Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%

May 2024, no. 464

This issue includes the winning essay in the Calibre Essay Prize. Scott Stephens considers clerical narcissism and brutality, and Patrick Mullins reviews a new profile of Peter Dutton, that former copper with a ‘suspicious instinct’. In her review of James Bradley’s Deep Water, Felicity Plunkett asks why we turn away from disaster’s proximity, Tony Hughes-d’Aeth explores an ‘inflexion point in Indigenous letters’, ex-ambassador Geoff Raby ponders ‘Chairman of everything’ Xi Jinping, and Alice Whitmore reviews the new-old Gabriel García Márquez. Essays from Heather Neilson and Maggie Nolan look at Gore Vidal’s posthumous life and the expansion of Australia’s storytelling database, AustLit. We review novels by Charmian Clift, Melanie Joosten, Liam Pieper, Siang Lu; poetry by David Brooks and Omar Sakr; film, music, memoir and more.

Free Article: No
Contents Category: Advances
Review Article: No
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Advances - May 2024
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Calibre Essay Prize

Tracey Slaughter – a poet, fiction writer, and essayist from Aotearoa New Zealand – has won the 2024 Calibre Essay Prize. Her name will be familiar to ABR readers: she was runner-up in the 2018 Peter Porter Poetry Prize. Overseas writers have been shortlisted for Calibre in the past, but Tracey becomes the first to claim first prize.

Display Review Rating: No

Calibre Essay Prize

Tracey Slaughter – a poet, fiction writer, and essayist from Aotearoa New Zealand – has won the 2024 Calibre Essay Prize. Her name will be familiar to ABR readers: she was runner-up in the 2018 Peter Porter Poetry Prize. Overseas writers have been shortlisted for Calibre in the past, but Tracey becomes the first to claim first prize.

Read more: Advances - May 2024

Write comment (0 Comments)
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Editorial
Review Article: No
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Message to Subscribers
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

In June 2014, before he became prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull – then minister for communications in the Abbott government – addressed the imposingly named ‘CEDA National Annual Conference – State of the Nation’. His paper was titled ‘Australia Post in the Digital Age’.

Display Review Rating: No

In June 2014, before he became prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull – then minister for communications in the Abbott government – addressed the imposingly named ‘CEDA National Annual Conference – State of the Nation’. His paper was titled ‘Australia Post in the Digital Age’.

‘Australia Post,’ the minister stated, ‘[was] facing up to a technology tsunami which threatens its fundamental business model … Australia Post’s ability to respond to digital disruption – to digital substitution – [was] limited under regulations that [compelled] the company to provide a five day a week delivery service to 98 per cent of all homes and businesses.’ Nor did Turnbull overlook the hard-working ‘postie’, compelled to ‘go up and down your street every day whether his bag of letters is full or nearly empty’. 

Read more: Message to Subscribers

Write comment (0 Comments)
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Letters
Review Article: No
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Letters - May 2024
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Want to write a letter to ABR? Send one to us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Display Review Rating: No

noun Letter 862038 000000Want to write a letter to ABR? Send one to us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

 

Katerina Clark

Dear Editor,

Read more: Letters to the Editor - May 2024

Write comment (0 Comments)
Scott Stephens reviews ‘Crimes of the Cross: The Anglican paedophile network of Newcastle, its protectors and the man who fought for justice’ by Anne Manne
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Religion
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Soul blindness
Article Subtitle: Clerical narcissism and unfathomable cruelty
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

My first encounter with the writing of Anne Manne was ten years ago when I read The Life of I, her incomparable treatment of the various expressions of what she calls ‘the new culture of narcissism’. Some of the examples she adduces in that book are singularly monstrous – like the grandiose bloodlust of Anders Breivik or the sexual malevolence of Ariel Castro – while others are more like expressions of a dominant cultural logic, such as neoliberalism’s valorisation of self-sufficiency and the penalties it accordingly inflicts on both the vulnerable and those who care for them. But in each case she identifies a conspicuous failure of empathy, an incapacity (or perhaps unwillingness) to regard the moral reality of others such that it might present some constraint on the imposition of one’s will, some limit to the realisation of one’s designs.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Scott Stephens reviews ‘Crimes of the Cross: The Anglican paedophile network of Newcastle, its protectors and the man who fought for justice’ by Anne Manne
Book 1 Title: Crimes of the Cross
Book 1 Subtitle: The Anglican paedophile network of Newcastle, its protectors and the man who fought for justice
Book Author: Anne Manne
Book 1 Biblio: Black Inc., $36.99 pb, 326 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Book 1 Readings Link: https://www.readings.com.au/product/9781863959681/crimes-of-the-cross--anne-manne--2024--9781863959681https://www.readings.com.au/product/9781863959681/crimes-of-the-cross--anne-manne--2024--9781863959681#rac:jokjjzr6ly9m
Display Review Rating: No

My first encounter with the writing of Anne Manne was ten years ago when I read The Life of I, her incomparable treatment of the various expressions of what she calls ‘the new culture of narcissism’. Some of the examples she adduces in that book are singularly monstrous – like the grandiose bloodlust of Anders Breivik or the sexual malevolence of Ariel Castro – while others are more like expressions of a dominant cultural logic, such as neoliberalism’s valorisation of self-sufficiency and the penalties it accordingly inflicts on both the vulnerable and those who care for them. But in each case she identifies a conspicuous failure of empathy, an incapacity (or perhaps unwillingness) to regard the moral reality of others such that it might present some constraint on the imposition of one’s will, some limit to the realisation of one’s designs.

Read more: Scott Stephens reviews ‘Crimes of the Cross: The Anglican paedophile network of Newcastle, its...

Write comment (0 Comments)
Patrick Mullins reviews ‘Bad Cop: Peter Dutton’s strongman politics (Quarterly Essay 93)’ by Lech Blaine
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Politics
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: ‘Some grotesque Minotaur’
Article Subtitle: Peter Dutton’s aggressive formation
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Bill Hayden might today be recalled as the unluckiest man in politics: Bob Hawke replaced him as Labor leader on the same day that Malcolm Fraser called an election that Hayden, after years of rebuilding the Labor Party after the Whitlam years, was well positioned to win. But to dismiss him thus would be to overlook his very real and laudable efforts to make a difference in politics – as an early advocate for the decriminalisation of homosexuality, and as the social services minister who introduced pensions for single mothers and Australia’s first universal health insurance system, Medibank. Dismissing Hayden would also cause us to miss the counterpoint he provides to Peter Dutton, current leader of the Liberal Party.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Patrick Mullins reviews ‘Bad Cop: Peter Dutton’s strongman politics (Quarterly Essay 93)’ by Lech Blaine
Grid Image (300px * 250px):
Book 1 Title: Bad Cop
Book 1 Subtitle: Peter Dutton’s strongman politics (Quarterly Essay 93)
Book Author: Lech Blaine
Book 1 Biblio: Black Inc., $27.99 pb, 176 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

Bill Hayden might today be recalled as the unluckiest man in politics: Bob Hawke replaced him as Labor leader on the same day that Malcolm Fraser called an election that Hayden, after years of rebuilding the Labor Party after the Whitlam years, was well positioned to win. But to dismiss him thus would be to overlook his very real and laudable efforts to make a difference in politics – as an early advocate for the decriminalisation of homosexuality, and as the social services minister who introduced pensions for single mothers and Australia’s first universal health insurance system, Medibank. Dismissing Hayden would also cause us to miss the counterpoint he provides to Peter Dutton, current leader of the Liberal Party.

Read more: Patrick Mullins reviews ‘Bad Cop: Peter Dutton’s strongman politics (Quarterly Essay 93)’ by Lech...

Write comment (1 Comment)
Geoff Raby reviews ‘The Political Thought of Xi Jinping’ by Steve Tsang and Olivia Cheung
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Politics
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Chairman of everything
Article Subtitle: Understanding Xi Jinping
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Two of the defining figures of our age are China’s President Xi Jinping and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin. Both are authoritarian rulers intent on reshaping the global Western-led order. They despise and mistrust the United States equally, and, to justify their hold on power, promote a nationalist and civilisationist vision that elevates the long historical and cultural roots of their societies. They have defined themselves as indispensable for their respective countries’ futures and standing in the world.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Geoff Raby reviews ‘The Political Thought of Xi Jinping’ by Steve Tsang and Olivia Cheung
Book 1 Title: The Political Thought of Xi Jinping
Book Author: Steve Tsang and Olivia Cheung
Book 1 Biblio: Oxford University Press, £22.99 hb, 272 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

Two of the defining figures of our age are China’s President Xi Jinping and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin. Both are authoritarian rulers intent on reshaping the global Western-led order. They despise and mistrust the United States equally, and, to justify their hold on power, promote a nationalist and civilisationist vision that elevates the long historical and cultural roots of their societies. They have defined themselves as indispensable for their respective countries’ futures and standing in the world.

But the similarities end there. Putin’s power rests on his maintaining influence among a small cabal of wealthy oligarchs. Xi is the head of the only effective political institution operating in China: the Communist Party of China (CPC). This is a bureaucracy of some ninety-three million paid-up members, the biggest political party on the planet. It controls the military and all other organs of state power, and is dedicated to perpetuating its own rule.

