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September 2006, no. 284

Welcome to the September 2006 issue of Australian Book Review.

Jaya Savige reviews The Goldfinches of Baghdad by Robert Adamson
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Critics often comment on the ‘shape’ a poem makes – not the concrete form of the words on the page, but the poem’s conceptual trajectory, the statement, development and resolution (or lack thereof) of its central theme. What is most striking about Robert Adamson’s first collection of poems published in North America, The Goldfinches of Baghdad, however, is the shape the collection makes as a whole ...

Book 1 Title: The Goldfinches of Baghdad
Book Author: Robert Adamson
Book 1 Biblio: Flood Editions, US$13.95 pb, 103 pp, 0974690287
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Critics often comment on the ‘shape’ a poem makes – not the concrete form of the words on the page, but the poem’s conceptual trajectory, the statement, development and resolution (or lack thereof) of its central theme. What is most striking about Robert Adamson’s first collection of poems published in North America, The Goldfinches of Baghdad, however, is the shape the collection makes as a whole, the arc of the volume in its entirety. As the culmination of forty years’ experience, it is nothing short of a masterpiece.

Here, the dominant concerns of what might be called Adamson’s later period (prevalent in the 1999 volume, Black Water: Approaching Zukofsky) reach their apotheosis: his writing of the Hawkesbury River region, his unremitting passion for all things ornithological, and his fascination with the Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice. But the volume is much more than a mere concatenation of individual poems treating the poet’s trademark themes.

As a collection, it is sublimely cohesive: from first to last, the correspondences between poems are considerably fecund. Less a series of songs than an organically realised symphony, the volume is replete with a masterful lyricism and a comprehensive, mythopoeic grandeur verging on an indigenous ‘dreaming’. To be sure, the individual poems are often marvels in their own right; many have been published previously, and have been reworked for this volume. It is not the place here to undertake a rigorous comparison of the various versions; suffice it to say that whereas Black Water was an accomplished volume, here the poems appear effortless: the enjambment is cleaner, the cadence immaculate, the music further refined.

Appropriately, the opening poem, ‘A Bend in the Euphrates’, is thematically incipient and functions as an overture, detailing an inherently creative primal-scene, a parable of creation or poesis. Reflecting on (a poem written on) a piece of crumpled Egyptian linen, the poet’s imagination riffs on the image of the loom:

In a flash I saw two dirty-breasted ibis
and heard their heads swish: black bills
swiped the cloudy stream, and in the rushes
I heard needles stitching, weaving features
into the landscape, clacking as they shaped
an orange tree, then switched a beat to invent
blue-black feathers for crows, the pointed
wedges of their beaks.

The performative lyricism of these lines is palpable; the internal, alternating rhyme of stitch, clack, switch and black suggests onomatopoeically the movements of the loom, as though the poem was mimicking it in two senses, as a creative device, and as a rhythmic or musical one. The delight that stems from such lyricism, however, is tempered by the sobriety of the mature poet: ‘The map’s folded away. I travel by heart now, / old lessons are useless.’

When, later in the volume, the poet observes ‘the city ibis stitching its voice / To the wind between car park and street’ (‘Eurydice in Sydney’), we recall his earlier association of the ibis – perennially linked with prehistory, from its deification in the ancient Egyptian pantheon, through to its appearance in Derek Walcott’s A Far Cry from Africa – with the creative impulse. For Adamson, the two are symbolically inseparable, and this is gathered from his word-sensitive correspondences, the (creative) ‘stitching’ of both instances.

As he explains in his autobiography Inside Out (2004), Adamson aspired to be an ornithologist from a young age. His fascination in his first year of high school with the Ptilorus magnificus, or Magnificent Riflebird, went beyond the bounds of adolescent enthusiasm, and ultimately landed him in a juvenile boys’ home after he stole a specimen from the Taronga Park Zoo. Fifty years on, his obsession with birdlife, particularly that of his native Hawkesbury – the Yellow Bittern, the Rainbow Bee-Eater, the Dollarbird and the Grey Whistler – has found its truest expression. The poetic manifestation of this passion goes beyond mere description; for Adamson, there is something about avian behaviour that chimes with human experience, and vice versa. Aspects of the human world are subsequently informed by his ornithological poetics: ‘His words were finches, / flying before him / as he swung his arms – / scrambled paragraphs’ (‘Walking by the River’); ‘The shadow your hand casts / resembles the mudlark, opening / its wings, calling and rocking, / perched in the pages of my book’ (‘Eurydice and the Mudlark’); ‘Avocets migrated from our / thoughts into words and went / skidding into sound as they / too became human’ (‘Red-Necked Avocet’).

These correspondences are nuanced beyond basic anthropomorphism. Adamson taps into a tradition that extends at least back to Keats – who declared, after Shakespeare, that poetry is elementally an aerial form, and should be as free as the wind – when he invokes the simplicity of avian freedom: ‘Ignorant of human borders, its migration / technology is simple: feathers / and fish-fuel, cryptic colour and homing / instinct’ (‘The Greenshank’). On other occasions, the speaker of the poem undergoes a type of Ovidian metamorphosis: ‘the / southerly each afternoon / ruffles my feathers, so that sometimes / I chuckle’ (‘Gang-Gang Cockatoos’); ‘My head contains thousands of images - / slimy mackerel splashing about in the murk’ (‘Thinking of Eurydice at Midnight’); ‘look – my frame, tail-shaped, fanning air. / Getting nowhere’ (‘Major Mitchell’s Pink Cockatoo’).

In the final instance, the cross-pollination of avian and human experience extends to the political realm. This gives rise to Adamson’s mordant wit: the defence minister ‘mimics the eclectus parrot – / his face turns red like its satin belly – but his / black beak’s genetically engineered for speech’ (‘Eclectus Parrot’). ‘The Flag-Tailed Bird of Paradise’ bears an epigraph concerning George W. Bush’s instruction to the ‘enemy’ to raise a white flag in surrender, and Adamson’s description of the birds (‘their eyes enormous, pink, and their / flag-tails heavy – almost too heavy / to hold up, but not theirs / to withhold’) takes on distressing proportions. Similarly, in the volume’s title-poem, the destruction of war fails to discriminate between bird and human: ‘Flesh and feathers, hands / and wings. Sirens wail, but the tongues / of poets and the beaks of goldfinches burn. / Those who cannot speak burn along with the / articulate.’

That the ‘tongues of poets’ and the ‘beaks of goldfinches’ are associated here suggests that Adamson connects birdsong with the song of the ephebe. When writing about native birdlife, his poems are clearly infused with a lyricism as precise as that of his avian subjects. For example, in Powder Hulk Bay, his observation of ‘Black-capped / terns catching chips in the park’ is, as a single sentence, intensely musical: note the assonance of the ‘a’ and the alliterated hard ‘c’ in black, capped and catch, the consonance of ‘ch’ in catch and chips, and the alliterated ‘p’ in capped, chips and park. This predominantly monosyllabic sentence is, like the lines describing the loom in the opening poem, inherently performative, conveying the staccato movements of the bird catching its dinner. But while Adamson’s virtuosic lyricism permeates the collection, it is only in light of his sustained engagement with the Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice that the volume’s music is fully appreciated.

 

If A Bend in the Euphrates introduces the theme of creativity and the correspondence between avian and human experience, then the second poem of the volume, ‘A Visitation’, establishes a preoccupation with the Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice – albeit obliquely. A prose poem set on the Hawkesbury River, it depicts the emergence of a yellow-footed rock wallaby from a burnt-out patch of scrub:

Although wounded, it seems miraculous: the soft yellow of its feet, the hard, sharp black of its claws. It’s the first yellow-footer I’ve seen for more than forty years. It takes me back immediately to a time when I was a kid, rowing my grandfather’s tallow-wood skiff across Big-Bay: I spotted a mob of four rock wallabies that stood there as I sat silently in the boat and let the tide carry me right by them […] Then a panic ran through them: the largest buck bounded, almost flew, straight up an enormous rock; the sheer wildness and ferocity of it shocked me. Afterwards, the atmosphere was thick with an odour unlike anything I recognized. This morning, it’s in the air again. I turn to take another look, but the rock wallaby’s gone.

