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y separately published work icon Australian Book Review periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2020... no. 422 June-July 2020 of Australian Book Review est. 1961 Australian Book Review
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2020 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
The Magnificent Mrs Mac : Australia's Woman Radio Pioneer, Jacqueline Kent , single work review
— Review of Radio Girl David Dufty , 2020 single work biography ;

'At first glance, this biography does not look especially compelling. Why should we want to know about Australia’s first woman radio pioneer? But David Dufty calmly and quietly shows why Violet McKenzie is well worth celebrating.' (Introduction)

(p. 45)
A Sevenfold Whammy : The Burdens of Self-doubt, Susan Varga , single work review
— Review of Untethered : A Memoir Hayley Katzen , 2020 single work autobiography ;
'What tethers you to your life? For most people it is the filaments of connection – family, place, friends, work. Hayley Katzen becomes untethered in multiple ways in this engaging and highly readable book. Many will identify with that period of life when you are technically a functioning adult, but there remains a long, long journey ahead to real adulthood. Katzen has a sevenfold whammy: a broken family life; the trauma of immigration; losing her Jewish heritage; discovering herself as a lesbian; dropping out of a career; moving to the country; and falling in love with an ‘unsuitable’ woman.' (Introduction)
(p. 46)
Sweet Man : Unriddling a Mercurial Father, Tali Lavi , single work review
— Review of Daddy Cool : Finding My Father, the Singer Who Swapped Hollywood Fame for Home in Australia Darleen Bungey , 2020 single work biography ;

‘“I must remember accurately,” I told myself, “remember everything accurately so that when he is gone I can re-create the father who created me.”’ This is Philip Roth exhorting himself while witnessing his declining father bathe in Patrimony: A true story (1991), a memoir that opens when Herman Roth is diagnosed with a brain tumour. The book, tender but also brutal, slips between the present and the past. Philip Roth, after all, is the writer. The matter of accuracy feels particularly perilous when the subject is the writer’s parent, if the intention is not to write a hagiography. It takes a particular kind of courage to countenance a parent’s failings when not motivated by revenge.' (Introduction)

(p. 48-49)
Not What They Used to Be : Pre-Pandemic Reflections on Elders, Kerryn Goldsworthy , single work review
— Review of Grandmothers : Essays by 21st-century Grandmothers 2020 anthology autobiography ; A Lasting Conversation : Stories on Ageing 2020 anthology short story prose ;
'Grandmothers are not what they used to be, as Elizabeth Jolley once said of custard tarts. It’s a point made by several contributors to Helen Elliott’s lively and thoughtfully curated collection of essays on the subject, Grandmothers, and it partly explains why these two books are not as similar as you might expect.' (Introduction)
(p. 50-51)
'A Universal Hum' : Three New Poetry Collections, Luke Beesley , single work review
— Review of God is Waiting in the World’s Yard M. T. C. Cronin , 2019 selected work poetry ; Element : The Atomic Weight and Radius of Love Jordie Albiston , 2020 selected work poetry ; Family Trees Michael Farrell , 2020 selected work poetry ;

'If I were to make gauche generalisations about the poetics of MTC Cronin, Jordie Albiston, and Michael Farrell, I might respectively write conceptualtechnical, and experimental. But these established poets – each in their fifties, highly regarded – display fluency with all these descriptors, especially in their latest books.' (Introduction)

(p. 53-54)
'Morning Carries On' : Two New Poetry Collections, Geoff Page , single work review
— Review of A Gathered Distance Mark Tredinnick , 2020 selected work poetry ; The Mirror Hurlers Ross Gillett , 2019 selected work poetry ;

'For Mark Tredinnick, best known so far as a nature poet employing distinctive and often ingenious imagery, A Gathered Distance is a brave book – even a risky one. It’s essentially the diary of a family breakup or, more accurately, its immediate aftermath. As with most poetry in the confessional genre, the poet is explicit about some people and reticent about others.' (Introduction)

(p. 55)
Catharsis : An Australian Film About PTSD, Jordan Prosser , single work review
— Review of Hearts and Bones Ben Lawrence , Beatrix Christian , 2019 single work film/TV ;

'Post-traumatic stress disorder is a slippery condition to pin down and portray. Cinema in general struggles to convey the depth and nuance of mental illness, especially when it stems from trauma. We’re often left with frenzied flashbacks, bombastic sound design, and overripe performances that skirt dangerously close to parody. A mental illness is like a haunting, which may be why genre cinema – especially the horror genre – has recently found such success exploring the topic.' (Introduction)

(p. 61-62)
Many Flights of Stairs : Australian Women Artists in France, Jane Sullivan , single work
— Review of Intrépide : Australian Women Artists in Early Twentieth-century France Clem Gorman , Therese Gorman , 2020 single work biography ;

'Art and Paris meant everything to Agnes Goodsir. ‘You must forgive my enthusiasm,’ she wrote. ‘Nothing else is of the smallest or faintest importance besides that.’ Goodsir was the Australian artist who painted the iconic portrait Girl with Cigarette, now in the Bendigo Art Gallery. It depicts a cool, sophisticated, free-spirited woman of the Parisian boulevards. When Goodsir created it, in 1925 or thereabouts, she had lived in Paris since the turn of the century. Apart from brief visits back to Australia, she stayed there until her death in 1939.' (Introduction)

(p. 65)
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