Then there’s the S-word itself, which has carried a heavy negative load since about the seventeenth century. (A minor irritation is the back-cover blurb, which describes this as ‘a book about being human’ – as distinct from being what?)' (Introduction)

(p. 41)
Catalyst and Curio : The Dank Spectre of Racism, Michael Winkler , single work review
— Review of Pathfinders : A History of Aboriginal Trackers in NSW Michael Bennett , 2020 multi chapter work biography ;

'The Aboriginal tracker is a stock character in certain Australian films, employed as set dressing, catalyst, curio. Although fictional trackers have been celebrated on celluloid, few real trackers have been given life within the national memory. Some people may recall Billy Dargin and his role in locating and shooting Ben Hall. Others might think of Dubbo’s Tracker Riley, or Dick-a-Dick, who found the missing Cooper and Duff children near Natimuk in 1864 when they had been given up for dead.' (Introduction)

(p. 45)
On the Characterisation of Male Poets’ Mothersi"Charles Baudelaire’s mother—", Lisa Gorton , single work poetry (p. 46-47)
Multiple Perspectives : A Postcolonial Look at the Gold Rush Era, Laura Woollett , single work review
— Review of Stone Sky Gold Mountain Mirandi Riwoe , 2020 single work novel ;

'In this multi-perspective novel, Mirandi Riwoe trains her piercing postcolonial gaze on Gold Rush-era Australia, lending richness to the lives of the Chinese settlers who are often mere footnotes in our history. Ying and Lai Yue are outsiders before their arrival in Far North Queensland, where they have gone to find their fortunes after their younger siblings are sold into slavery. While Ying struggles with hiding her gender in the male-dominated goldfields, Lai Yue is haunted by his betrothed, Shan – killed in a landslide back in China – and by his failure to protect the family from penury. Meanwhile, in nearby Maytown, a white woman, Meriem, grapples with her exile from respectable society while working as a maid to local sex worker Sophie.' (Introduction)

(p. 49)
Ness and Hetty : A Genlte Exploration of Female Friendship, Chloe Cooper , single work review
— Review of Cherry Beach Laura McPhee-Browne , 2020 single work novel ;

'How do you define love? How much of yourself do you need to sacrifice to keep a friendship afloat? And can we ever truly understand the inner workings of other people’s lives? These are some of the questions that Laura McPhee-Browne explores in Cherry Beach, a gentle tale of female friendship.' (Introduction)

(p. 53)
Open Page with James Bradley, single work interview (p. 56)
The Hidden Self : Communicating the Experience of Psychosis, Barnaby Smith , single work review
— Review of The Toy of the Spirit Anthony Mannix , 2019 single work prose ;

'Any definition of what constitutes ‘outsider art’, or art brut, is elusive. The boundaries of this ‘category’ are notoriously porous. There is no manifesto, no consistent medium, nor is it especially tied to any single period in time. However, it can be argued that outsider art is often regarded as art created by those on the margins of society, such as people in psychiatric hospitals, in prison, or the disabled. Outsider artists are also usually self-taught. For several decades, Anthony Mannix has been at the forefront of Australian outsider art, his particular qualification for the label being serious mental illness (though the term ‘illness’, as The Toy of the Spirit implores, is problematic). Mannix was diagnosed with schizophrenia in the mid-1980s, and spent periods as a patient in psychiatric hospitals over the next decade. Now based in the Blue Mountains, he has been free of schizophrenic episodes for many years.' (Introduction)

(p. 60-61)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 6 May 2020 07:15:20
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