Read more: Geoff Raby reviews ‘The Political Thought of Xi Jinping’ by Steve Tsang and Olivia Cheung

Write comment (1 Comment)
Tony Hughes-d’Aeth reviews ‘On Kim Scott: Writers on writers’ by Tony Birch
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Literary Studies
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Archival poetics
Article Subtitle: An inflexion point in Indigenous writing
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

In this latest instalment of Black Inc.’s ‘Writers on Writers’ series, we have the intriguing prospect of Tony Birch reflecting on the work of Kim Scott. While most of the previous twelve books in this series have featured a generational gap, Birch and Scott, both born in 1957, are almost exact contemporaries. This is also the first book in the series in which an Indigenous writer is considering the work of another Indigenous writer. It will not be giving too much away to say that Birch’s assessment of Scott’s oeuvre is based in admiration. There is no sting in the tail or smiling twist of the knife.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Tony Hughes-d’Aeth reviews ‘On Kim Scott: Writers on writers’ by Tony Birch
Book 1 Title: On Kim Scott
Book 1 Subtitle: Writers on writers
Book Author: Tony Birch
Book 1 Biblio: Black Inc., $22.99 hb, 89 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Book 1 Readings Link: https://www.readings.com.au/product/9781760644796/on-kim-scott--tony-birch--2024--9781760644796#rac:jokjjzr6ly9m
Display Review Rating: No

In this latest instalment of Black Inc.’s ‘Writers on Writers’ series, we have the intriguing prospect of Tony Birch reflecting on the work of Kim Scott. While most of the previous twelve books in this series have featured a generational gap, Birch and Scott, both born in 1957, are almost exact contemporaries. This is also the first book in the series in which an Indigenous writer is considering the work of another Indigenous writer. It will not be giving too much away to say that Birch’s assessment of Scott’s oeuvre is based in admiration. There is no sting in the tail or smiling twist of the knife.

Read more: Tony Hughes-d’Aeth reviews ‘On Kim Scott: Writers on writers’ by Tony Birch

Write comment (0 Comments)
Felicity Plunkett reviews ‘Deep Water: The world in the ocean’ by James Bradley
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Environment
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: ‘A babel of eerie sounds’
Article Subtitle: An elegiac mood in tension with hope
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

On the surface, this encyclopedic work offers a gloriously lyrical exploration of the sea. It could be part of a recent shoal of books about the more-than-human world, limning the wondrous and astonishing. In Deep Water: The world in the ocean, whales learn rhyme-like patterns to remember their songs, a ‘babel of strange, eerie sounds: skittering blips, long cries, whoops and basso moans’. A loggerhead turtle travels more than 37,000 kilometres to return to her birthplace. Sharks’ chemo-receptors prove acute enough to detect blood ‘in amounts as low as one part in a million’. Port Jackson sharks socialise with their peers, and evidence emerges that some fish species use tools.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Felicity Plunkett reviews ‘Deep Water: The world in the ocean’ by James Bradley
Book 1 Title: Deep Water
Book 1 Subtitle: The world in the ocean
Book Author: James Bradley
Book 1 Biblio: Hamish Hamilton, $36.99 pb, 464 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

On the surface, this encyclopedic work offers a gloriously lyrical exploration of the sea. It could be part of a recent shoal of books about the more-than-human world, limning the wondrous and astonishing. In Deep Water: The world in the ocean, whales learn rhyme-like patterns to remember their songs, a ‘babel of strange, eerie sounds: skittering blips, long cries, whoops and basso moans’. A loggerhead turtle travels more than 37,000 kilometres to return to her birthplace. Sharks’ chemo-receptors prove acute enough to detect blood ‘in amounts as low as one part in a million’. Port Jackson sharks socialise with their peers, and evidence emerges that some fish species use tools.

Read more: Felicity Plunkett reviews ‘Deep Water: The world in the ocean’ by James Bradley

Write comment (0 Comments)
Robyn Arianrhod reviews ‘Quantum Drama: From the Bohr-Einstein debate to the riddle of entanglement’ by Jim Baggott and John L. Heilbron
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Science
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Quantum Drama
Article Subtitle: From the Bohr-Einstein debate to the riddle of entanglement
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Let’s face it, quantum mechanics mystifies most of us. But as Quantum Drama shows, it baffled its creators, too – so much so that some of them turned to suicide, drink, or psychiatry (Carl Jung was a favourite). Who wouldn’t go crazy, trying to get their head around such bizarre happenings as subatomic particles sometimes being wave-like, and a theory that cannot tell you the particle’s definite state – its position and velocity, say – before you measure it? In ordinary ‘classical’ physics, by contrast, you can predict in advance every point on the trajectory of an ordinary object, such as a ball or a spacecraft, launched from any given place with any particular velocity. But quantum theory does not play by these long-established rules: until you observe the particle, all the theory can tell you are the chances it will show up at various places. As Einstein asked, ‘Do you really believe the Moon is only there when you look at it?’

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Robyn Arianrhod reviews ‘Quantum Drama: From the Bohr-Einstein debate to the riddle of entanglement’ by Jim Baggott and John L. Heilbron
Book 1 Title: Quantum Drama
Book 1 Subtitle: From the Bohr-Einstein debate to the riddle of entanglement
Book Author: Jim Baggott and John L. Heilbron
Book 1 Biblio: Oxford University Press, £25 hb, 352 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Book 1 Readings Link: https://www.readings.com.au/product/9780192846105/quantum-drama--dr-jim-baggott-prof-john-l-heilbron--2024--9780192846105#rac:jokjjzr6ly9m
Display Review Rating: No

Let’s face it, quantum mechanics mystifies most of us. But as Quantum Drama shows, it baffled its creators, too – so much so that some of them turned to suicide, drink, or psychiatry (Carl Jung was a favourite). Who wouldn’t go crazy, trying to get their head around such bizarre happenings as subatomic particles sometimes being wave-like, and a theory that cannot tell you the particle’s definite state – its position and velocity, say – before you measure it? In ordinary ‘classical’ physics, by contrast, you can predict in advance every point on the trajectory of an ordinary object, such as a ball or a spacecraft, launched from any given place with any particular velocity. But quantum theory does not play by these long-established rules: until you observe the particle, all the theory can tell you are the chances it will show up at various places. As Einstein asked, ‘Do you really believe the Moon is only there when you look at it?’

Read more: Robyn Arianrhod reviews ‘Quantum Drama: From the Bohr-Einstein debate to the riddle of...

Write comment (0 Comments)
2024 Calibre Essay Prize (Winner) | ‘why your hair is long & your stories short’ by Tracey Slaughter
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Calibre Prize
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: why your hair is long & your stories short
Article Subtitle: 2024 Calibre Essay Prize winner
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

‘A woman who cuts her hair is about to change her life.’

Coco Chanel

Related Article Image (300px * 400px):
Alt Tag (Related Article Image): 2024 Calibre Essay Prize (Winner) | ‘why your hair is long & your stories short’ by Tracey Slaughter
Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): 2024 Calibre Essay Prize (Winner) | ‘why your hair is long & your stories short’ by Tracey Slaughter
Display Review Rating: No

‘A woman who cuts her hair is about to change her life.’

Coco Chanel

Read more: 2024 Calibre Essay Prize (Winner) | ‘why your hair is long & your stories short’ by Tracey Slaughter

Write comment (0 Comments)
Amy Walters reviews ‘Like Fire-Hearted Suns’ by Melanie Joosten
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Fiction
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: The dismissal of self
Article Subtitle: Ticking the boxes of historical fiction
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Melanie Joosten’s third novel follows three women who are brought into contact during the fight for British women’s suffrage. Beatrice Taylor, captivated by the movement, becomes a full-blown militant. Her college roommate Catherine Dawson stays out of the direct struggle, preferring to advance women’s rights through a trail-blazing career in scientific research. Ida Bennett, a widow, supports herself and her children as a warden in Holloway Prison. Although sympathetic to the cause of women’s emancipation, when the suffragettes are jailed she is responsible for disciplining them.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Amy Walters reviews ‘Like Fire-Hearted Suns’ by Melanie Joosten
Book 1 Title: Like Fire-Hearted Suns
Book Author: Melanie Joosten
Book 1 Biblio: Ultimo Press $34.99 pb, 408 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

Melanie Joosten’s third novel follows three women who are brought into contact during the fight for British women’s suffrage. Beatrice Taylor, captivated by the movement, becomes a full-blown militant. Her college roommate Catherine Dawson stays out of the direct struggle, preferring to advance women’s rights through a trail-blazing career in scientific research. Ida Bennett, a widow, supports herself and her children as a warden in Holloway Prison. Although sympathetic to the cause of women’s emancipation, when the suffragettes are jailed she is responsible for disciplining them.