The Orphic elements of this poem remain latent until one has read the entire volume and encountered its numerous explicit engagements with the Greek myth (‘Eurydice at Midnight’, ‘Letter to Eurydice’, ‘Eurydice on Fire’ et al.). Only then does the final line here resonate with Orpheus’s fatal glance at Eurydice (on the verge of leaving the underworld). Crucially, on seeing the wallaby, the poet is reminded of a sighting as a child; when he remembers their panicked flight, he recognises the odour of the earlier visitation (‘this morning … in the air again’), and this pre-empts the disappearance of the present wallaby. Thus, like Orpheus, who loses Eurydice twice – the second time because he recalls the initial loss and so turns to glance at her – the speaker in this poem suffers the loss of the wallaby twice, once in memory, then presently. It is, ironically, only in hindsight that the Orphic resonances of this poem become apparent.

The myth is made manifest in many similarly oblique ways throughout this volume. Thus, a throwaway mention of the poet’s grandmother describing summer to be ‘hot as bloody Hades’ (‘The Serpent’), or a title such as ‘The First Chance Was the Last’, takes on an overwhelming poignance. In ‘Singing His Head Off’, the poet seems to identify with the Orphic figure of the ferryman at Kangaroo Point (‘before the bridge’), who ‘coalesces around the feeling of loss / of his wife in his stomach’:

Standing now with his back to the storm,
he straightens and begins to sing –
a deep low moan building
to a howl and a high elemental
keening – his song that could once
make rocks weep.

Again, while this is a fine poem in its own right, its significance (the fact that the ferryman’s wife has been ‘underground for a week’, the dolorous song of the ferryman himself) is only fully appreciated in the context of the volume as a whole. On other occasions, the poet, as both fisherman and musician, becomes an Orpheus of the Hawkesbury: ‘I scribble / a few lines, pass my fishing rod off / as a lyre. Who needs this bitter tune? / Its distorted chords lull me into numbness. / I bend it over double and pluck’ (‘The Floating Head’).

In a poem such as ‘Eurydice on Fire’, Adamson’s cadence is as refined as birdsong:

A shapeless field of mist above the river’s
surface, drifting. At first light the head
of a tree emerges, then black sticks
from oyster racks. The mist
parts as it rolls across
a channel pole’s yellow marker –
another level of watching settles
in thinking the mist
forms ribbons and leaves
wisps of itself
in mangrove branches.

The music begins with the sibilance of shapeless, which courts that of mist, surface and first, before chiming truly with across in the sixth line (which gives momentum into the delightfully enjambed final section); there are the alliterated ‘f’s of field, surface, drifting and first in the opening couplet; the true internal rhyme of black and racks, as well as that of rolls and pole’s, whose music is extended through the alliterated ‘l’s, in channel, pole’s, yellow and level; the consonance of the ‘st’ in mist and first which returns in sticks and oysters; and of course the hard ‘c’s of black, stick, racks. With such prosody, these lines constitute less a poem about the mist than a poem that lyrically enacts the mist, as if the mist were itself a poem.

Adamson’s sustained engagement with the Greek myth also entails a profound use of what might be called the chiaroscuro of the underworld, the depths of Hades contrasted with earthly light. This is evident in many of the Hawkesbury river scenes, such as ‘The Voyage’: ‘The river flowed towards morning / until Scorpio grew pale, fading with dawn, / and darkness sailed into light.’ It culminates in the final poem of the volume, ‘Reaching Light’, a beautiful dramatic monologue from the perspective of Eurydice, reminiscent of Rembrandt’s revelatory illumination.

The Goldfinches of Baghdad is that rare thing, a book of Australian poetry to which I respond the way Frank McCourt did when reading Shakespeare as a child: ‘it’s like having jewels in my mouth when I say the words.’

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Peter Rose reviews Crème de la Phlegm  edited by Angela Bennie
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Custom Article Title: Assassin in the orchard
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As with all forms of Australian cultural activity, it would be easy to inflate local critical endeavour (its novelty, its scintillations, its martial tendencies) and to forget that the history of acerbity is longer than that of our peppy federation. Hundreds of years before Hal Porter carved up Patrick White, critics were pillorying artists with a deftness and wit that can surprise modern readers. Samuel Johnson said, ‘If bad writers were to pass without reprehension, what should restrain them?’ Even a writer as famously suave and tempered as Henry James did not hesitate to wound. Reviewing Walt Whitman’s Drum-Taps in 1865, he wrote: ‘It has been a melancholy task to read this book; and it is a still more melancholy one to write about it.’ Ten years later, George Bernard Shaw began writing the theatre and music journalism that would forever change criticism, and forever change the public’s perception of criticism’s freedom and indispensability. Open any of Shaw’s pages from the next seventy-five years and you will find passages that present-day editors would clamour to publish. Try, ‘I have no idea of the age at which Grieg perpetrated this tissue of puerilities; but if he was a day over eighteen the exploit is beyond excuse.’

Book 1 Title: Crème de la Phlegm
Book 1 Subtitle: Unforgettable Australian reviews
Book Author: Angela Bennie
Book 1 Biblio: Miegunyah, $34.95 hb
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As with all forms of Australian cultural activity, it would be easy to inflate local critical endeavour (its novelty, its scintillations, its martial tendencies) and to forget that the history of acerbity is longer than that of our peppy federation. Hundreds of years before Hal Porter carved up Patrick White, critics were pillorying artists with a deftness and wit that can surprise modern readers. Samuel Johnson said, ‘If bad writers were to pass without reprehension, what should restrain them?’ Even a writer as famously suave and tempered as Henry James did not hesitate to wound. Reviewing Walt Whitman’s Drum-Taps in 1865, he wrote: ‘It has been a melancholy task to read this book; and it is a still more melancholy one to write about it.’ Ten years later, George Bernard Shaw began writing the theatre and music journalism that would forever change criticism, and forever change the public’s perception of criticism’s freedom and indispensability. Open any of Shaw’s pages from the next seventy-five years and you will find passages that present-day editors would clamour to publish. Try, ‘I have no idea of the age at which Grieg perpetrated this tissue of puerilities; but if he was a day over eighteen the exploit is beyond excuse.’

Read more: Peter Rose reviews 'Crème de la Phlegm' edited by Angela Bennie

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Alan Atkinson reviews A History of New South Wales by Beverley Kingston
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This book has one of the most beautiful covers you could hope to see: a Margaret Preston woodcut of Sydney Harbour, in rich blue, scarlet and ivory. Nor does the inside disgrace the exterior. It is a long time since anyone attempted a history of New South Wales, more than a century according to the blurb, presumably a reference to T.A. Coghlan’s annual publication, The Wealth and Progress of New South Wales, the last edition of which appeared in 1901. Beverley Kingston is highly qualified to do the job, and the twentieth-century detail is especially good.

Book 1 Title: A History of New South Wales
Book Author: Beverley Kingston
Book 1 Biblio: Cambridge University Press, $36.95 pb, 300 pp
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This book has one of the most beautiful covers you could hope to see: a Margaret Preston woodcut of Sydney Harbour, in rich blue, scarlet and ivory. Nor does the inside disgrace the exterior. It is a long time since anyone attempted a history of New South Wales, more than a century according to the blurb, presumably a reference to T.A. Coghlan’s annual publication, The Wealth and Progress of New South Wales, the last edition of which appeared in 1901. Beverley Kingston is highly qualified to do the job, and the twentieth-century detail is especially good.

Read more: Alan Atkinson reviews 'A History of New South Wales' by Beverley Kingston

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Annie Condon reviews ‘Poinciana’ by Jane Turner Goldsmith
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South Australian publishers Wakefield Press claim on their website: ‘We love good stories and make beautiful books.’ Poinciana has narrative potential, but is undermined by weak characterisation and unpredictable changes in time and narrative. What makes it a ‘beautiful book’, though, is its exotic backdrop of New Caledonia and its depictions of the landscape, including the brilliant red-flowered tree, the Poinciana.

Book 1 Title: Poinciana
Book Author: Jane Turner Goldsmith
Book 1 Biblio: Wakefield Press, $24.95 pb, 216 pp
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South Australian publishers Wakefield Press claim on their website: ‘We love good stories and make beautiful books.’ Poinciana has narrative potential, but is undermined by weak characterisation and unpredictable changes in time and narrative. What makes it a ‘beautiful book’, though, is its exotic backdrop of New Caledonia and its depictions of the landscape, including the brilliant red-flowered tree, the Poinciana.

