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Kristina Olsson Kristina Olsson i(A1913 works by) (a.k.a. Kris Olsson)
Born: Established: 1956 ;
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Invisible Histories : Excavating the Buried Past Kristina Olsson , 2020 single work essay
— Appears in: Griffith Review , no. 70 2020; (p. 21-32)

'IMAGINE YOURSELF A bird, huge, flying out of time through a smoky sky, back, back through millennia. Further than your own memory, deeper than your instinct: about 226 million years. Gondwana floats, massive, around the polar south. Umbilical. The shape of Australia, the place that will one day be your home, is still lost, a speck in the supercontinent, just recognisable from above if you know what you’re looking for. Still, you beat through temperate air; from your high currents you can make out great mountains and gouged valleys, the shapes of trees, small plants – delicate, lacy – and horsetails, mosses. Tree ferns, woody conifers, seed-bearing ginkgos. And there, between swamp and mountain, early dinosaurs – therapods. Young, toothless.' (Publication summary)

1 3 y separately published work icon Shell : A Novel Kristina Olsson , Cammeray : Scribner , 2018 13998429 2018 single work novel war literature

'In this spellbinding and poignant historical novel--perfect for fans of All the Light We Cannot See and The Flamethrowers--a Swedish glassmaker and a fiercely independent Australian journalist are thrown together amidst the turmoil of the 1960s and the dawning of a new modern era.

'1965: As the United States becomes further embroiled in the Vietnam War, the ripple effects are far-reaching--even to the other side of the world. In Australia, a national military draft has been announced and Pearl Keogh, a headstrong and ambitious newspaper reporter, has put her job in jeopardy to become involved in the anti-war movement. Desperate to locate her two runaway brothers before they're called to serve, Pearl is also hiding a secret shame--the guilt she feels for not doing more for her younger siblings after their mother's untimely death.

'Newly arrived from Sweden, Axel Lindquist is set to work as a sculptor on the besieged Sydney Opera House. After a childhood in Europe, where the shadow of WWII loomed large, he seeks to reinvent himself in this utterly foreign landscape, and finds artistic inspiration--and salvation--in the monument to modernity that is being constructed on Sydney's Harbor. But as the nation hurtles towards yet another war, Jørn Utzon, the Opera House's controversial architect, is nowhere to be found--and Axel fears that the past he has tried to outrun may be catching up with him.

'As the seas of change swirl around them, Pearl and Axel's lives orbit each other and collide in this sweeping novel of art and culture, love and destiny"--'(Publication summary)

1 A Tribute to Cory Taylor and Dying : A Memoir Kristina Olsson , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: The Stella Interviews 2018;

'Cory Taylor’s Dying: A Memoir is shortlisted for the 2017 Stella Prize. It was written in the space of a few weeks before Cory’s death from cancer in July 2016. To honour her shortlisting and celebrate the book, Cory’s friend Kristina Olsson shares this reflection.' (Introduction)

1 Glasswork Kristina Olsson , 2017 single work extract novel
— Appears in: Review of Australian Fiction , vol. 21 no. 5 2017;
1 Finding the Songlines : Sharing Stories with Dhapanbal Yunupingu Kristina Olsson , 2016 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 6 August 2016;
1 On Writing Boy, Lost Kristina Olsson , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 75 no. 2 2016; (p. 55-70)
'Boy, Lost was the book that was never going to be written. Was nearly not written. The following account is partly an answer to my own question: why not? And its echo: then why was it? It is also an attempt to understand one of the central and most vexed questions not just of this book but of the writing of memoir, a genre grounded in claims to knowledge and memory, in assumptions about the nature of 'truth'. (Introduction 55)
1 The Words We Loved Charlotte Wood , Geraldine Brooks , Graeme Simsion , Michael Robotham , Chris Wallace-Crabbe , Helen Garner , Favel Parrett , Gregory Day , Fiona Wright , Alexis Wright , Robert Adamson , Debra Adelaide , Lisa Gorton , Abigail Ulman , Christos Tsiolkas , Maxine Beneba Clarke , Susan Johnson , Kristina Olsson , Peter Goldsworthy , Tim Flannery , Malcolm Knox , Shane Maloney , Thomas Keneally , Don Watson , Anita Heiss , Omar Musa , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 12-13 December 2015; (p. 24-26) The Saturday Age , 12-13 December 2015; (p. 30)
Famous Australian writers pick their favourite reads of 2015
1 Force of Nature Kristina Olsson , 2014 single work column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian Magazine , 19-20 April 2014; (p. 18-24)
'Violence, racism, early motherhood...Keelen Mailman's life was following a predictable path - until her fighting spirit took over and a mighty cattle station beckoned her home.'
1 Endless Summer Nick Earls , Kristina Olsson , Stephen M. Irwin , 2014 single work column
— Appears in: Brisbane News , 12-18 February no. 967 2014; (p. 12-13)
1 The Missing Kristina Olsson , 2013 extract biography (Boy, Lost : A Family Memoir)
— Appears in: The Courier-Mail , 30-31 March 2013; (p. 22-26)
1 18 y separately published work icon Boy, Lost : A Family Memoir Kristina Olsson , St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2013 Z1923431 2013 single work biography (taught in 2 units)

'Kristina Olsson's mother lost her infant son, Peter, when he was snatched from her arms as she boarded a train in the hot summer of 1950. She was young and frightened, trying to escape a brutal marriage, but despite the violence and cruelty she'd endured, she was not prepared for this final blow, this breathtaking punishment. Yvonne would not see her son again for nearly 40 years.