Read more: Amy Walters reviews ‘Like Fire-Hearted Suns’ by Melanie Joosten

Write comment (0 Comments)
Susan Sheridan review ‘The End of the Morning’ by Charmian Clift
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Fiction
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: A mythical quality
Article Subtitle: Charmian Clift’s posthumous novella
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Charmian Clift was a novelist, travel writer, and essayist who, with her writer husband George Johnston, lived with their young family on the Greek island of Hydra from 1955 to 1964. One member of the artist community who gathered around them there, the young Leonard Cohen, described them as having ‘a larger-than-life, a mythical quality’. That mythical quality was matched by real-life fame when, on their return to Australia, George’s novel My Brother Jack (1964) met with huge success, and Charmian became widely known and admired for her regular newspaper columns. Yet within five years of their return, both had died prematurely, Charmian by her own hand in 1969 and George of tuberculosis the following year.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Susan Sheridan review ‘The End of the Morning’ by Charmian Clift
Book 1 Title: The End of the Morning
Book Author: Charmian Clift
Book 1 Biblio: NewSouth, $34.99 pb, 225 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

Charmian Clift was a novelist, travel writer, and essayist who, with her writer husband George Johnston, lived with their young family on the Greek island of Hydra from 1955 to 1964. One member of the artist community who gathered around them there, the young Leonard Cohen, described them as having ‘a larger-than-life, a mythical quality’. That mythical quality was matched by real-life fame when, on their return to Australia, George’s novel My Brother Jack (1964) met with huge success, and Charmian became widely known and admired for her regular newspaper columns. Yet within five years of their return, both had died prematurely, Charmian by her own hand in 1969 and George of tuberculosis the following year.

Such tragic circumstances fed into what Clift’s biographer, Nadia Wheatley, was to call The Life and Myth of Charmian Clift (2001). As she points out, when two writers, often collaborators, both wrote autobiographical fiction where the Charmian character was called Cressida Morley, there was a blurring of boundaries between private and public areas, especially between the stories of Charmian and Cressida. This complicated the biographer’s task of untangling her subject’s ‘real’ identity from the myth.

Read more: Susan Sheridan review ‘The End of the Morning’ by Charmian Clift

Write comment (0 Comments)
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Poem
Review Article: No
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Defeat Device
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

 ‘I made bad decisions and for that I am sorry.’

(Oliver Schmidt, Volkswagen AG Executive, 2017)

Display Review Rating: No

I made bad decisions and for that I am sorry.

(Oliver Schmidt, Volkswagen AG Executive, 2017)

Read more: ‘Defeat Device’, a new poem by Lachlan Brown

Write comment (1 Comment)
Eli McLean reviews ‘Appreciation’ by Liam Pieper
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Fiction
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Restlessness
Article Subtitle: Ghost writing as recuperative practice
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

‘There are only so many ways to make a story work.’ So begins Liam Pieper’s new novel, Appreciation, a hyper-contemporary chronicle of one artist’s vain attempt to redeem his reputation in the eyes of a disappointed public. Drug-addled, egomaniacal, and hopeless, Oli Darling – an enfant terrible of Australian art – is in desperate need of rehabilitation. And the advice of his equally desperate coterie? Employ a ghost writer and publish your memoir, of course. Pieper having made a career of his own in ghost writing, Appreciation cuts close to the bone. As the opening line suggests, however, there is little room for redemption when all the ways of making your story work have been exhausted.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Eli McLean reviews ‘Appreciation’ by Liam Pieper
Book 1 Title: Appreciation
Book Author: Liam Pieper
Book 1 Biblio: Hamish Hamilton, $34.99 pb, 358 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

‘There are only so many ways to make a story work.’ So begins Liam Pieper’s new novel, Appreciation, a hyper-contemporary chronicle of one artist’s vain attempt to redeem his reputation in the eyes of a disappointed public. Drug-addled, egomaniacal, and hopeless, Oli Darling – an enfant terrible of Australian art – is in desperate need of rehabilitation. And the advice of his equally desperate coterie? Employ a ghost writer and publish your memoir, of course. Pieper having made a career of his own in ghost writing, Appreciation cuts close to the bone. As the opening line suggests, however, there is little room for redemption when all the ways of making your story work have been exhausted.

Read more: Eli McLean reviews ‘Appreciation’ by Liam Pieper

Write comment (0 Comments)
Alice Whitmore reviews ‘Until August’ by Gabriel García Márquez and translated by Anne McLean
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Fiction
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Gabo was right
Article Subtitle: A posthumous appendix to García Márquez’s oeuvre
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

In Gabriel García Márquez’s most famous novel, One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967), Colonel Aureliano Buendía twice requests that his poetry be destroyed – first when he is in prison, preparing to face the firing squad. He hands his mother a roll of sweat-stained poems and instructs her to burn them. ‘Promise me that no one will read them,’ he says. His mother promises, but does not burn the poems. Years later, as a different family member is about to light the oven, the colonel hands her the same roll of yellowed papers. ‘Light it with this,’ he says. When she refuses, the colonel feeds the poems to the fire himself.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Alice Whitmore reviews ‘Until August’ by Gabriel García Márquez and translated by Anne McLean
Book 1 Title: Until August
Book Author: Gabriel García Márquez, translated by Anne McLean
Book 1 Biblio: Viking, $35 hb, 129 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

In Gabriel García Márquez’s most famous novel, One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967), Colonel Aureliano Buendía twice requests that his poetry be destroyed – first when he is in prison, preparing to face the firing squad. He hands his mother a roll of sweat-stained poems and instructs her to burn them. ‘Promise me that no one will read them,’ he says. His mother promises, but does not burn the poems. Years later, as a different family member is about to light the oven, the colonel hands her the same roll of yellowed papers. ‘Light it with this,’ he says. When she refuses, the colonel feeds the poems to the fire himself.

Read more: Alice Whitmore reviews ‘Until August’ by Gabriel García Márquez and translated by Anne McLean

Write comment (0 Comments)
Giselle Au-Nhien Nguyen reviews ‘Ghost Cities’ by Siang Lu
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Fiction
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Sliding places
Article Subtitle: An experimental second novel
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Siang Lu’s polyphonic début novel, The Whitewash (2022), occupied a unique place in Australian fiction. It was written as an oral history, with a cast of voices, sometimes in conflict with one another, coalescing to tell the story of the rise and fall of a Hollywood spy blockbuster. The film was supposed to star the first-ever Asian male lead in such a role, but he was replaced by a white actor at the last minute. Blending real and invented film history, The Whitewash was an original work of satire, providing a breath of fresh air in the local literary landscape – even more so considering that it dealt so adroitly with matters of race and representation, normally approached in a much more conventional, and predictable, way.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Giselle Au-Nhien Nguyen reviews ‘Ghost Cities’ by Siang Lu
Book 1 Title: Ghost Cities
Book Author: Siang Lu
Book 1 Biblio: University of Queensland Press, $32.99 pb, 289 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

Siang Lu’s polyphonic début novel, The Whitewash (2022), occupied a unique place in Australian fiction. It was written as an oral history, with a cast of voices, sometimes in conflict with one another, coalescing to tell the story of the rise and fall of a Hollywood spy blockbuster. The film was supposed to star the first-ever Asian male lead in such a role, but he was replaced by a white actor at the last minute. Blending real and invented film history, The Whitewash was an original work of satire, providing a breath of fresh air in the local literary landscape – even more so considering that it dealt so adroitly with matters of race and representation, normally approached in a much more conventional, and predictable, way.

Ghost Cities, Lu’s second novel, also takes an ambitious and inventive approach. This time, it is through dual narratives that both highlight something true about modern life and work through the absurdist lenses of late capitalism and rapid technological advances.

The first thread involves Xiang Lu, a young man living in Sydney who is fired from his job as a translator at the Chinese Consulate when it is discovered that he has been using Google Translate for his work, and cannot in fact speak the language, let alone interpret it. When he goes viral as #BadChinese, a tricksy film director, Baby Bao, senses an opportunity for marketing success.

The second takes place centuries earlier via a series of fable-like tales about an ancient emperor’s rule, and his efforts to ensure that his power and influence remain uncontested. These narratives loop around one another, through surprising and often perplexing paths – from the creation of thousands of indistinguishable emperor clones to a cautionary tale about a power-hungry mountain. Yet another strand concerns Wuer, the emperor’s concubine, who embarks on a secret journey to recreate all the destroyed books, and therefore knowledge, of the empire.

The initial thing tying these two timelines together is Death of a Pagoda, a text written in the ancient setting but unfinished due to the exile of the author, who was one of three scholars summoned to compose the emperor’s origin story. The emperor, incensed at the work produced by the scholars, which painted him in a negative light, banished them all to the Six Levels of Hell and destroyed the Imperial Library and all the books within it – another act of control and censorship. In the modern timeline, Death of a Pagoda is being made into a film by Baby Bao, who latches onto Xiang’s virality to turn his sprawling vision into a reality.

That venture whisks Xiang across the world, with interpreter and love interest Yuan in tow, to the dystopian ghost city of Port Man Tou, a fictionalised and animated version of China’s abandoned megacities. There, he discovers ‘a film set within a city within a film set’. So begins an existence reminiscent of The Truman Show (1998), where reality and simulation blur, and citizens are all paid actors. The Department of Verisimilitude is the body that oversees Port Man Tou, ‘to make sure every inch of the city is believable’. Xiang cannot even be sure that his romance with Yuan is not simply an extension of this simulated world.