Read more: Annie Condon reviews ‘Poinciana’ by Jane Turner Goldsmith

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Barry Jones reviews ‘The Memoirs of Zelman Cowen: A public life’ by Zelman Cowen
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Justice Michael Kirby’s launching of Sir Zelman Cowen’s memoirs at the Melbourne University’s Woodward Centre in early June was a great Melbourne occasion. Two of Cowen’s successors as governor-general, Sir Ninian Stephen and Archbishop Peter Hollingworth, attended as part of a galaxy of judges, barristers, academics and a scattering of ex-politicians. The occasion was a festival of oratory, with five substantial speeches, possibly an Australian record for a book launch.

Book 1 Title: The Memoirs of Zelman Cowen
Book 1 Subtitle: A public life
Book Author: Zelman Cowen
Book 1 Biblio: Miegunyah, $59.95 hb, 416 pp
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Justice Michael Kirby’s launching of Sir Zelman Cowen’s memoirs at the Melbourne University’s Woodward Centre in early June was a great Melbourne occasion. Two of Cowen’s successors as governor-general, Sir Ninian Stephen and Archbishop Peter Hollingworth, attended as part of a galaxy of judges, barristers, academics and a scattering of ex-politicians. The occasion was a festival of oratory, with five substantial speeches, possibly an Australian record for a book launch.

Read more: Barry Jones reviews ‘The Memoirs of Zelman Cowen: A public life’ by Zelman Cowen

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Free Article: No
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Approaching a new book by Sydney’s Peter Minter, we are afforded the opportunity to see where a maturing poet is headed. A few years ago, he was very much identified with cutting-edge poetics. More interested in the epistemology of language than most of our poets, he could be seen as an experimental ally of, say, Michael Farrell and the American, Andrew Zawacki. Yet there was sometimes a whiff of the academy about his projects, a certain cerebral coldness. The poems kept holding us at a slippery arms’ length. Cunningly though, he opens the main flow of his new book with Ed Dorn’s concise observation that ‘All academics are hopeless’.

Book 1 Title: Blue grass
Book Author: Peter Minter
Book 1 Biblio: Salt Publishing, $29.95 pb, 115 pp
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Approaching a new book by Sydney’s Peter Minter, we are afforded the opportunity to see where a maturing poet is headed. A few years ago, he was very much identified with cutting-edge poetics. More interested in the epistemology of language than most of our poets, he could be seen as an experimental ally of, say, Michael Farrell and the American, Andrew Zawacki. Yet there was sometimes a whiff of the academy about his projects, a certain cerebral coldness. The poems kept holding us at a slippery arms’ length. Cunningly though, he opens the main flow of his new book with Ed Dorn’s concise observation that ‘All academics are hopeless’.

Read more: Chris Wallace-Crabbe reviews ‘Blue grass’ by Peter Minter

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Dan Toner reviews ‘Francis de Groot: Irish fascist Australian legend’ by Andrew Moore
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There was a time in Australia when right-wing citizens of this country were passionate and organised enough to bring the left-led state of New South Wales to the brink of civil war on political grounds. This violent opposition was led by rebel elements among ‘as many as 30,000 members’ of a conservative and ‘formally constituted civilian reserve’ known as the Old Guard. Impatient with the staid organisation, they had forged a more militant collective under the guise of the New Guard. One of the major players in this evolution was Captain Francis Edward De Groot, an antique-dealer and reproduction furniture manufacturer from Ireland, whose ambition and taste for adventure had led him to Australia. De Groot went on to star in the most famous scene of this political drama and to carve his name into Australian popular myth by usurping Premier Jack Lang as the ribbon-slasher at the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

Book 1 Title: Francis de Groot
Book 1 Subtitle: Irish fascist, Australian legend
Book Author: Andrew Moore
Book 1 Biblio: Federation Press, $39.95 hb, 222 pp
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There was a time in Australia when right-wing citizens of this country were passionate and organised enough to bring the left-led state of New South Wales to the brink of civil war on political grounds. This violent opposition was led by rebel elements among ‘as many as 30,000 members’ of a conservative and ‘formally constituted civilian reserve’ known as the Old Guard. Impatient with the staid organisation, they had forged a more militant collective under the guise of the New Guard. One of the major players in this evolution was Captain Francis Edward De Groot, an antique-dealer and reproduction furniture manufacturer from Ireland, whose ambition and taste for adventure had led him to Australia. De Groot went on to star in the most famous scene of this political drama and to carve his name into Australian popular myth by usurping Premier Jack Lang as the ribbon-slasher at the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

Read more: Dan Toner reviews ‘Francis de Groot: Irish fascist Australian legend’ by Andrew Moore

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David McCooey reviews ‘Windchimes: Asia in Australian Poetry’ by Noel Rowe and Vivian Smith
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All regions being regions of the mind, ‘Asia’ has had an especially unsettled and unsettling place in Australian thought. Australia has, in part, defined its own ‘occidental’ status with almost hysterical reference to its many ‘oriental’ neighbours. The putative border crisis of recent times, for instance, involved representing (mostly Middle Eastern and Asian) refugees as cashed-up ‘queue jumpers’ and potential terrorists who were ready to swamp our shores.

Asian ‘hordes’ have long been spectres haunting the Australian imagination. We see them in Windchimes, a marvellous anthology of ‘Asia in Australian Poetry’. But all of the usual suspects are present here, too: Asia as feminine and erotic; as terminally superstitious or spiritually enlightened; as a realm of pure aestheticism; as timeless or primitive; and as a region of war and warriors. All of these tropes, like the idea of ‘Asia’ itself (a region that supposedly ranges from China to Turkey), are as factitious as the notion that Asia is even a distinct continent. So far, so Edward Said, whose Orientalism (1978) made such observations postcolonial clichés. But if we consider the poetry of Australia as it reflects upon the idea of Asia, then we find an exciting literature that both maps and exceeds such tropes.

Book 1 Title: Windchimes
Book 1 Subtitle: Asia in Australian Poetry
Book Author: Noel Rowe and Vivian Smith
Book 1 Biblio: Pandanus, $29.95 pb, 277 pp
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All regions being regions of the mind, ‘Asia’ has had an especially unsettled and unsettling place in Australian thought. Australia has, in part, defined its own ‘occidental’ status with almost hysterical reference to its many ‘oriental’ neighbours. The putative border crisis of recent times, for instance, involved representing (mostly Middle Eastern and Asian) refugees as cashed-up ‘queue jumpers’ and potential terrorists who were ready to swamp our shores.

Read more: David McCooey reviews ‘Windchimes: Asia in Australian Poetry’ by Noel Rowe and Vivian Smith

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Delia Falconer reviews Dark Roots by Cate Kennedy
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Cate Kennedy’s name will be familiar to anyone who takes even the vaguest interest in Australian short story contests. Over the last decade, she has racked up an impressive list of awards in regional competitions, but readers are most likely to have noticed her successes in two of the most high-profile ones. In 2001 she took out the prestigious and now-defunct HQ Magazine short story competition; and in 2000 and 2001, two Age short story competitions back-to-back. With such a strong recognition factor, it seems like a smart move by Scribe to publish her first collection. Not only should it appeal to readers looking for new short fiction of established quality, but also, presumably, to the thousands of writers who enter short story competitions each year and who wish to see the gold standard.

Book 1 Title: Dark Roots
Book Author: Cate Kennedy
Book 1 Biblio: Scribe, $28.95 pb, 192 pp
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Cate Kennedy’s name will be familiar to anyone who takes even the vaguest interest in Australian short story contests. Over the last decade, she has racked up an impressive list of awards in regional competitions, but readers are most likely to have noticed her successes in two of the most high-profile ones. In 2001 she took out the prestigious and now-defunct HQ Magazine short story competition; and in 2000 and 2001, two Age short story competitions back-to-back. With such a strong recognition factor, it seems like a smart move by Scribe to publish her first collection. Not only should it appeal to readers looking for new short fiction of established quality, but also, presumably, to the thousands of writers who enter short story competitions each year and who wish to see the gold standard.

Read more: Delia Falconer reviews 'Dark Roots' by Cate Kennedy

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Denise O’Dea reviews ‘Border Street’ by Suzanne Leal
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Halfway through Border Street, an ageing Holocaust survivor describes a night spent standing in the snow at Dachau. His companion, a young Australian woman desperate to understand what he has been through, tries to simulate his ordeal: she wades waist-deep into the winter surf and is shocked by the terrible cold. It is a futile, melodramatic gesture, but a touching one as well; here and throughout this quietly affecting first novel, Suzanne Leal explores the limits of human sympathy with compassion, understatement and tender humour.