'Kristina was the first child of her mother's subsequent, much gentler marriage and, like her siblings, grew up unaware of the reasons behind her mother's sorrow, though Peter's absence resounded through the family, marking each one. Yvonne dreamt of her son by day and by night, while Peter grew up a thousand miles and a lifetime away, dreaming of his missing mother.

'Boy, Lost tells how their lives proceeded from that shattering moment, the grief and shame that stalked them, what they lost and what they salvaged. But it is also the story of a family, the cascade of grief and guilt through generations, and the endurance of memory and faith.' (Publisher's blurb)

1 A Kind of Forgetting : Bound by the Echoes of Sons Lost (From a work-in-progress) Kristina Olsson , 2012 extract biography
— Appears in: Griffith Review , Spring no. 37 2012; (p. 240-252)
1 It's a Boy Kristina Olsson (interviewer), 2012 single work interview
— Appears in: The Sunday Mail , 13 May 2012; (p. 12-16)
1 Letter from Crete Kristina Olsson , 2011 single work short story
— Appears in: Rex : The Journal of New Writing , vol. 3 no. 2 2011; (p. 30-32)
1 A Gift across Time Kristina Olsson , 2010 single work biography
— Appears in: Australian Author , April vol. 42 no. 1 2010; (p. 28)
1 Ourselves/Themselves : On Mothers, Fathers and Writing Kristina Olsson , Matthew Condon , 2010 single work correspondence
— Appears in: Island , Winter no. 121 2010; (p. 8-14)
1 She Says: Naming and Grandmother Magic Kristina Olsson , 2009 single work autobiography
— Appears in: Grandma Magic : True Stories by and about Grandmothers 2009; (p. 9-22)
2 13 y separately published work icon The China Garden Kristina Olsson , St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2009 Z1559414 2009 single work novel

'The China Garden follows three protagonists over a 2-week period that culminates in a shocking event that affects them all. Fifty-year-old Laura has come home from Italy to bury her mother Angela and get her affairs in order. However, she has an unexpected surprise waiting for her. Until Angela's death, Laura had believed she was an only child, but the will has made allowance for a brother she had never known, adopted out at birth. In another part of town, 70-year-old Cress is grieving the loss, not only of Angela, but of her own faith. She consoles herself with irregular thefts from the op shop where she volunteers: an old wedding dress, a silver fork, small pictures of the Virgin Mary. Somewhere among these things, she knows, she will relocate faith, she will fend off fear. Kieran, the watcher, sees them both. Kieran is a gatherer of information, a 30-year-old quiz show addict who failed junior school but is good at other kinds of knowing; who knits his world together with cunningly garnered facts and lovingly stored information. As the tragic event looms, it pierces and links the lives of the three characters. The China Garden explores identity in mid-century and mid-life; examining the effects of social policies in a country struggling to re-establish a facade of goodness and morality after a major world war. It shows how the events of mid-life, the death of parents, the confrontation with lost faith or the fruits of youthful mistakes might unravel the various versions of ourselves that we construct in order to survive.' Source: Provided by publisher.

1 Secrets and Memories Kristina Olsson , 2008 single work criticism
— Appears in: Perilous Adventures , vol. 08 no. 9 2008;
Who owns the facts of our lives? We would hope, of course, that we own our own. Only we, as individuals, have lived in our skins, seen through our eyes, felt with our hearts and touched with our hands. But does that mean we know ourselves truthfully and well? Are our own versions of ourselves more accurate and reliable than another's version of us?
1 Love and the First Page Kristina Olsson , 2008 single work criticism
— Appears in: Perilous Adventures , vol. 08 no. 9 2008;
I remember books by their beginnings. This may not be fair. Sometimes, an ordinary beginning leads the reader coquettishly, cleverly, into the multi-layered complexity of a stunning narrative you couldn't have guessed at by its first page. That's happened to me enough times, as a reader, to urge me past an opening paragraph that bores or fails to seduce or just doesn't promise enough, to the next page and the next until suddenly I'm four pages from the end and panicking, wishing there was more. But still, I'm a sucker for that beautiful first page or paragraph. Often, it means the difference between taking a book home and leaving it on the bookshop shelf.
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