Baby Bao – or as he is later simply known, The Director – and the emperor are mirrors to one another across the timelines. Both display a kind of megalomania, a desperate desire for control and order. Xiang and Yuan – and, in the past timeline, Wuer – are the dissenters who represent a breaking away from tradition, a refusal. They are the people writing their own stories (and histories) in the face of authoritarianism.

Lu is a playful and imaginative writer who takes obvious pleasure in the possibilities of language – its limitations and permutations. It is evident in his wordplay – the two parts of the book are titled, respectively, ‘Assimilated Man’ and ‘A Simulated Man’, and the name of the city of Port Man Tou suggests another assimilation. Untranslated Chinese appears throughout the novel, which keeps the reader at a remove similar to that which Xiang feels – we might approach something resembling the truth or comprehension, but it remains tantalisingly out of reach.

As in The Whitewash, Lu takes an interest in the film world and how stories are constructed (or twisted, depending on your perspective) for an audience – and what that says about the society they exist in and cater for. In Ghost Cities, it is evident in the way that The Director builds his set and story, and how Xiang becomes a pawn in that game. Film is the record-keeper of choice in the modern timeline, as books and scripts were in the past, but it bleeds into real life, too – again, the difference between fact and fiction melts into a liminal third space.

The city of Port Man Tou ultimately becomes a character in and unto itself, relying less on human interaction and involvement as technology develops and allows it to bloom undisturbed, as it ‘replaces itself with new and stranger iterations’. Xiang and Yuan watch from afar with a mixture of fear and admiration, reflecting the experience of being a human in an increasingly automated world.

Reading Ghost Cities can feel discombobulating, flitting back and forth between these disparate timelines and stories. The connection between the two is sometimes tenuous and the scope of it overwhelming, but like a jigsaw puzzle, the challenge is in finding the places where two pieces slide together seamlessly – and sometimes surprisingly. It is an impressive piece of work that blends genre tropes, storytelling techniques, and observations of the modern world to cement Lu as an assured voice in experimental Australian fiction.

Write comment (0 Comments)
‘Information and transformation: The continuing expansion of AustLit’ by Maggie Nolan
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Commentary
Custom Article Title: Information and transformation: The continuing expansion of AustLit
Review Article: No
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Information and transformation
Article Subtitle: The continuing expansion of AustLit
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Say, you’re a school teacher in the Kimberley region of Western Australia, and you’re looking for a play for your class to perform that is set in Broome. Or maybe you’re a crime writer playing with the idea of writing a novel set in Sydney and want to check out what other crime novels have been set there. Perhaps you just found out that your great aunt once wrote a series of poems, and you want to know more. It could even be that you’re an author wanting to find the reviews of your latest short story collection. All this, and more, can be found in AustLit. Scholars of Australian literature know how valuable AustLit has been for over two decades, but anyone with an interest in Australian literary culture will find something worth exploring in Australia’s national literary database. AustLit will not only answer your questions, it will surely inspire more.

Related Article Image (300px * 400px):
Alt Tag (Related Article Image): ‘Information and transformation: The continuing expansion of AustLit’ by Maggie Nolan
Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): ‘Information and transformation: The continuing expansion of AustLit’ by Maggie Nolan
Display Review Rating: No

Say, you’re a school teacher in the Kimberley region of Western Australia, and you’re looking for a play for your class to perform that is set in Broome. Or maybe you’re a crime writer playing with the idea of writing a novel set in Sydney and want to check out what other crime novels have been set there. Perhaps you just found out that your great aunt once wrote a series of poems, and you want to know more. It could even be that you’re an author wanting to find the reviews of your latest short story collection. All this, and more, can be found in AustLit. Scholars of Australian literature know how valuable AustLit has been for over two decades, but anyone with an interest in Australian literary culture will find something worth exploring in Australia’s national literary database. AustLit will not only answer your questions, it will surely inspire more.

For those who don’t know, AustLit is a comprehensive and authoritative bibliographical and biographical database of Australian storytelling. It evolved in the 1980s from a need to integrate and house a range of existing specialist bibliographical projects and databases relating to Australia’s literary and print history that were scattered throughout different institutions across the country. Starting as a card catalogue at UNSW Duntroon, now UNSW Canberra, it subsequently incorporated A Bibliography of Australian Multicultural Writers out of Monash, A Bibliography of Literary Responses to ‘Asia’ at Flinders University, Western Australian Writing from UWA, and Writers of Tropical North Queensland from James Cook University. It also brought in existing bibliographies of children’s literature, work that continues.

After a brief life as a CD-ROM in the 1990s, AustLit went online in September 2001 and was launched by Brendan Nelson, the federal minister for education, in August 2002. This online iteration included an advanced search function built around a data model based on FRBR – Functional Requirements for Bibliographical Records – a bibliographical system that was promoted by the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions. Because AustLit was constructed according to established bibliographical standards that were in place prior to the integration of the records, there is a great deal of consistency across the database, and its search function enables nuanced and fine-grained explorations of the literary field. If you want, for example, to find all the novels set in the 1980s written by women born in Brisbane, you can. Or, if you want to know which film and television scripts were written by Noongar writers, AustLit can tell you.

Read more: ‘Information and transformation: The continuing expansion of AustLit’ by Maggie Nolan

Write comment (0 Comments)
Diane Stubbings reviews ‘Missing Persons, Or My Grandmother’s Secrets’ by Clair Wills
Free Article: No
Contents Category: History
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Silence and stigma
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

When amateur historian Catherine Corless wrote in the Journal of the Old Tuam Society (2012) that the bodies of 796 children who had died in Tuam’s Mother and Baby Home between 1925 and 1961 might have been interred in a disused septic tank within the home’s grounds, she supposed her involvement in the search for truth would be at an end. The article, she expected, would prompt academics, politicians, and law enforcement agencies – not to mention the Bon Secours nuns who ran the home – to begin their own inquiries.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Diane Stubbings reviews ‘Missing Persons, Or My Grandmother’s Secrets’ by Clair Wills
Book 1 Title: Missing Persons, Or My Grandmother’s Secrets
Book Author: Clair Wills
Book 1 Biblio: Allen Lane, $45 hb, 208 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

When amateur historian Catherine Corless wrote in the Journal of the Old Tuam Society (2012) that the bodies of 796 children who had died in Tuam’s Mother and Baby Home between 1925 and 1961 might have been interred in a disused septic tank within the home’s grounds, she supposed her involvement in the search for truth would be at an end. The article, she expected, would prompt academics, politicians, and law enforcement agencies – not to mention the Bon Secours nuns who ran the home – to begin their own inquiries.

Read more: Diane Stubbings reviews ‘Missing Persons, Or My Grandmother’s Secrets’ by Clair Wills

Write comment (0 Comments)
Miles Pattenden reviews ‘Forbidden Desire in Early Modern Europe: Male-male sexual relations, 1400-1750’ by Noel Malcolm
Free Article: No
Contents Category: History
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Sodomites and catamites
Article Subtitle: An engaging history of European homosexuality
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Do gay men have a history – and, if so, what is it? Historians have grappled with such questions ever since Michel Foucault first published his History of Sexuality in the 1970s. The stakes are high because they are political: at root, they contest nature versus nurture. We know that men who have sex with other men have existed in every past society. But were those men the same as modern homosexuals? Many contemporary gays claim them as forerunners – yet several scholars see modern homosexuality as, fundamentally, a creation of contemporary late-stage capitalism and a chronological and cultural anomaly, whose associated rights may prove equally ephemeral.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Miles Pattenden reviews ‘Forbidden Desire in Early Modern Europe: Male-male sexual relations, 1400-1750’ by Noel Malcolm
Book 1 Title: Forbidden Desire in Early Modern Europe
Book 1 Subtitle: Male-male sexual relations, 1400-1750
Book Author: Noel Malcolm
Book 1 Biblio: Oxford University Press, £25 hb, 608 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

Do gay men have a history – and, if so, what is it? Historians have grappled with such questions ever since Michel Foucault first published his History of Sexuality in the 1970s. The stakes are high because they are political: at root, they contest nature versus nurture. We know that men who have sex with other men have existed in every past society. But were those men the same as modern homosexuals? Many contemporary gays claim them as forerunners – yet several scholars see modern homosexuality as, fundamentally, a creation of contemporary late-stage capitalism and a chronological and cultural anomaly, whose associated rights may prove equally ephemeral.

Read more: Miles Pattenden reviews ‘Forbidden Desire in Early Modern Europe: Male-male sexual relations,...

