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Issue Details: First known date: 2020... no. 422 June-July 2020 of Australian Book Review est. 1961 Australian Book Review
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Our winter double issue features two superb meditations on family, gender, mourning and becoming. Yves Rees is the winner of this year's Calibre Essay Prize. 'Reading the Mess Backwards' is a story of trans becoming that digs into the messiness of bodies, gender and identity. ABR Rising Star Sarah Walker writes beautifully about losing her mother and the difficulties of commemoration during a pandemic. James Ley has a virtuoso pastiche of Philip Roth in his review of the Portnoy trials. Sophie Cunningham reviews Richard Cooke's book on Robyn Davidson. Plus poems by Gwen Harwood, Jaya Savige, and Stephen Edgar – and much more!' (Publication summary)

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2020 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Failures of Judgement : Memoirs of an Unlikely Liberal Leader, Judith Brett , single work review
— Review of A Bigger Picture : An Autobiography Malcolm Turnbull , 2020 single work autobiography ;

'Malcolm Turnbull looks us straight in the eye from the cover of this handsome book, with just a hint of a smile. He looks calm, healthy, and confident; if there are scars from his loss of the prime ministership in August 2018, they don’t show. The book’s voice is the engaging one we heard when Turnbull challenged Tony Abbott in July 2015 and promised a style of leadership that respected people’s intelligence. He takes us from his childhood in a very unhappy marriage, through school and university, his astonishing successes in media, business, and the law, his entry into politics as the member for Wentworth, and ends with his exit from parliament.'  (Introduction)

(p. 8-9)
Myths and Realities : Two Labor Prime Ministers from Gold Towns, Frank Bongiorno , single work review
— Review of Becoming John Curtin and James Scullin : Their Early Political Careers and the Making of the Modern Labor Party Liam Byrne , 2020 single work biography ;
(p. 11-12)
Dawn Soloi"First light beside the Murray in Mildura", Stephen Edgar , single work poetry (p. 16)
Unsolicited Smut : A Nation of Prudes and Wowsers, James Ley , single work review
— Review of The Trials of Portnoy : How Penguin Brought down Australia's Censorship System Patrick Mullins , 2020 single work criticism ;
'Okay, I’ll tell you what’s wrong with this country. For a start, we have this profoundly stupid and deeply irritating myth that we’re all irreverent freedom-loving larrikins and easygoing egalitarians, when it is painfully obvious that we have long been a nation of prudes and wowsers, that our collective psyche has been warped by what Patrick Mullins describes, with his characteristic lucidity, as ‘a fear of contaminating international influences’, and that we are not just an insular, conservative, and deeply conformist society, but for some unaccountable reason we take pride in our ignorance and parochialism. And let’s not neglect the fact that we are cringingly deferential and enamoured of hierarchy...' (Introduction)
(p. 17)
'The Thing I Mostly Am' : The Many Treks of Robyn Davidson, Sophie Cunningham , single work review
— Review of Richard Cooke on Robyn Davidson Richard Cooke , 2020 single work essay ;

'The women that Robyn Davidson had a powerful effect on, Richard Cooke tells us, include author Anna Krien, adventurer Esther Nunn, and his wife. ‘I watched as the power of this book and its author, their energy and weight, worked an entrainment across cultures and generations,’ writes Cooke. In some ways his essay charts his struggle with that power. How not to fall into the trap that others who have tackled Davidson have fallen into? ‘I lagged decades of writers and pilgrims, interlopers and fans. Reading interviews to try to chicane through the questions already asked was pointless. They most often sought answers about the same thing – her first book, now published forty years ago.’' (Introduction)

(p. 18)
Contested Breath : The Ethics of Assembly in an Age of Absurdity, Sarah Walker , single work essay

'There’s a script for everything. Someone, voice wavering, says, ‘She’s dead’, and you say, ‘What?’ They say it again, and you say, ‘Oh, my god.’ You ask the usual questions, and then hang up and everything is incredibly quiet. You tell your boyfriend, and you both walk around the house trying to pack useful things: a sleeve of Valium, warm socks. You call your brother in London. He texts to say it’s five am there, can it wait? You call back. Before he even answers the phone, he knows.' (Introduction)

(p. 20-23)
Carnal Knowledge Ii"Roll back, you fabulous animal", Gwen Harwood , single work poetry (p. 26)
Hungry for Something : An Imaginative Take on Dystopia, Naama Grey-Smith , single work review
— Review of Rise and Shine Patrick Allington , 2020 single work novel ;

'‘What is the use of saying, “Peace, Peace” when there is no peace below the diaphragm?’ asks Chinese writer Lin Yutang in The Importance of Living (1937). The subject of food and its manifestations – sustenance, communion, gluttony, longing – has claimed a place in the books of every era and genre, from heavenly manna in the Book of Exodus to starving gladiators in Suzanne Collins’s multi-billion-dollar The Hunger Games franchise. Writers as varied as Marcel Proust and Margaret Atwood have prioritised this theme in their work.' (Introduction)

(p. 28)
Gabriel's Grave Mission : A Confident Debut from the Vogel Winner, Nicole Abadee , single work review
— Review of A Treacherous Country K.M. Kruimink , 2020 single work novel ;