Book 1 Title: Border Street
Book Author: Suzanne Leal
Book 1 Biblio: Scribe, $32.95 pb, 336 pp
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Halfway through Border Street, an ageing Holocaust survivor describes a night spent standing in the snow at Dachau. His companion, a young Australian woman desperate to understand what he has been through, tries to simulate his ordeal: she wades waist-deep into the winter surf and is shocked by the terrible cold. It is a futile, melodramatic gesture, but a touching one as well; here and throughout this quietly affecting first novel, Suzanne Leal explores the limits of human sympathy with compassion, understatement and tender humour.

Read more: Denise O’Dea reviews ‘Border Street’ by Suzanne Leal

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Emily Fraser reviews Murder in the Dark by Kerry Greenwood
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Murder in the Dark is a worthy addition to the vast Phryne Fisher collection. Fans of this well-researched series will be pleased to rediscover the usual St Kilda cast, and will welcome the diverse, if not always likeable, supporting cast of profligate party-goers, polo-playing cowgirls, sultry American jazz musicians, rather luscious young men and the occasional goat.

Fisher, the waspishly slim, ever-fashionable and cunning detective, is endowed with looks as deadly as her pearl-handled Beretta. Despite holding a high social ranking in 1920s Melbourne, she enjoys breaking societal rules as much as author Kerry Greenwood does generic ones (using an unconventional figure as her heroine). If she were male, Fisher’s drinking, smoking, casual sex and choice of profession would be a less entertaining stereotype. Aficionados of the series will enjoy the latest misconstrual of Fisher’s behaviour and femininity: a male character always manages to underestimate her abilities, intelligence or openness to all members of society.

Book 1 Title: Murder in the Dark
Book Author: Kerry Greenwood
Book 1 Biblio: Allen & Unwin, $19.95 pb, 299 pp
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Murder in the Dark is a worthy addition to the vast Phryne Fisher collection. Fans of this well-researched series will be pleased to rediscover the usual St Kilda cast, and will welcome the diverse, if not always likeable, supporting cast of profligate party-goers, polo-playing cowgirls, sultry American jazz musicians, rather luscious young men and the occasional goat.

Read more: Emily Fraser reviews 'Murder in the Dark' by Kerry Greenwood

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In the 1980s, when it seemed that the situation in South Africa would never improve, debate raged about the responsibility of South African novelists to act as witnesses to, and opponents of, apartheid. Some believed that white writers, especially, should use their privileged position in the fight. Nadine Gordimer was prominent among those who felt it was essential to be, in J.M. Coetzee’s words, a ‘stripper-away of convenient illusions and unmasker of colonial bad faith’1 in the realist convention, rather than a spinner of postmodern metafictions.

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In the 1980s, when it seemed that the situation in South Africa would never improve, debate raged about the responsibility of South African novelists to act as witnesses to, and opponents of, apartheid. Some believed that white writers, especially, should use their privileged position in the fight. Nadine Gordimer was prominent among those who felt it was essential to be, in J.M. Coetzee’s words, a ‘stripper-away of convenient illusions and unmasker of colonial bad faith’1 in the realist convention, rather than a spinner of postmodern metafictions.

Read more: 'Coetzee’s Freedom' by Gillian Dooley

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Jennifer Strauss reviews ‘The Passenger’ by Laurie Duggan
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How to convey the pleasures of a whole collection of Laurie Duggan’s poetry? They are so various, one reason why Duggan is a source of perplexity to anthologists in search of a definitively characteristic poem. Anything as long and wilfully extravagant in spacing and layout as the anti-rhapsody ‘September Song’ almost automatically excludes itself; something epigrammatic then, say ‘A Little Book of Wisdom’ – but what about a virtuoso pastiche, the sonnets of ‘In Memory of Ted Berrigan’, or a ‘Blue Hills’ poem, with that imagist ‘minimalistic elegance’, which ‘Upside down’ declares: ‘unattractive / as the description of a potential residence / though ok if applied to / a book of poems ... my poems.’

It is even more difficult to find a Duggan poem that will slot neatly into the discourse of a thematic anthology. Against the grain of solidity in so much Australian poetry, there is something elusive here, an unreadiness to be ‘formulated, sprawling on a pin’ like that prototype of modernist angst Prufrock, whose ‘Do I dare to eat a peach?’ mischievously morphs to ‘Do I dare to eat a Porsche?’ in ‘Fantasia on a Theme by TS Eliot’. Mischief is part of Duggan’s very considerable satirical armoury against solemnity: consider ‘this country is my mind’: ‘just two minutes after / Les Murray became a republic / somebody cancelled my visa.’ But mischief is not all; there is something coldly sobering about this other glimpse Duggan offers of the relationship between politics and poetry: ‘At the centre of empire / the poets, stitched, bound / and acid-free.’

Book 1 Title: The Passenger
Book Author: Laurie Duggan
Book 1 Biblio: UQP, $23.95 pb, 89 pp
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How to convey the pleasures of a whole collection of Laurie Duggan’s poetry? They are so various, one reason why Duggan is a source of perplexity to anthologists in search of a definitively characteristic poem. Anything as long and wilfully extravagant in spacing and layout as the anti-rhapsody ‘September Song’ almost automatically excludes itself; something epigrammatic then, say ‘A Little Book of Wisdom’ – but what about a virtuoso pastiche, the sonnets of ‘In Memory of Ted Berrigan’, or a ‘Blue Hills’ poem, with that imagist ‘minimalistic elegance’, which ‘Upside down’ declares: ‘unattractive / as the description of a potential residence / though ok if applied to / a book of poems ... my poems.’

Read more: Jennifer Strauss reviews ‘The Passenger’ by Laurie Duggan

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Jill Roe reviews Ida Leeson: A life by Sylvia Martin
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This book opens in Papeete one evening in 1935. Two American film-makers are in Tahiti to take location shots for Mutiny on the Bounty, and director Frank Lloyd laments his failure to find Captain Bligh’s log books. A small white-haired person of indeterminate appearance at the next table leans over: ‘I know where they are,’ she says. Of course she did. The logbooks were in the Mitchell Library, Sydney, and the speaker was Ida Leeson, Mitchell Librarian from 1932 to 1946. The Mitchell Library, located in the Public (now State) Library of New South Wales, is based on the priceless collection of Australiana and south-west Pacific materials donated in 1907 by the reclusive bibliophile David Scott Mitchell. Leeson, its second chief custodian, not only knew the vast collection backwards but added significantly to it. She also used it herself, a key to effective librarianship.

Book 1 Title: Ida Leeson
Book 1 Subtitle: A life
Book Author: Sylvia Martin
Book 1 Biblio: Allen & Unwin, $29.95 pb, 256 pp
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This book opens in Papeete one evening in 1935. Two American film-makers are in Tahiti to take location shots for Mutiny on the Bounty, and director Frank Lloyd laments his failure to find Captain Bligh’s log books. A small white-haired person of indeterminate appearance at the next table leans over: ‘I know where they are,’ she says. Of course she did. The logbooks were in the Mitchell Library, Sydney, and the speaker was Ida Leeson, Mitchell Librarian from 1932 to 1946. The Mitchell Library, located in the Public (now State) Library of New South Wales, is based on the priceless collection of Australiana and south-west Pacific materials donated in 1907 by the reclusive bibliophile David Scott Mitchell. Leeson, its second chief custodian, not only knew the vast collection backwards but added significantly to it. She also used it herself, a key to effective librarianship.

Read more: Jill Roe reviews 'Ida Leeson: A life' by Sylvia Martin

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Jo Case reviews The Unexpected Elements of Love by Kate Legge
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The world conjured by first-time novelist and veteran journalist Kate Legge in The Unexpected Elements of Love is disturbingly familiar. It is peopled by frantic working mothers, lonely single women battling the biological clock, ageing couples ‘rowing against the tide’ of dementia and ill health, and sensitive small children swallowing pill-packed marshmallows for ADHD, all set against the backdrop of an increasingly extreme weather system, frequently referred to as ‘the warming’. It seems odd that this blazingly topical book, published in a year when the effects of climate change have been headline news, was written five years ago.