Write comment (1 Comment)
Peter McPhee reviews ‘The Revolutionary Temper: Paris, 1748-1789’ by Robert Darnton
Free Article: No
Contents Category: History
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Limitless possibilities
Article Subtitle: A magisterial study of revolutionary France
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

On 27 August 1783, Jacques Charles launched the world’s first hydrogen balloon flight from the Champ de Mars (now the site of the Eiffel Tower). He excluded his rival Jacques-Étienne Montgolfier from the ticketed reserve. Then, on 21 November, Charles and another ‘navigateur aérien’ made the first manned flight, landing thirty kilometres north of Paris. Montgolfier was invited to cut a ribbon as a gesture of reconciliation in the name of science.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Peter McPhee reviews ‘The Revolutionary Temper: Paris, 1748-1789’ by Robert Darnton
Book 1 Title: The Revolutionary Temper
Book 1 Subtitle: Paris, 1748-1789
Book Author: Robert Darnton
Book 1 Biblio: Allen Lane, $65 hb, 547 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

On 27 August 1783, Jacques Charles launched the world’s first hydrogen balloon flight from the Champ de Mars (now the site of the Eiffel Tower). He excluded his rival Jacques-Étienne Montgolfier from the ticketed reserve. Then, on 21 November, Charles and another ‘navigateur aérien’ made the first manned flight, landing thirty kilometres north of Paris. Montgolfier was invited to cut a ribbon as a gesture of reconciliation in the name of science.

The public exhilaration generated by the balloon flights is the perfect metaphor for Robert Darnton: ‘Man had conquered the air … Perhaps even the laws governing society could be mastered. Reason seemed capable of anything.’ The week after the first flight, on 3 September 1783, the Peace of Paris was signed, formally ending the American War of Independence and recognising the new United States. The new republic further inspired radical ideas in Paris, just as the costs of France’s military involvement in the war would trigger a financial crisis that Louis XVI fumbled fatally.

Read more: Peter McPhee reviews ‘The Revolutionary Temper: Paris, 1748-1789’ by Robert Darnton

Write comment (0 Comments)
Ebony Nilsson reviews ‘No Country for Idealists: The making of a family of subversives’ by Boris Frankel
Free Article: No
Contents Category: History
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Both portrait and polemic
Article Subtitle: Boris Frankel’s genre-bending work
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

I first met Boris Frankel when he was a thirteen-year-old, in the pages of a file at the National Archives of Australia. I was working on Russian migrant families in Australia that decided to return to the Soviet Union, but then tried to come back to Australia. Boris and his sister Genia had travelled more than 1,500 kilometres from the Crimea to Moscow, alone, in 1959, in the hopes of persuading British authorities to allow their return to Australia. It was a remarkable story: two teenagers who negotiated Soviet bureaucracy and surveillance, made an impassioned plea, and secured the support of a British ambassador. The file even contained letters the children had written to Prime Minister Robert Menzies – their own, teenaged voices. Letters like this are a historian’s dream: I felt I had got to the heart of the story. And yet, in Boris Frankel’s historical memoir, No Country for Idealists, I saw the trip to Moscow anew. In the texture of Frankel’s narrative – their Siberian cabin-mate on the train journey (named Rasputin!), the ambassador’s chef who cooked them breakfast – the wonder of the journey emerged afresh.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Ebony Nilsson reviews ‘No Country for Idealists: The making of a family of subversives’ by Boris Frankel
Book 1 Title: No Country for Idealists
Book 1 Subtitle: The making of a family of subversives
Book Author: Boris Frankel
Book 1 Biblio: Greenmeadows, $34.99 pb, 384 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

I first met Boris Frankel when he was a thirteen-year-old, in the pages of a file at the National Archives of Australia. I was working on Russian migrant families in Australia that decided to return to the Soviet Union, but then tried to come back to Australia. Boris and his sister Genia had travelled more than 1,500 kilometres from the Crimea to Moscow, alone, in 1959, in the hopes of persuading British authorities to allow their return to Australia. It was a remarkable story: two teenagers who negotiated Soviet bureaucracy and surveillance, made an impassioned plea, and secured the support of a British ambassador. The file even contained letters the children had written to Prime Minister Robert Menzies – their own, teenaged voices. Letters like this are a historian’s dream: I felt I had got to the heart of the story. And yet, in Boris Frankel’s historical memoir, No Country for Idealists, I saw the trip to Moscow anew. In the texture of Frankel’s narrative – their Siberian cabin-mate on the train journey (named Rasputin!), the ambassador’s chef who cooked them breakfast – the wonder of the journey emerged afresh.

Read more: Ebony Nilsson reviews ‘No Country for Idealists: The making of a family of subversives’ by Boris...

Write comment (0 Comments)
Claudio Bozzi reviews ‘The Shortest History of Italy’ by Ross King
Free Article: No
Contents Category: History
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: History short and bittersweet
Article Subtitle: Italia, broadly synthesised
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

This book is orthodox in its range (from the foundation of Rome to the Covid pandemic), organised into specific historical periods (Renaissance, Illuminismo, Risorgimento), and traditional in telling history largely through eminent biographies and great historical events.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Claudio Bozzi reviews ‘The Shortest History of Italy’ by Ross King
Book 1 Title: The Shortest History of Italy
Book Author: Ross King
Book 1 Biblio: Black Inc., $27.99 pb, 262 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

This book is orthodox in its range (from the foundation of Rome to the Covid pandemic), organised into specific historical periods (Renaissance, Illuminismo, Risorgimento), and traditional in telling history largely through eminent biographies and great historical events.

A book aimed at a general readership cannot enter into the debates of ancient historiography. The author acknowledges that attempts to distinguish between the historical and mythical in early Rome are dangerous, and trusts the classical historians thereafter. But they present their own problems, which current research balances against archaeological evidence. Tacitus may control the errors and generalisations of Suetonius and Cassius Dio, but the senator has his own reasons for telling stories as he does.

Read more: Claudio Bozzi reviews ‘The Shortest History of Italy’ by Ross King

Write comment (0 Comments)
Gideon Haigh reviews ‘Alice™: The biggest untold story in the history of money’ by Stuart Kells
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Finance
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Alice Corp
Article Subtitle: A study of financial entropy
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

In the last decade, Stuart Kells has become one of Australia’s most versatile and fecund non-fiction writers, responsible for a variety of diverting histories, of enterprises, institutions, and ideas. His thoroughly readable The Library: A catalogue of wonders (2017) was shortlisted for a Prime Minister’s Award; his Shakespeare’s Library: Unlocking the greatest mystery in literature (2018) felt rather more padded, if not unenjoyably so. Books about Argyle Diamonds (2021) and Melbourne University Publishing (2023) have been welcome. I imagine him in a medieval artisanal workshop, a kind of booksmith studiously occupied in multiple, simultaneous pursuits.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Gideon Haigh reviews ‘Alice™: The biggest untold story in the history of money’ by Stuart Kells
Book 1 Title: Alice™
Book 1 Subtitle: The biggest untold story in the history of money
Book Author: Stuart Kells
Book 1 Biblio: Melbourne University Publishing, $35 pb, 272 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

In the last decade, Stuart Kells has become one of Australia’s most versatile and fecund non-fiction writers, responsible for a variety of diverting histories, of enterprises, institutions, and ideas. His thoroughly readable The Library: A catalogue of wonders (2017) was shortlisted for a Prime Minister’s Award; his Shakespeare’s Library: Unlocking the greatest mystery in literature (2018) felt rather more padded, if not unenjoyably so. Books about Argyle Diamonds (2021) and Melbourne University Publishing (2023) have been welcome. I imagine him in a medieval artisanal workshop, a kind of booksmith studiously occupied in multiple, simultaneous pursuits.

Read more: Gideon Haigh reviews ‘Alice™: The biggest untold story in the history of money’ by Stuart Kells

Write comment (0 Comments)
‘Some sort of afterlife: Posthumous representations of Gore Vidal’ by Heather Neilson
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Commentary
Custom Article Title: Some sort of afterlife: Posthumous representations of Gore Vidal
Review Article: No
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Some sort of afterlife
Article Subtitle: Posthumous representations of Gore Vidal
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Gore Vidal (1925–2012) emphatically rejected any conventionally religious version of an afterlife. In an essay, ‘Armageddon?’ (1987), he contrasted his own view on the matter with that of Norman Mailer. ‘[B]ecause there is no cosmic point to the life that each of us perceives on this distant bit of dust at galaxy’s edge, all the more reason for us to maintain in proper balance what we have here. Because there is nothing else.’ Five years later, in Screening History, a meditation on the significance of cinema in his own life, Vidal suggested that the medium of film offers an alternative possibility of immortality.

Related Article Image (300px * 400px):
Alt Tag (Related Article Image): ‘Some sort of afterlife: Posthumous representations of Gore Vidal’ by Heather Neilson
Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): ‘Some sort of afterlife: Posthumous representations of Gore Vidal’ by Heather Neilson
Display Review Rating: No

I recognize Ravello in the dream
Where Gore Vidal and Howard walk towards
Me, smiling, with martinis in their hands.
We’re now inside La Rondinaia (or
The Swallow’s Nest). I sense unevenness
Beneath my feet, look down, and see the floor
Comprised of pale blue jigsaw pieces, all
In disarray. I must tread carefully,
In order not to break these scattered tiles
That seem like fragments from a fallen sky.