'Tasmanian writer K.M. Kruimink’s first novel, A Treacherous Country, a witty, cracking tale set in Van Diemen’s Land in the 1840s, has more than a hint of Dickens and Moby-Dick about it. It won The Australian/Vogel’s Literary award, established in 1980 for an unpublished manuscript by an author under thirty-five, which has launched the career of Kate Grenville and Tim Winton, among others. The award sets high standards – it was not awarded in 2019 due to a ‘lack of quality’. Kruimink, who described it as an ‘absolute life-changer’, is a worthy recipient.' (Introduction)

(p. 29)
Neel and Mae : A Serendipitous Third Work, Declan Fry , single work review
— Review of Elephants with Headlights Bem Le Hunte , 2020 single work novel ;

'Perhaps reflecting the long gestation period of Bem Le Hunte’s third novel, the term ‘Asian Century’ occurs early on in Elephants with Headlights. The sobriquet is certainly apt. Induction into this vaunted space does not befall a country haphazardly: its temporal aspect serves to remind us that the fate is written in centuries-old geopolitical legacies. Before there was an ‘Asia’ to eponymise in this fashion, a wealth of cultures simply went about their business. But the determinations of capital and colonisation were made long ago, and now we live with the press.' (Introduction)

(p. 31)
Rippling Outward : An Imaginative Allegorical Novel, Laura Woollett , single work review
— Review of The Rain Heron Robbie Arnott , 2020 single work novel ;

'In an unnamed land under the thrall of a mysterious coup, mountain-dweller Ren wants only to live off the grid, undisturbed by human contact. Ren’s familiarity with the natural world becomes a liability when a band of soldiers comes seeking information that only she can provide: the whereabouts of a fabled bird with the ability to make it rain.' (Introduction)

(p. 31)
Marvel of Quirks : A Delightful First Collection of Short Stories, Lisa Bennett , single work review
— Review of Smart Ovens for Lonely People Elizabeth Tan , 2020 selected work short story ;

'Though its origins are unknown, the earliest sense of the word ‘quirk’ was as a subtle verbal twist or a quibble. Over time, its definition has become more nuanced: a quirk now also refers to a person’s peculiar or idiosyncratic traits, chance occurrences, and sudden, surprise curves appearing on paths or in facial expressions. Quirks can also be accidents, vagaries, witty turns of phrase.' (Introduction)

(p. 32)
The Power of Witches : Three New Fantasy Novels for Younger Readers, Margaret Robson Kett , single work review
— Review of The Threads of Magic Alison Croggon , 2020 single work children's fiction ; Euphoria Kids Alison Evans , 2020 single work novel ; The Vanishing Deep Astrid Scholte , 2020 single work novel ;

'This month’s survey features three bewitching novels from authors intent on transporting younger readers to other worlds.'

(p. 33-34)
Bach to the Fuchsiai"In thrall to thresholds, drawn to every brink,", Jaya Savige , single work poetry (p. 34)
Instincts : A Novel Exploring the Riskiness of Motherhood, Rosalind Moran , single work review
— Review of Fauna Donna Mazza , 2020 single work novel ;

'While having a child is an act of hope and joy for many, it is also risky. One can heed expert advice, prepare, even throw money at the endeavour, but there is no guarantee that the creation or nurturing of a child will go as planned.' (Introduction)

(p. 35)
Reluctant Road Trip : An Absorbing First Novel, Chloe Cooper , single work review
— Review of State Highway One Sam Coley , 2020 single work novel ;

'In this absorbing first novel – which won the 2017 Richell Prize for Emerging Writers – Sam Coley tells the story of Alex, a young Aucklander who returns home from abroad after the sudden death of his parents. Alex and his estranged twin sister, Amy, set off on a reluctant road trip through New Zealand to reconnect with each other and their home country.' (Introduction)

(p. 35)
Reading the Mess Backwards, Yves Rees , single work essay

'When I’m ten or so, my brother appears shirtless at the dinner table. Ever the eager disciple, I follow his example without a second thought. It is a sweltering January day, and our bodies are salt-crusted from the beach. Clothing seems cruel in these conditions.' (Introduction)

(p. 36-39)
Coronaspeak : Tracking Language in a Pandemic, Amanda Laugesen , single work essay

'The Covid-19 pandemic has affected all our lives, and little else has featured in the media for weeks. Unsurprisingly, this has led those of us who work with words to track the language of the pandemic (coronaspeak) closely. Here at the Australian National Dictionary Centre (temporarily WFH, of course), we have been compiling a database of the words emerging from the pandemic; from anti-lockdown protest to zumping (being dumped via Zoom), the Covid-19 isolation lockdown has generated its own vocabulary.' (Introduction)

(p. 40)
Rights and Responsibilities : Literary Journals and Freedom of Expression, Robert Wood , single work essay

'A number of recent political events in Australia will have enduring and wide-ranging impacts on freedom of expression in this country. They include the denial of access to archival papers concerning the Whitlam dismissal, which Professor Jenny Hocking detailed in the April 2020 issue of ABR.' (Introduction)

(p. 41)
Prodigal Son : Conversations with Readers and Writers, Dan Dixon , single work review
— Review of Spinoza's Overcoat Subhash Jaireth , 2020 selected work essay ;
'For some of us, love for a work of literature brings with it a desire to learn about the work’s gestation. All the literary theory in the world can insist that a piece of writing is not a question to which the author holds the answer, but whenever a book or poem or essay catches our interest, we want to know more about the person behind it.' (Introduction)
(p. 44)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 4 Jun 2020 08:07:28
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