Book 1 Title: The Unexpected Elements of Love
Book Author: Kate Legge
Book 1 Biblio: Viking, $29.95 pb, 249 pp
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The world conjured by first-time novelist and veteran journalist Kate Legge in The Unexpected Elements of Love is disturbingly familiar. It is peopled by frantic working mothers, lonely single women battling the biological clock, ageing couples ‘rowing against the tide’ of dementia and ill health, and sensitive small children swallowing pill-packed marshmallows for ADHD, all set against the backdrop of an increasingly extreme weather system, frequently referred to as ‘the warming’. It seems odd that this blazingly topical book, published in a year when the effects of climate change have been headline news, was written five years ago.

Read more: Jo Case reviews 'The Unexpected Elements of Love' by Kate Legge

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John Hirst reviews ‘What If?: Australian history as it might have been’ by Stuart Macintyre and Sean Scalmer
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Thirteen scholars here have fun changing the course of Australian history, but this diverting exercise has the serious purpose of making the real history fresher, more complex and surprising.

Even the more implausible scenarios can have this effect. Marilyn Lake imagines Prime Minister Alfred Deakin declaring independence from Britain in 1908 and aligning Australia with the United States, which brings to our attention the high place in the Australian imagination accorded to the American republic as exemplar, potential ally and partner in the spreading of a vigorous white manhood across the new world. Ann Curthoys ponders the character and influence of feminism by imagining a men’s movement emerging in the 1970s.

Book 1 Title: What If?
Book 1 Subtitle: Australian history as it might have been
Book Author: Stuart Macintyre and Sean Scalmer
Book 1 Biblio: MUP, $34.95 pb, 293 pp
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Thirteen scholars here have fun changing the course of Australian history, but this diverting exercise has the serious purpose of making the real history fresher, more complex and surprising.

Even the more implausible scenarios can have this effect. Marilyn Lake imagines Prime Minister Alfred Deakin declaring independence from Britain in 1908 and aligning Australia with the United States, which brings to our attention the high place in the Australian imagination accorded to the American republic as exemplar, potential ally and partner in the spreading of a vigorous white manhood across the new world. Ann Curthoys ponders the character and influence of feminism by imagining a men’s movement emerging in the 1970s.

Read more: John Hirst reviews ‘What If?: Australian history as it might have been’ by Stuart Macintyre and...

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Kabita Dhara reviews India Vik by Liz Gallois
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Longing is the central player in these interlinked short stories, set in India and Australia. Liz Gallois’s characters are questing individuals, resisting the hand that life has dealt them. They negotiate relationships that are fraught with tension – sexual, racial, cultural – all affected by the frailty of their understanding of who they are and what they want.

Western writing that uses India and Indians as counterpoints often veers towards exoticism, but there is a refreshing lack of sentimentality and stereotypes in Gallois’ stories. An individual and confident voice, she often challenges assumptions, sometimes distorting the lens through which the West views ‘India’.

Book 1 Title: India Vik
Book Author: Liz Gallois
Book 1 Biblio: Transit Lounge, $29.95 pb, 199 pp
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Longing is the central player in these interlinked short stories, set in India and Australia. Liz Gallois’s characters are questing individuals, resisting the hand that life has dealt them. They negotiate relationships that are fraught with tension – sexual, racial, cultural – all affected by the frailty of their understanding of who they are and what they want.

Western writing that uses India and Indians as counterpoints often veers towards exoticism, but there is a refreshing lack of sentimentality and stereotypes in Gallois’ stories. An individual and confident voice, she often challenges assumptions, sometimes distorting the lens through which the West views ‘India’.

Read more: Kabita Dhara reviews 'India Vik' by Liz Gallois

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Marion Maddox reviews Voting for Jesus: Christianity and politics in Australia (Quarterly Essay 22) by Amanda Lohrey
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In the week that Voting for Jesus landed in my letterbox, the Howard government announced that it was considering dollar-for-dollar support for state school chaplaincies, while, in New South Wales, fresh allegations surfaced of branch stacking by the state Liberals’ ‘religious right’ faction. Those perplexed by such developments in secular Australia will find novelist Amanda Lohrey a helpful, warm-hearted guide. Her colourful, impressionistic and approachable account of Australia’s religious right welcomes readers into a debate that some might previously have been inclined to dismiss as too confusing, or as marginal to secular concerns. Chats with academics, theologians and commentators offer a variety of angles. Far from adopting a didactic tone, the text beguiles with numerous questions that sound rhetorical but often remain unanswered.

Book 1 Title: Quarterly Essay 22: Voting for Jesus
Book 1 Subtitle: Christianity and politics in Australia
Book Author: Amanda Lohrey
Book 1 Biblio: Black inc., $14.95 pb, 112 pp
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In the week that Voting for Jesus landed in my letterbox, the Howard government announced that it was considering dollar-for-dollar support for state school chaplaincies, while, in New South Wales, fresh allegations surfaced of branch stacking by the state Liberals’ ‘religious right’ faction. Those perplexed by such developments in secular Australia will find novelist Amanda Lohrey a helpful, warm-hearted guide. Her colourful, impressionistic and approachable account of Australia’s religious right welcomes readers into a debate that some might previously have been inclined to dismiss as too confusing, or as marginal to secular concerns. Chats with academics, theologians and commentators offer a variety of angles. Far from adopting a didactic tone, the text beguiles with numerous questions that sound rhetorical but often remain unanswered.

Read more: Marion Maddox reviews 'Voting for Jesus: Christianity and politics in Australia (Quarterly Essay...

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Morag Fraser reviews This is the ABC: The Australian Broadcasting Commission 1932–1983 by Ken Inglis
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Ken Inglis is now as much a part of the history of the ABC as any of the charismatic broadcasters, mercurial managers or audiences – devoted and indignant – that his two monumental histories chronicle. He has become the repository, the source, the critical race memory of the ABC, ‘just three years older’ than the phenomenon he examines.

The list of corrigenda at the end of the new edition of This Is the ABC (first published by Melbourne University Press in 1983) underscores the point: insiders, listeners, viewers and politicians have inundated him with corrections and information to refine and expand his already minutely detailed volume one of the history. Listeners plead with him to include the story of the newsreader who announced that a lady had been bitten on the funnel by a finger-webbed spider. Other responses are less benign. Solicitors for Sir Charles Moses, for thirty years the ABC’s general manager, write to Inglis in 1983 listing ‘imputations’ in his book which they claim are grossly defamatory of Sir Charles’s good name and reputation. Sir Charles himself, at the Broadcast House launch of the first volume in 1983, greeted the disconcerted author with the news that he would be hearing from his solicitors. ‘I did my best to look and sound at ease when Dame Leonie called me to the dais’, recalls Inglis. The case was not pursued, and the relevant documents are now deposited in the National Library. But it is characteristic of the man and the historian that Inglis should ‘remain sad that although my admiration for the ABC’s principal maker was evidently clear to reviewers and other readers, the subject himself could not see it’.

Book 1 Title: This is the ABC
Book 1 Subtitle: The Australian Broadcasting Commission 1932–1983
Book Author: Ken Inglis
Book 1 Biblio: Black Inc., $39.95, 645 pp
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The list of corrigenda at the end of the new edition of This Is the ABC (first published by Melbourne University Press in 1983) underscores the point: insiders, listeners, viewers and politicians have inundated him with corrections and information to refine and expand his already minutely detailed volume one of the history. Listeners plead with him to include the story of the newsreader who announced that a lady had been bitten on the funnel by a finger-webbed spider. Other responses are less benign. Solicitors for Sir Charles Moses, for thirty years the ABC’s general manager, write to Inglis in 1983 listing ‘imputations’ in his book which they claim are grossly defamatory of Sir Charles’s good name and reputation. Sir Charles himself, at the Broadcast House launch of the first volume in 1983, greeted the disconcerted author with the news that he would be hearing from his solicitors. ‘I did my best to look and sound at ease when Dame Leonie called me to the dais’, recalls Inglis. The case was not pursued, and the relevant documents are now deposited in the National Library. But it is characteristic of the man and the historian that Inglis should ‘remain sad that although my admiration for the ABC’s principal maker was evidently clear to reviewers and other readers, the subject himself could not see it’.

Read more: Morag Fraser reviews 'This is the ABC: The Australian Broadcasting Commission 1932–1983' by Ken...