‘Intimation’ by Heather Neilson (July 2012)

Gore Vidal (1925–2012) emphatically rejected any conventionally religious version of an afterlife. In an essay, ‘Armageddon?’ (1987), he contrasted his own view on the matter with that of Norman Mailer. ‘[B]ecause there is no cosmic point to the life that each of us perceives on this distant bit of dust at galaxy’s edge, all the more reason for us to maintain in proper balance what we have here. Because there is nothing else.’ Five years later, in Screening History, a meditation on the significance of cinema in his own life, Vidal suggested that the medium of film offers an alternative possibility of immortality.

He recalls the impact of a British gothic fantasy film, The Ghost Goes West, which he watched in adolescence.  Robert Donat stars in the film as the ghost of a Scottish clansman killed in battle in the eighteenth century. The plot’s catalyst is the dismantling of the castle, which is transported to the United States for reconstruction by its new owner. In the end, all is resolved and the ghost is finally able to pass into the beyond. Reflecting on the enduring appeal of The Ghost Goes West, which he described as having haunted him, Vidal considered its emphasis on clan loyalty. There is, as well, ‘the attractive conceit that personality survives death, even if one is only a ghost on a boring assignment’. Vidal would often return in his writings to the subject of ghosts. One of his favourite fictional characters, Caroline Sanford, echoes her author as she discusses the subject with the terminally ill Harry Hopkins, Franklin Roosevelt’s secretary of commerce. ‘I always thought in my movie days that the shadow of oneself on the screen is the true ghost preserved forever, at least in theory.’ (The Golden Age, 2000)

Since his own death at the age of eighty-six, Gore Vidal has been evoked in numerous ways, for a variety of purposes. In the plethora of obituaries, he was remembered as an essayist, novelist, playwright, actor, media personality, and a tenacious critic of American politics and presidents. Nicholas Wrathall’s documentary Gore Vidal: The United States of Amnesia (2013) provides an engaging and informative introduction to its subject’s life and times. In the several memoirs which soon ensued – written by acquaintances of varying degrees of intimacy – Vidal was generally represented as supremely witty, ‘generous, hospitable, loyal to friends, and a quiet contributor to charities that benefited other authors’ (from Michael Mewshaw’s Sympathy for the Devil: Four decades of friendship with Gore Vidal [2015]). However, he was just as consistently portrayed as an unpleasant alcoholic who, according to his second biographer, Jay Parini, ‘tended to lash out at anyone who refused to condone his self-destructive drinking’ (Every Time a Friend Succeeds, Something Inside Me Dies: The life of Gore Vidal [2015]). The last years of Vidal’s life were blighted by the effects of a chronic alcohol use disorder. In this, ironically, he followed the path of his mother, Nina, from whom he had been estranged for decades before her own death.

Read more: ‘Some sort of afterlife: Posthumous representations of Gore Vidal’ by Heather Neilson

Write comment (0 Comments)
John Hawke reviews ‘The Other Side of Daylight: New and selected poems’ by David Brooks
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Poetry
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: ‘Chill leaves the words’
Article Subtitle: A masterly collection by David Brooks
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

The final poem of this superb collection, ‘The Darkness’, identifies a primal scene. The young protagonist is a nascent poet, watching over the embers of a desert fire in early morning, awaiting the breath of a Pentecostal wind to rekindle the flames. It is a parable which emblematises the difficult task of transformation that is central to poetry itself: the boy contends with ‘fragments / that will not alchemise to song / that yield not / to the metaphrast’.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): John Hawke reviews ‘The Other Side of Daylight: New and selected poems’ by David Brooks
Book 1 Title: The Other Side of Daylight
Book 1 Subtitle: New and selected poems
Book Author: David Brooks
Book 1 Biblio: University of Queensland Press, $26.99 pb, 206 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

The final poem of this superb collection, ‘The Darkness’, identifies a primal scene. The young protagonist is a nascent poet, watching over the embers of a desert fire in early morning, awaiting the breath of a Pentecostal wind to rekindle the flames. It is a parable which emblematises the difficult task of transformation that is central to poetry itself: the boy contends with ‘fragments / that will not alchemise to song / that yield not / to the metaphrast’.

Decades later, David Brooks returns to this scene in a companion poem, ‘A Place on Earth’: now the embers of the log contain all of civilisation and cultural history, in ‘a phoenix nest’, a perpetual zone of potential renewal. Behind both poems is the sensed presence of immanence, ‘that something / rustling in the undergrowth’, which is related to an awareness of ‘the still / point of his being’. The title of this selected volume directly recollects Rainer Maria Rilke’s description of precisely this recognition, in his essay ‘An Experience’, where he relates the sensation ‘that he had reached the other side of Nature’. This is the essential poetic experience which Brooks continually aspires towards, and sometimes locates.

Read more: John Hawke reviews ‘The Other Side of Daylight: New and selected poems’ by David Brooks

Write comment (0 Comments)
David McCooey reviews ‘The Penguin Book of Elegy: Poems of memory, mourning and consolation’ edited by Andrew Motion and Stephen Regan
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Poetry
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: ‘We need elegies’
Article Subtitle: The poetry of loss
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

In the famous opening sequence of the 1946 film A Matter of Life and Death, an RAF pilot, flying his burning Lancaster bomber over the English Channel, talks with a radio operator at a nearby English base. Apparently facing certain death, the pilot quotes Sir Walter Raleigh’s ‘The Passionate Man’s Pilgrimage’, a poem allegedly written just before its author’s execution in 1618. ‘Give me my scallop shell of quiet, / My staff of faith to walk upon,’ the pilot recites, amid the roar of his stricken aircraft.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): David McCooey reviews ‘The Penguin Book of Elegy: Poems of memory, mourning and consolation’ edited by Andrew Motion and Stephen Regan
Book 1 Title: The Penguin Book of Elegy
Book 1 Subtitle: Poems of memory, mourning and consolation
Book Author: Andrew Motion and Stephen Regan
Book 1 Biblio: Penguin Classics, $75 hb, 688 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Editor
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Book 1 Readings Link: https://www.readings.com.au/product/9780241269602/the-penguin-book-of-elegy--andrew-motion-prof-stephen-regan--2021--9780241269602#rac:jokjjzr6ly9m
Display Review Rating: No

In the famous opening sequence of the 1946 film A Matter of Life and Death, an RAF pilot, flying his burning Lancaster bomber over the English Channel, talks with a radio operator at a nearby English base. Apparently facing certain death, the pilot quotes Sir Walter Raleigh’s ‘The Passionate Man’s Pilgrimage’, a poem allegedly written just before its author’s execution in 1618. ‘Give me my scallop shell of quiet, / My staff of faith to walk upon,’ the pilot recites, amid the roar of his stricken aircraft.

Read more: David McCooey reviews ‘The Penguin Book of Elegy: Poems of memory, mourning and consolation’...

Write comment (0 Comments)
Mykaela Saunders reviews ‘Woven: First Nations poetic conversations from the Fair Trade project’ edited by Anne-Marie Te Whiu
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Poetry
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Poetic tapestries
Article Subtitle: An ambitious multi-vocal project
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

The concept of Woven, a Fair Trade project from Red Room Poetry, seems simple but the reality is complex: one local First Nations poet is paired with another First Nations poet from another continent, and together they create a poem. This is an ambitious undertaking for the poets themselves and especially for the editor, Māori poet Anne-Marie Te Whiu, who should be commended for stewarding this project through the last few tumultuous years. The resulting book is a gorgeous tapestry of weavings from some fine poets.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Mykaela Saunders reviews ‘Woven: First Nations poetic conversations from the Fair Trade project’ edited by Anne-Marie Te Whiu
Book 1 Title: Woven
Book 1 Subtitle: First Nations poetic conversations from the Fair Trade project
Book Author: Anne-Marie Te Whiu
Book 1 Biblio: Magabala Books, $27.99 pb, 160 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Editor
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

The concept of Woven, a Fair Trade project from Red Room Poetry, seems simple but the reality is complex: one local First Nations poet is paired with another First Nations poet from another continent, and together they create a poem. This is an ambitious undertaking for the poets themselves and especially for the editor, Māori poet Anne-Marie Te Whiu, who should be commended for stewarding this project through the last few tumultuous years. The resulting book is a gorgeous tapestry of weavings from some fine poets.

Read more: Mykaela Saunders reviews ‘Woven: First Nations poetic conversations from the Fair Trade project’...

Write comment (0 Comments)
Simon West reviews ‘Birds and Fish: Life on the Hawkesbury’ by Robert Adamson and edited by Devin Johnston
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Memoir
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: The bird’s head
Article Subtitle: Prose that makes eye contact
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

In the year leading up to his death, the poet Robert Adamson (1943-2022) gathered together a selection of his work that focused on one of his enduring passions: the birds and fish of the Hawkesbury River, beside which Adamson lived much of his life. Adamson was best known for exploring this passion in poetry, but the pieces collected in this new book are works of prose and include selections from Adamson’s autobiography Inside Out (2004), and from his late collection, Net Needle (2015). They also include material that is likely to be less familiar to readers, pieces published in the magazine Fishing World, and extracts from a journal Adamson kept between 2015 and 2018 titled ‘The Spinoza Journal’.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Simon West reviews ‘Birds and Fish: Life on the Hawkesbury’ by Robert Adamson and edited by Devin Johnston
Book 1 Title: Birds and Fish
Book 1 Subtitle: Life on the Hawkesbury
Book Author: Robert Adamson, edited by Devin Johnston
Book 1 Biblio: Upswell, $29.99 pb, 117 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

In the year leading up to his death, the poet Robert Adamson (1943-2022) gathered together a selection of his work that focused on one of his enduring passions: the birds and fish of the Hawkesbury River, beside which Adamson lived much of his life. Adamson was best known for exploring this passion in poetry, but the pieces collected in this new book are works of prose and include selections from Adamson’s autobiography Inside Out (2004), and from his late collection, Net Needle (2015). They also include material that is likely to be less familiar to readers, pieces published in the magazine Fishing World, and extracts from a journal Adamson kept between 2015 and 2018 titled ‘The Spinoza Journal’.

