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Issue Details: First known date: 2019... vol. 29 no. 1 2019 of Australian Women's Book Review est. 1989 Australian Women's Book Review
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Last year there seemed to be some momentum towards accelerating carbon neutral futures, with Green new deals proposed in the US, the UK and Europe and elsewhere and a forthcoming UN climate change conference to meet in Glasgow in late 2020 to review international progress towards targets.' (Carole Ferrier, Editorial introduction)

Notes

  • Contents indexed selectively. Other works not individually indexed include:

    “A Human Being Is Greater Than War…” Review of Svetlana Alexievich. The Unwomanly Face of War by Susri Bhattacharya

    Always the Land of Legendary Droughts and Floods? Review of Joëlle Gergis Sunburnt Country: The History and Future of Climate Change in Australia  by Emily Duncanson

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2019 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Editorial, Carole Ferrier , single work essay (p. 5-14)
‘Be Careful What You Remember’, Anne Brewster , single work review
— Review of Sleep Catherine Cole , 2019 single work novel ;
'Catherine Cole’s new novel Sleep revolves around an extended family of women and the ways in which they manage intergenerational trauma. The protagonist, Ruth, struggles with issues of abandonment. She has to deal with the trauma of her mother, Monica, which had been passed down to Monica through her father, a survivor of the Second World War. He returned from the war a troubled and restless man, estranged from his family and the Yorkshire landscape of his childhood. He relocated the family from Yorkshire, where Monica had grown up, to London where they continued to move from house to house, with Monica and her sister always homesick for Yorkshire. Although they had never lived there, Monica’s daughter, Ruth, and her sister, Antoinette, remained deeply attached to the Yorkshire landscape of their mother’s childhood, and to the people who inhabited it, especially their Aunt Elsie.' (Introduction)
(p. 15-20)
Eyes Are Singing Out : Australia’s Justice System and the Importance of Speaking Up, Riley Byrne , single work review
— Review of Eggshell Skull Bri Lee , 2018 single work autobiography ;
'It took me the first thirty pages of Bri Lee’s Eggshell Skull to connect the jittery judge’s associate described in its opening chapter with the self-possessed author I had seen moderating an event at Avid Reader in Brisbane’s West End last year. I hadn’t even realised that the author of the book was Australian. But while Google quickly confirmed this, it would have been difficult to get much further into Lee’s memoir without being struck by the locality of it and its author.' (Introduction)
(p. 21-26)
Reaching Deep, Jena Woodhouse , single work review
— Review of The Yield Tara June Winch , 2019 single work novel ;
'Tara June Winch’s hugely accomplished and intensely engaging narrative, The Yield, reaches deep into Australian culture and society in its ancient, colonial and modern aspects. The means deployed to assemble this fluid, three-dimensional model of a place and its people are ingenious and effective.' (Introduction)
(p. 27-33)
‘History Will Find Me’ : The Life Journey of Zora Cross, Christina Ealing-Godbold , single work review
— Review of The Shelf Life of Zora Cross Cathy Perkins , 2019 single work biography ;
'As the gruesome reality of World War One dawned on Australians in 1917, a woman from Queensland published a book of love poetry which became one of the nation’s bestsellers. It was considered distasteful in society for a woman to display passion or allude to sex. Yet Zora Cross, born in Brisbane in 1890 and a granddaughter of Queensland pioneer and landowner, Zachariah Skyring, was to create something of a sensation with the publication of Songs of Love and Life. With a cover illustration by Norman Lindsay, the publication was bordering on scandalous.' 

 (Introduction)

(p. 39-43)
Families and Black Holes, Gillian Bouras , single work review
— Review of Man Out of Time Stephanie Bishop , 2018 single work novel ;
'It is a brave writer who tackles the subject of mental illness, sufferers of which still labour under the stigma of being “different”: most “ordinary” people fear and dread mental illness and find it hard to comprehend. But Stephanie Bishop, author of Man Out of Time, a novel in which the protagonist is clearly disturbed, is on record as stating that her father was plagued by depression for much of his life. Thus, she also runs the risk of readers taking her novel as a factual account, but it is definitely a work of the imagination, despite the parallels with Bishop’s life. In her second novel, the much-lauded The Other Side of the World, she also draws on her family background while constructing a gripping novel.' 

 (Introduction)

(p. 44-47)
Rediscovering Anne Elder, Poet and Dancer, Michelle Concetta Borzi , single work review
— Review of The Bright and the Cold : Selected Poems of Anne Elder 2018 anthology poetry ; The Heart's Ground : A Life of Anne Elder Julia Hamer , 2018 single work biography ;
'The Bright and the Cold: Selected Poems of Anne Elder compiled by Catherine Elder and The Heart’s Ground: A Life of Anne Elder by Julia Hamer are companion books in their representation of the oeuvre and life of a poet whose literary career began in the mid-1950s and subsequently produced two collections: For the Record in 1972 and Crazy Woman and Other Poems, posthumously in 1976. Anne Elder’s name is well known, synonymous as it is with the prestigious annual award for the first book of poetry published in Australia, an award inaugurated by her husband John Elder following her death. While each of Elder’s individual books received a few critical reviews, her full oeuvre has had minimal critical attention. Her books have long been out of print and this in itself will have limited her readership. Catherine Elder writes in her “Preface” that the concurrent publication in 2018 of a biography and the Selected, marks two milestones: the 100th anniversary of her mother’s birth and the 40th year of the Anne Elder Poetry Award.' (Introduction)
(p. 48-67)
A Measured Monograph on an Artful Modernist, Lesley Synge , single work review
— Review of The Fiction of Thea Astley Susan Sheridan , 2016 multi chapter work criticism ;
(p. 68-73)
Backwash, Emma Hamwood , single work review
— Review of Bluebottle Belinda Castles , 2018 single work novel ;
'Australian author, Belinda Castles has written four books. Her first novel was Falling Woman (2000); the second, The River Baptists (2007) was the winner of the Australian Vogel Literary Award (2006) while her third novel is Hannah & Emil (2012). In 2018, she released her fourth book, Bluebottle. The title can be interpreted as denoting the setting at Bilgola Beach, relationships of character, and the sting of the plot.' (Introduction)
(p. 74-76)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 6 Aug 2020 12:23:13
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