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Article Title: Advances - September 2006
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We welcome entries in the third ABR Poetry Prize. In its short life, this competition has become one of the most prominent of its kind in the country. Poets have until December 15 to enter the prize, which is worth $2000. Up to six poems will be shortlisted in the March 2007 issue; the winner will be announced one month later. Full details appear on page 42. The entry form is also available on our website, or on request. The previous winners were Stephen Edgar and Judith Bishop. Advances was pleased to see that Judith Beveridge has included Edgar’s prize-winning poem ‘The Man on the Moon’ in The Best Australian Poetry 2006 (UQP) — one of eight poems in the anthology that were first published in ABR.

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ABR Poetry Prize

We welcome entries in the third ABR Poetry Prize. In its short life, this competition has become one of the most prominent of its kind in the country. Poets have until December 15 to enter the prize, which is worth $2000. Up to six poems will be shortlisted in the March 2007 issue; the winner will be announced one month later. Full details appear on page 42. The entry form is also available on our website, or on request. The previous winners were Stephen Edgar and Judith Bishop. Advances was pleased to see that Judith Beveridge has included Edgar’s prize-winning poem ‘The Man on the Moon’ in The Best Australian Poetry 2006 (UQP) — one of eight poems in the anthology that were first published in ABR.

Matters of life and death

Read more: Advances - September 2006

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Dear Editor,

The Australian Society of Authors has written to Attorney-General Philip Ruddock to oppose any moves to ban books. The ASA is very concerned by any move to ‘ban books’ under the guise of ‘counselling, urging, providing instruction or praising terrorism’ and hence determined as seditious. Under current law, it is a crime to publish ‘seditious words’, and the provisions within that law enable federal and state jurisdictions to take action if warranted. It is the view of the ASA that our members currently operate responsibly within this restriction and will continue to do so, even when critical of any government in power at the time.

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ASA opposes banning books

Dear Editor,

The Australian Society of Authors has written to Attorney-General Philip Ruddock to oppose any moves to ban books. The ASA is very concerned by any move to ‘ban books’ under the guise of ‘counselling, urging, providing instruction or praising terrorism’ and hence determined as seditious. Under current law, it is a crime to publish ‘seditious words’, and the provisions within that law enable federal and state jurisdictions to take action if warranted. It is the view of the ASA that our members currently operate responsibly within this restriction and will continue to do so, even when critical of any government in power at the time.

Read more: Letters - September 2006

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Gail Jones reviews After Blanchot: Literature, criticism, philosophy edited by Leslie Hall, Brian Nelson and Dimitris Vardoulakis
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When I introduce undergraduates to the work of Maurice Blanchot, I begin with three simple stories. In the first, a philosopher refuses to allow himself to be photographed. Foucault tells of engaging in vig-orous conversation at a May 1968 demonstration with a man he learned only later was the elusive Blanchot. He was the unrecognised colleague, invisible and self-effacing, but also enormously productive (Leslie Hill tells us that his works, if collected, would run to three dozen volumes). The second story is told in Blanchot’s TheWriting of the Disaster (1980), in which a small boy awakens at night, looks out into the blackness and sees no stars, no presence, ‘nothing beyond’. It is a remembered scene, riveting in its clarity, of originary loss and intimations of mortality. The third story is without doubt the most well known. In 1944, Blanchot faced execution by a Nazi firing squad but somehow, mysteriously, ‘escaped his own death’. This bizarre impossibility, the sense of death’s untimeliness and capricious propinquity, marks all Blanchot’s work, his essays, journalism, fiction and philosophy, and infuses it with a pervasively melancholic tone.

Book 1 Title: After Blanchot
Book 1 Subtitle: Literature, criticism, philosophy
Book Author: Leslie Hall, Brian Nelson and Dimitris Vardoulakis
Book 1 Biblio: University of Delaware Press, $49.95 pb, 279 pp
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When I introduce undergraduates to the work of Maurice Blanchot, I begin with three simple stories. In the first, a philosopher refuses to allow himself to be photographed. Foucault tells of engaging in vig-orous conversation at a May 1968 demonstration with a man he learned only later was the elusive Blanchot. He was the unrecognised colleague, invisible and self-effacing, but also enormously productive (Leslie Hill tells us that his works, if collected, would run to three dozen volumes). The second story is told in Blanchot’s TheWriting of the Disaster (1980), in which a small boy awakens at night, looks out into the blackness and sees no stars, no presence, ‘nothing beyond’. It is a remembered scene, riveting in its clarity, of originary loss and intimations of mortality. The third story is without doubt the most well known. In 1944, Blanchot faced execution by a Nazi firing squad but somehow, mysteriously, ‘escaped his own death’. This bizarre impossibility, the sense of death’s untimeliness and capricious propinquity, marks all Blanchot’s work, his essays, journalism, fiction and philosophy, and infuses it with a pervasively melancholic tone.

Read more: Gail Jones reviews 'After Blanchot: Literature, criticism, philosophy' edited by Leslie Hall,...

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Geoff Gallop reviews Fear and Politics by Carmen Lawrence
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The subject of fear and politics has often captured the attention of the political left. Indeed, I am immediately reminded of two wonderful books: In Place of Fear (1952), by the British Labour politician Nye Bevan; and The Fear of Freedom (1941), by the post-Freudian and socialist Erich Fromm. Whilst Fromm set out to understand the roots of fear in the human condition, Bevan sought practical solutions to the most obvious manifestations of fear in a world that had been shaken to its foundations by economic depression, fascism and war. Both were democratic socialists who believed that the insecurities which led to fear could be tackled through political, social and economic change.

For a brief moment following the collapse of communism, it appeared that such a solution might be within our grasp. Some even talked of ‘the end of history’. How wrong they were, as we witness the rebirth of insecurity associated with global warming, international terrorism and nuclear proliferation.

Book 1 Title: Fear and Politics
Book Author: Carmen Lawrence
Book 1 Biblio: Scribe, $22 pb, 136 pp
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The subject of fear and politics has often captured the attention of the political left. Indeed, I am immediately reminded of two wonderful books: In Place of Fear (1952), by the British Labour politician Nye Bevan; and The Fear of Freedom (1941), by the post-Freudian and socialist Erich Fromm. Whilst Fromm set out to understand the roots of fear in the human condition, Bevan sought practical solutions to the most obvious manifestations of fear in a world that had been shaken to its foundations by economic depression, fascism and war. Both were democratic socialists who believed that the insecurities which led to fear could be tackled through political, social and economic change.

For a brief moment following the collapse of communism, it appeared that such a solution might be within our grasp. Some even talked of ‘the end of history’. How wrong they were, as we witness the rebirth of insecurity associated with global warming, international terrorism and nuclear proliferation.

Read more: Geoff Gallop reviews 'Fear and Politics' by Carmen Lawrence

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Geordie Williamson reviews Meanjin vol. 65 no. 2, On Cities, Overland 183: The New Australian Ugliness and Heat 11: Sheltered Lives
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The idea that literary journals gain something by being yoked to a single theme seems to me one of the mildly dubious aspects of the enterprise. I suspect the tendency grows from a fear of disorder – ‘the anarchy of randomness’, as Adam Phillips puts it. But if these organs do require some unifying concept, it should ideally be a determination on the part of their contributors not to be herded into acquiescence with any one position. The true pleasure to be had from their pages is the jostle of selfhoods, the dust and din of competing subjectivities, rather than a communal reinforcement of, or opposition to, the status quo. As with any muster, it is the breakaways that provide the best exercise.

Book 1 Title: Meanjin
Book 1 Subtitle: Vol. 65, No. 2, On Cities
Book Author: Ian Britain
Book 1 Biblio: $22.95 pb, 250 pp
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Book 2 Title: Overland 183
Book 2 Subtitle: The New Australian Ugliness
Book 2 Author: Nathan Hollier
Book 2 Biblio: $12.50 pb, 96 pp
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Book 3 Title: Heat 11
Book 3 Subtitle: Sheltered Lives
Book 3 Author: Ivor Indyk
Book 3 Biblio: $24.95 pb, 240 pp
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The idea that literary journals gain something by being yoked to a single theme seems to me one of the mildly dubious aspects of the enterprise. I suspect the tendency grows from a fear of disorder – ‘the anarchy of randomness’, as Adam Phillips puts it. But if these organs do require some unifying concept, it should ideally be a determination on the part of their contributors not to be herded into acquiescence with any one position. The true pleasure to be had from their pages is the jostle of selfhoods, the dust and din of competing subjectivities, rather than a communal reinforcement of, or opposition to, the status quo. As with any muster, it is the breakaways that provide the best exercise.