Read more: Simon West reviews ‘Birds and Fish: Life on the Hawkesbury’ by Robert Adamson and edited by Devin...

Write comment (0 Comments)
Mike Ladd reviews ‘Non-Essential Work’ by Omar Sakr
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Poetry
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Song worth singing
Article Subtitle: Omar Sakr’s latest collection
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

The title of Omar Sakr’s latest collection references the Covid pandemic and comes from his prose poem ‘Diary of a Non-Essential Worker’. It also reminded me of Plato’s banning of the poets from his ideal republic, and Auden’s line that ‘poetry makes nothing happen’. Throughout Non-Essential Work, Sakr explores the limits of poetry and its function in society, questioning the value of his own art, letting us in on his doubts. In the poem ‘Your People Your Problem’, he asks: ‘What is a song worth singing here? / The silenced are listening.’ Despite these doubts, or perhaps because of them, he has achieved a powerful collection of lyric poetry, simultaneously political and intimate.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Mike Ladd reviews ‘Non-Essential Work’ by Omar Sakr
Book 1 Title: Non-Essential Work
Book Author: Omar Sakr
Book 1 Biblio: University of Queensland Press, $24.99 pb, 116 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

The title of Omar Sakr’s latest collection references the Covid pandemic and comes from his prose poem ‘Diary of a Non-Essential Worker’. It also reminded me of Plato’s banning of the poets from his ideal republic, and Auden’s line that ‘poetry makes nothing happen’. Throughout Non-Essential Work, Sakr explores the limits of poetry and its function in society, questioning the value of his own art, letting us in on his doubts. In the poem ‘Your People Your Problem’, he asks: ‘What is a song worth singing here? / The silenced are listening.’ Despite these doubts, or perhaps because of them, he has achieved a powerful collection of lyric poetry, simultaneously political and intimate.

Read more: Mike Ladd reviews ‘Non-Essential Work’ by Omar Sakr

Write comment (0 Comments)
Jennifer Harrison reviews ‘Troubled Minds: Understanding and treating mental illness’ by Sidney Bloch and Nick Haslam
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Psychology
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Rabbit holes
Article Subtitle: A tour de force
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

In the introduction to Troubled Minds, authors Sidney Bloch and Nick Haslam outline the territory they will cover, indicating that they are experts in psychology, psychiatry, and mental illness, with more than eighty years’ experience between them. They are wary of quick fixes (How to… books) and are also wary of professionals publishing in their own fields (potentially biased expertise). Fittingly, they see mental health and mental illness as complex. They have perceived a reader who is looking for a well-written, easy-to-comprehend book that spans conceptual diversity yet concentrates on ‘understanding’ both the ‘emotional and intellectual’ aspects of mental health and illness; one that emphasises contribution from the humanities as well as from science. They hope the book will assist those who first encounter people seeking mental health help (primary practitioners, counsellors, and others). Indeed, Troubled Minds is wonderfully written, highly readable and a tour de force from authors who have seamlessly brought their voices together.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Jennifer Harrison reviews ‘Troubled Minds: Understanding and treating mental illness’ by Sidney Bloch and Nick Haslam
Book 1 Title: Troubled Minds
Book 1 Subtitle: Understanding and treating mental illness
Book Author: Sidney Bloch and Nick Haslam
Book 1 Biblio: Scribe, $35 pb, 335 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

In the introduction to Troubled Minds, authors Sidney Bloch and Nick Haslam outline the territory they will cover, indicating that they are experts in psychology, psychiatry, and mental illness, with more than eighty years’ experience between them. They are wary of quick fixes (How to… books) and are also wary of professionals publishing in their own fields (potentially biased expertise). Fittingly, they see mental health and mental illness as complex. They have perceived a reader who is looking for a well-written, easy-to-comprehend book that spans conceptual diversity yet concentrates on ‘understanding’ both the ‘emotional and intellectual’ aspects of mental health and illness; one that emphasises contribution from the humanities as well as from science. They hope the book will assist those who first encounter people seeking mental health help (primary practitioners, counsellors, and others). Indeed, Troubled Minds is wonderfully written, highly readable and a tour de force from authors who have seamlessly brought their voices together.

Read more: Jennifer Harrison reviews ‘Troubled Minds: Understanding and treating mental illness’ by Sidney...

Write comment (0 Comments)
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Environment
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Internationalised solutions
Article Subtitle: Globalising climate change
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

In 2020, with Katie Holmes and Andrea Gaynor, Ruth A. Morgan co-authored ‘Doing Environmental History in Urgent Times’, an article which was published in a dedicated ‘In urgent times’ edition of History Australia. With more than 8,800 views since its publication, which coincided with the first Covid lockdowns, the paper has gone on to become that journal’s most read article in its twenty-year lifetime. In it, the co-authors staunchly called for ‘barbed and incendiary histories that hold wrongdoers to account and keep watch over the present’. History writing is an inherently political act, and they stressed – in italics, no less – ‘there is no justice without history’. Four years on, there remains an ever-accelerating and palpable urgency to the work of history writing. With coruscating prose and assiduous scholarship, Climate Change and International History adds its voice to this chorus.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Harrison Croft reviews ‘Climate Change and International History: Negotiating science, global change, and environmental justice’ by Ruth A. Morgan
Book 1 Title: Climate Change and International History
Book 1 Subtitle: Negotiating science, global change, and environmental justice
Book Author: Ruth A. Morgan
Book 1 Biblio: Bloomsbury Academic, $44.99 pb, 280 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

In 2020, with Katie Holmes and Andrea Gaynor, Ruth A. Morgan co-authored ‘Doing Environmental History in Urgent Times’, an article which was published in a dedicated ‘In urgent times’ edition of History Australia. With more than 8,800 views since its publication, which coincided with the first Covid lockdowns, the paper has gone on to become that journal’s most read article in its twenty-year lifetime. In it, the co-authors staunchly called for ‘barbed and incendiary histories that hold wrongdoers to account and keep watch over the present’. History writing is an inherently political act, and they stressed – in italics, no less – ‘there is no justice without history’. Four years on, there remains an ever-accelerating and palpable urgency to the work of history writing. With coruscating prose and assiduous scholarship, Climate Change and International History adds its voice to this chorus.

Read more: Harrison Croft reviews ‘Climate Change and International History: Negotiating science, global...

Write comment (1 Comment)
Michael Shmith reviews ‘God and the Angel: Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier’s tour de force of Australia and New Zealand’ by Shiroma Perera-Nathan
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Film Studies
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Lacquered in glamour
Article Subtitle: The Oliviers’ famous tour of 1948
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

This attractive and fascinating volume is billed as ‘the first illustrated book on the 1948 Old Vic tour’, and, sure enough, it is jammed from stage-left to stage-right with scores of images – especially of the eternally photogenic two superstars who led the tour. Not among them is one particular photograph – more of a snapshot, really, just 6 x 4½ inches in 1948 measurements. It was taken on the night of 17 May 1948 at a post-performance party at a family home in Melbourne’s St Kilda. Four of the seven people in shot are unidentified; but two of the others, unmistakably, are Vivien Leigh and her husband, Laurence Olivier: she is in a fur coat, sitting in an armchair, a plate of food balanced on her lap; he is two along, perched on a piano stool. But who is that man in the middle in half profile? None other than Chico Marx, who was also in Melbourne, with his own show at the Tivoli.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Michael Shmith reviews ‘God and the Angel: Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier’s tour de force of Australia and New Zealand’ by Shiroma Perera-Nathan
Book 1 Title: God and the Angel
Book 1 Subtitle: Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier’s tour de force of Australia and New Zealand
Book Author: Shiroma Perera-Nathan
Book 1 Biblio: Melbourne Books, $59.95 hb, 253 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

This attractive and fascinating volume is billed as ‘the first illustrated book on the 1948 Old Vic tour’, and, sure enough, it is jammed from stage-left to stage-right with scores of images – especially of the eternally photogenic two superstars who led the tour. Not among them is one particular photograph – more of a snapshot, really, just 6 x 4½ inches in 1948 measurements. It was taken on the night of 17 May 1948 at a post-performance party at a family home in Melbourne’s St Kilda. Four of the seven people in shot are unidentified; but two of the others, unmistakably, are Vivien Leigh and her husband, Laurence Olivier: she is in a fur coat, sitting in an armchair, a plate of food balanced on her lap; he is two along, perched on a piano stool. But who is that man in the middle in half profile? None other than Chico Marx, who was also in Melbourne, with his own show at the Tivoli.