But editors, whose responsibility it is to impose order on chaos, must furnish some broad rubric; and the reviewer must attend to it in response. So, here, the Zeitgeist settles upon the urban and its declinations. Each journal, after its particular fashion, and to a greater or lesser degree, is interested in the particular density and texture that the urban experience proffers: either in the way that culture, politics or history manifests itself in urban space, or through the artistic responses such space inspires.

Read more: Geordie Williamson reviews 'Meanjin vol. 65 no. 2, On Cities', 'Overland 183: The New Australian...

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Grant Bailey reviews The Premiers of New South Wales Volume 1: 1856-1901 and The Premiers of New South Wales Volume 2: 1901-2005 edited by David Clune and Ken Turner
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The problem with many ‘big occasion’ publications is that they are written for the occasion rather than for an audience. This collection – the first reference work to cover all the premiers of New South Wales from 1856 until July 2005 – has been published to coincide with the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of responsible government in New South Wales. Happily, however, The Premiers of New South Wales displays none of the failings typical of other ‘landmark’ volumes. On the contrary, this is a valuable and relevant work that merits the interest of non-specialist readers. The authors have profiled the premiers in their social and personal contexts, as well as in their political environments. This extends the appeal of the collection and adds considerable interest. Together, the two volumes provide valuable insights into the evolution of New South Wales from a colony to a state.

Book 1 Title: The Premiers of New South Wales Volume 1
Book 1 Subtitle: 1856-1901
Book Author: David Clune and Ken Turner
Book 1 Biblio: Federation Press, $39.95 hb, 272 pp
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Book 2 Title: The Premiers of New South Wales Volume 2
Book 2 Subtitle: 1901-2005
Book 2 Author: David Clune and Ken Turner
Book 2 Biblio: Federation Press, $39.95 hb, 548 pp
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The problem with many ‘big occasion’ publications is that they are written for the occasion rather than for an audience. This collection – the first reference work to cover all the premiers of New South Wales from 1856 until July 2005 – has been published to coincide with the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of responsible government in New South Wales. Happily, however, The Premiers of New South Wales displays none of the failings typical of other ‘landmark’ volumes. On the contrary, this is a valuable and relevant work that merits the interest of non-specialist readers. The authors have profiled the premiers in their social and personal contexts, as well as in their political environments. This extends the appeal of the collection and adds considerable interest. Together, the two volumes provide valuable insights into the evolution of New South Wales from a colony to a state.

Read more: Grant Bailey reviews 'The Premiers of New South Wales Volume 1: 1856-1901' and 'The Premiers of...

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James Ley reviews Reflected Light: La Trobe essays edited by Peter Beilharz and Robert Manne
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In 1993, when he was editor of Quadrant, Robert Manne published a short essay, which is collected in his recent book Left Right Left (2005), called ‘On Political Correctness’. The essay rehearsed some familiar right-wing arguments against this ‘highly intolerant’ doctrine and the threat it posed to academic freedom. Manne’s political opinions have, of course, undergone a considerable realignment in the intervening years, and so has the national political landscape. While the term ‘political correctness’ has proved far too convenient to disappear completely, these days it is heard less often and is generally invoked with less heat. This is partly because, over the past decade or so, it has done its job of denigrating any leftish sounding opinion so effectively.

Book 1 Title: Reflected Light
Book 1 Subtitle: La Trobe essays
Book Author: Peter Beilharz and Robert Manne
Book 1 Biblio: Black Inc., $29.95, 343 pp
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In 1993, when he was editor of Quadrant, Robert Manne published a short essay, which is collected in his recent book Left Right Left (2005), called ‘On Political Correctness’. The essay rehearsed some familiar right-wing arguments against this ‘highly intolerant’ doctrine and the threat it posed to academic freedom. Manne’s political opinions have, of course, undergone a considerable realignment in the intervening years, and so has the national political landscape. While the term ‘political correctness’ has proved far too convenient to disappear completely, these days it is heard less often and is generally invoked with less heat. This is partly because, over the past decade or so, it has done its job of denigrating any leftish sounding opinion so effectively.

‘Political correctness’ is, as Manne observed in 1993, a ‘pejorative label’. It is a rhetorical cudgel wielded in place of rational argument. It does precisely what it accuses the so-called politically correct of doing: it stigmatises an ideologically deviant opinion rather than engaging with it on a point of substance. It is little more than a received idea that is used as a reflex form of denunciation. For anyone interested in the power of words and the way they define public political debate, the potent example of political correctness is instructive. In no small part due to the endless reiteration of the concept in the media, the whole character of public discourse has changed. We have passed through the looking glass. As a nation, we are now so gloriously liberated from the tyranny of political correctness that even taking part in a race riot does not constitute evidence of racism.

Read more: James Ley reviews 'Reflected Light: La Trobe essays' edited by Peter Beilharz and Robert Manne

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Paul Brunton reviews Paper Empires: A history of the book in Australia, 1946-2005 edited by Craig Munro and Robyn Sheahan-Bright
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This eagerly awaited volume is the last in a trilogy which will recount the history of the book in Australia. The first volume, which will cover the years to 1890, is in preparation. Volume Two, A History of the Book in Australia, 1891–1945: A National Culture in a Colonised Market, edited by Martyn Lyons and John Arnold, was published in 2001.

What is a history of the book? The present volume regrettably does not tell us. We need to consult Volume Two, where Martyn Lyons tells us that it is the history of print culture: ‘The historian of the book is concerned not just with the creative imagination but with all the processes of production, including typesetting, binding, illustration, editing, proofreading, designing, and publishing.’ In addition to the history of book production, the history of print culture encompasses distribution and reception, which involves bookshops and booksellers, libraries and librarians, and, by no means least, readers. The promotion of reading and its hindrance (censorship and other factors) are important topics. It is a broad canvas.

Book 1 Title: Paper Empires
Book 1 Subtitle: A history of the book in Australia, 1946-2005
Book Author: Craig Munro and Robyn Sheahan-Bright
Book 1 Biblio: UQP, $45 pb, 433 pp
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This eagerly awaited volume is the last in a trilogy which will recount the history of the book in Australia. The first volume, which will cover the years to 1890, is in preparation. Volume Two, A History of the Book in Australia, 1891–1945: A National Culture in a Colonised Market, edited by Martyn Lyons and John Arnold, was published in 2001.

What is a history of the book? The present volume regrettably does not tell us. We need to consult Volume Two, where Martyn Lyons tells us that it is the history of print culture: ‘The historian of the book is concerned not just with the creative imagination but with all the processes of production, including typesetting, binding, illustration, editing, proofreading, designing, and publishing.’ In addition to the history of book production, the history of print culture encompasses distribution and reception, which involves bookshops and booksellers, libraries and librarians, and, by no means least, readers. The promotion of reading and its hindrance (censorship and other factors) are important topics. It is a broad canvas.

Read more: Paul Brunton reviews 'Paper Empires: A history of the book in Australia, 1946-2005' edited by...

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Peter Mares reviews Unravelling Identity: Immigrants, identity and citizenship in Australia by Trevor Batrouney and John Goldlust, and Borderwork in multicultural Australia by Bob Hodge and John OCarroll
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I witnessed Australia’s inglorious exit from the World Cup in a packed Balmain Rugby Leagues club. Many in the crowd were sporting green and gold, and when it came time for the pre-match national anthem, the crowd rose almost as one to join in a well-oiled and full-throated rendition of Advance Australia Fair. I was glad that my reluctance to take part was masked by the fact that I was already standing – at the bar as it happens, trying to order a beer before kick-off.

In the 2006 Colin Simpson Memorial lecture for the Australian Society of Authors, poet Dorothy Porter declared that ‘at this present time’ she loves her cat more than she loves her country. Porter also declared that she loves the poem ‘For My Cat Jeoffrey’, by Christopher Smart (an eighteenth-century poet who spent much of his life in an asylum), astronomically more than the ‘drab strains and drab pompous lyrics’ of our national anthem. Perhaps Dorothy Porter and I are both un-Australian, but then patriotism, surely, is not measured in decibels.