Read more: Michael Shmith reviews ‘God and the Angel: Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier’s tour de force of...

Write comment (0 Comments)
Robyn Archer reviews ‘Becoming Ella Fitzgerald: The jazz singer who transformed American song’ by Judith Tick
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Music
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Lady Be Good!
Article Subtitle: A deep scholarly dive into the singer’s life
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

My one-woman show A Star Is Torn was a sung catalogue of the great women singers who had ‘taught’ me via their recordings. Having assembled a list of twelve, Bessie Smith and Billie Holiday among them, I realised that they had all died young. The original draft also included a bunch of survivors, including Lena Horne and Ella Fitzgerald. My assessment of Ella was based on scant information. When I premièred that show in 1979, she was in her sixties and still touring the world at a phenomenal pace. The rest was largely mythology. Judith Tick’s mammoth biography is authoritative enough to make me believe I now have something much closer to the truth.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Robyn Archer reviews ‘Becoming Ella Fitzgerald: The jazz singer who transformed American song’ by Judith Tick
Book 1 Title: Becoming Ella Fitzgerald
Book 1 Subtitle: The jazz singer who transformed American song
Book Author: Judith Tick
Book 1 Biblio: W.W. Norton & Company, US$40 hb, 582 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

My one-woman show A Star Is Torn was a sung catalogue of the great women singers who had ‘taught’ me via their recordings. Having assembled a list of twelve, Bessie Smith and Billie Holiday among them, I realised that they had all died young. The original draft also included a bunch of survivors, including Lena Horne and Ella Fitzgerald. My assessment of Ella was based on scant information. When I premièred that show in 1979, she was in her sixties and still touring the world at a phenomenal pace. The rest was largely mythology. Judith Tick’s mammoth biography is authoritative enough to make me believe I now have something much closer to the truth.

Read more: Robyn Archer reviews ‘Becoming Ella Fitzgerald: The jazz singer who transformed American song’ by...

Write comment (0 Comments)
Open Page with Anne Manne
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Open Page
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: An interview with Anne Manne
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text: Anne Manne is an Australian writer, essayist, and social philosopher.
Related Article Image (300px * 400px):
Alt Tag (Related Article Image): Open Page with Anne Manne
Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Open Page with Anne Manne
Display Review Rating: No

Anne Manne is an Australian writer, essayist, and social philosopher.AnneManneInterview

 

 

 

 

 


If you could go anywhere tomorrow, where would it be, and why?

Galloping across the high plains of Tibet on a horse.

What’s your idea of hell?

Book tours.

What do you consider the most specious virtue?

Chastity.

What’s your favourite film?

Babette’s Feast which is about gratitude, care, and generosity, and the searingly powerful Turtles Can Fly by Kurdish Iranian filmmaker Bahman Ghobadi.

And your favourite book?

Fyodor Dostoevsky’s The Possessed, sometimes titled The Devils. Brilliant, prophetic understanding of the cruelty of a fanatical ideology, ahead of the Russian Revolution of 1917, but throwing light on all the ‘possessed devils’ ever after.

Name the three people with whom you would most like to dine.

Hilary Mantel, Sigmund Freud, Stendhal.

Which word do you most dislike, and which one would you like to see back in public usage?

My current pet hate is a verb turned into a noun: ‘learnings’. Everyone is walking around weighed down by their new ‘learnings’. Back into common usage: adumbrations. It is such a delicious word to say out loud. The sound of it also evokes the word vibrations, to which adumbration has a delicately contiguous relation, and is suggestive of the way a poet can use words which convey meaning not directly but as a shadow, an intimation, a foreshadowing.

Who is your favourite author?

Dostoevsky.

And your favourite literary hero or heroine?

Elizabeth Bennet.

Which quality do you most admire in a writer?

The courage to face difficult things, to look in dark places, to refuse the human impulse to take refuge in denialism. 

Which book influenced you most in your youth?

Whiskery Jinks and The Donkey Cart, by Patricia Donahue, where a poor farmer and his wife, Mr and Mrs Whortleberry, live outside their broken-down house, while the chickens live happily inside. An insouciant, vain cat (Whiskery Jinx) befriends them, along with Henry the Donkey who helps them get an enormous pumpkin to market. It was an unselfconscious children’s book about creatureliness and the sentience of animals which influenced me deeply as a child.

Name an early literary idol or influence whom you no longer admire – or vice versa.

Habermas. As an earnest young woman, I was reading Habermas, Heidegger, and Husserl, my brow furrowed. I asked someone what he thought of them, and he said, ‘Life is too short to study all those German “H’s!”’ I laughed so hard; he cured me instantly. I then thought, this person is a one-man labour-saving-device! And married him.

Do you have a favourite podcast?

Oh, only ABR’s! [Brava, Ed.]

What, if anything, impedes your writing?

Anxiety – that the finished result of my labours will not be as good as the project deserves. Also, I admit, cat videos.

What qualities do you look for in critics and which ones do you enjoy reading?

I like it when critics situate a work in a whole area. I like Daniel Mendelsohn, Hilary Mantel, Mary Beard, and, in Australia, Peter Craven. When Helen Garner wrote film reviews, I loved them!

How do you find working with editors?

At its best, it is an alchemy, where work becomes possible that would not have otherwise come into being. On this last book, I’ve been privileged to work with a brilliant editor, Chris Feik. However, I can feel so furious after first reading an edit, I am tempted to send an incendiary device in the post. Fortunately, I have excellent impulse control (note I didn’t say self-control was a specious virtue) and eventually calm down enough to grudgingly recognise … it might just be right.

What do you think of writers’ festivals?

My ideal writers’ festival would be a version of the Agora, a public space where ideas and books, including unfashionable topics and with non-famous people, are discussed freely and passionately, but with civility. I fear writers’ festivals are becoming too fashionable and predictable.

Are artists valued in our society?

Compared to a footballer? You are kidding! Then again, I spend more time watching Geelong than I do in art galleries.

What are you working on now?

A memoir of my mother. A brilliant student, she achieved a postgraduate degree in philosophy in the 1940s. Unconventional, she was a solo mother raising her family in a country town in the 1960s, when women’s wages were half men’s. She also suffered from episodes of schizophrenia and courageously picked herself off the floor of life, time and again.

Write comment (0 Comments)
Joachim Redner reviews ‘Selected Stories’ by Franz Kafka, translated and edited by Mark Harman
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Short Stories
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: A man made only of words
Article Subtitle: Hidden humour in the interstices
Online Only: Yes
Custom Highlight Text:

In Selected Stories, Mark Harman gives us crisp new translations of Franz Kafka’s best novellas and tales and also a substantial scholarly introduction to his life and work. Like most biographers, he explores Kafka’s painful relations with his family, particularly his father, and his anxieties about marriage. The women in Kafka’s life – particularly his twice-rejected fiancée
Felice Bauer and his gifted Czech translator Milena Jesenská – are powerful presences. But Harman looks beyond Freudian family romance for insight. He sees Kafka as a man in search of transformative experience. Kafka tried to enlist during World War I; he reflected with increasing urgency on what it meant to be a Jew; he wrestled with philosophical and religious doubt. Set against all this, there was his absolute commitment to an ascetic writing life, which he sometimes feared was no life at all, making him a man made only of words, a literary fiction, truly absurd – and so in the midst of all these struggles he laughed, primarily at himself. Irony is thus the hallmark of his writing, with, as Harman says, ‘humour hidden in the interstices of his sentences’.

Featured Image (400px * 250px):
Alt Tag (Featured Image): Joachim Redner reviews ‘Selected Stories’ by Franz Kafka, translated and edited by Mark Harman
Book 1 Title: Selected Stories
Book Author: Franz Kafka, translated and edited by Mark Harman
Book 1 Biblio: Harvard University Press, US$ 29.95 hb, 304 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Cover Small (400 x 600):
Book 1 Cover (800 x 1200):
Display Review Rating: No

In Selected Stories, Mark Harman gives us crisp new translations of Franz Kafka’s best novellas and tales and also a substantial scholarly introduction to his life and work. Like most biographers, he explores Kafka’s painful relations with his family, particularly his father, and his anxieties about marriage. The women in Kafka’s life – particularly his twice-rejected fiancée
Felice Bauer and his gifted Czech translator Milena Jesenská – are powerful presences. But Harman looks beyond Freudian family romance for insight. He sees Kafka as a man in search of transformative experience. Kafka tried to enlist during World War I; he reflected with increasing urgency on what it meant to be a Jew; he wrestled with philosophical and religious doubt. Set against all this, there was his absolute commitment to an ascetic writing life, which he sometimes feared was no life at all, making him a man made only of words, a literary fiction, truly absurd – and so in the midst of all these struggles he laughed, primarily at himself. Irony is thus the hallmark of his writing, with, as Harman says, ‘humour hidden in the interstices of his sentences’.

Read more: Joachim Redner reviews ‘Selected Stories’ by Franz Kafka, translated and edited by Mark Harman

Write comment (0 Comments)