Read more: Peter Mares reviews 'Unravelling Identity: Immigrants, identity and citizenship in Australia' by...

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Peter Mares reviews Unravelling Identity: Immigrants, identity and citizenship in Australia by Trevor Batrouney and John Goldlust, and Borderwork in multicultural Australia by Bob Hodge and John OCarroll
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I witnessed Australia’s inglorious exit from the World Cup in a packed Balmain Rugby Leagues club. Many in the crowd were sporting green and gold, and when it came time for the pre-match national anthem, the crowd rose almost as one to join in a well-oiled and full-throated rendition of Advance Australia Fair. I was glad that my reluctance to take part was masked by the fact that I was already standing – at the bar as it happens, trying to order a beer before kick-off.

In the 2006 Colin Simpson Memorial lecture for the Australian Society of Authors, poet Dorothy Porter declared that ‘at this present time’ she loves her cat more than she loves her country. Porter also declared that she loves the poem ‘For My Cat Jeoffrey’, by Christopher Smart (an eighteenth-century poet who spent much of his life in an asylum), astronomically more than the ‘drab strains and drab pompous lyrics’ of our national anthem. Perhaps Dorothy Porter and I are both un-Australian, but then patriotism, surely, is not measured in decibels.

Book 1 Title: Unravelling Identity
Book 1 Subtitle: Immigrants, identity and citizenship in Australia
Book Author: Trevor Batrouney and John Goldlust
Book 1 Biblio: Common Ground, $45 pb, 251 pp
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Book 2 Title: Borderwork In Multicultural Australia
Book 2 Author: Bob Hodge and John O'Carroll
Book 2 Biblio: Allen & Unwin, $35 pb, 252 pp
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I witnessed Australia’s inglorious exit from the World Cup in a packed Balmain Rugby Leagues club. Many in the crowd were sporting green and gold, and when it came time for the pre-match national anthem, the crowd rose almost as one to join in a well-oiled and full-throated rendition of Advance Australia Fair. I was glad that my reluctance to take part was masked by the fact that I was already standing – at the bar as it happens, trying to order a beer before kick-off.

In the 2006 Colin Simpson Memorial lecture for the Australian Society of Authors, poet Dorothy Porter declared that ‘at this present time’ she loves her cat more than she loves her country. Porter also declared that she loves the poem ‘For My Cat Jeoffrey’, by Christopher Smart (an eighteenth-century poet who spent much of his life in an asylum), astronomically more than the ‘drab strains and drab pompous lyrics’ of our national anthem. Perhaps Dorothy Porter and I are both un-Australian, but then patriotism, surely, is not measured in decibels.

Read more: Peter Mares reviews 'Unravelling Identity: Immigrants, identity and citizenship in Australia' by...

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Rebecca Starford reviews Write Home for Me: A red cross woman in Vietnam by Jean Debelle Lamensdorf
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Towards the end of her story, Jean Debelle Lamensdorf admits that she ‘wanted to mentally shut out the horror of Vietnam – to remember only a sanitised version of our year out there’. Having spent twelve gruelling months working as a volunteer for the Red Cross, tending to the non-medical welfare of wounded ANZAC troops, Debelle Lamensdorf has succeeded in cleansing this personal account of life during one of modern history’s most bloody wars.

Book 1 Title: Write Home for Me
Book 1 Subtitle: A red cross woman in Vietnam
Book Author: Jean Debelle Lamensdorf
Book 1 Biblio: Random House, $32.95 pb, 302 pp
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Towards the end of her story, Jean Debelle Lamensdorf admits that she ‘wanted to mentally shut out the horror of Vietnam – to remember only a sanitised version of our year out there’. Having spent twelve gruelling months working as a volunteer for the Red Cross, tending to the non-medical welfare of wounded ANZAC troops, Debelle Lamensdorf has succeeded in cleansing this personal account of life during one of modern history’s most bloody wars.

Read more: Rebecca Starford reviews 'Write Home for Me: A red cross woman in Vietnam' by Jean Debelle...

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Contents Category: Essay
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Article Title: Celluloid Junkies
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Though we have seen periods during which Australian cinema has been synonymous with period-set narratives and idealised evocations of the outback, there has always been a darker side to our cinematic imagination, a gritty, hard-edged element that is just as crucial to this country’s feature film output as are the sepia-tinged dreamscapes. Many of the pivotal films of the Australian New Wave brought a vivid, finely judged aesthetic to the bleakest of subject matter. Fred Schepisi’s The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith (1978) conjured a harrowing tragedy of grisly murders and manhunts, while Peter Weir’s darkly comic feature début, The Cars That Ate Paris (1974), presented a paranoid, murderous rural community whose raison d’être was maintaining its seclusion, even if that meant killing any outsiders who found their way into town.

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Though we have seen periods during which Australian cinema has been synonymous with period-set narratives and idealised evocations of the outback, there has always been a darker side to our cinematic imagination, a gritty, hard-edged element that is just as crucial to this country’s feature film output as are the sepia-tinged dreamscapes. Many of the pivotal films of the Australian New Wave brought a vivid, finely judged aesthetic to the bleakest of subject matter. Fred Schepisi’s The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith (1978) conjured a harrowing tragedy of grisly murders and manhunts, while Peter Weir’s darkly comic feature début, The Cars That Ate Paris (1974), presented a paranoid, murderous rural community whose raison d’être was maintaining its seclusion, even if that meant killing any outsiders who found their way into town.

Read more: ‘Celluloid Junkies’ by Nick Prescott

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James Walter reviews ‘Reconnecting Labor’ by Barry Donovan and ‘Coming to the Party: Where to next for Labor?’ by Barry Jones
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Article Title: Labor’s cottage industry
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The Liberal Party, in its barren years (1983–96), was consumed in battles over beliefs. The dries took up the cudgels in a war over the nature of liberalism and effectively gained control of the party room. As Paul Kelly has described it, the party torched its Deakinite heritage. John Howard was not central to these battles, but he was the inheritor. His brilliance has been to take the neo-liberal agenda (individualism, choice, markets versus ‘bureaucracy’, the ‘mainstream’ versus ‘élites’), to give it an Australian resonance (by reinterpreting the ‘Australian legend’ as a story of individual battlers) and, relentlessly, to link his profession of beliefs to every policy statement he makes. It is unlikely that most of the punters systematically assess what Howard says in their own voting deliberations, or could complete a test on Howard’s key principles, but impressions have their effects. Recently, when I asked a group whether they thought there was a difference between the parties, a young woman confidently replied: ‘Yes, one party knows what it thinks and gets on with it; the other doesn’t.’

Book 1 Title: Reconnecting Labor
Book Author: Barry Donovan
Book 1 Biblio: Scribe, $30 pb, 213 pp
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Book 2 Title: Coming to the Party
Book 2 Subtitle: Where to next for Labor?
Book 2 Author: Barry Jones
Book 2 Biblio: MUP, $24.95 pb, 237 pp
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The Liberal Party, in its barren years (1983–96), was consumed in battles over beliefs. The dries took up the cudgels in a war over the nature of liberalism and effectively gained control of the party room. As Paul Kelly has described it, the party torched its Deakinite heritage. John Howard was not central to these battles, but he was the inheritor. His brilliance has been to take the neo-liberal agenda (individualism, choice, markets versus ‘bureaucracy’, the ‘mainstream’ versus ‘élites’), to give it an Australian resonance (by reinterpreting the ‘Australian legend’ as a story of individual battlers) and, relentlessly, to link his profession of beliefs to every policy statement he makes. It is unlikely that most of the punters systematically assess what Howard says in their own voting deliberations, or could complete a test on Howard’s key principles, but impressions have their effects. Recently, when I asked a group whether they thought there was a difference between the parties, a young woman confidently replied: ‘Yes, one party knows what it thinks and gets on with it; the other doesn’t.’

Read more: James Walter reviews ‘Reconnecting Labor’ by Barry Donovan and ‘Coming to the Party: Where to next...

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Jay Thompson reviews ‘At Thy Call: We did not falter’ by Clive Holt
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At Thy Call is Clive Holt’s account of his experience as a soldier in the Angolan War. The author aims to convey the enormity of this event and the impact it has had upon the servicemen involved. In doing this, he provides an alternative to those writings that have addressed only ‘the tactical components of the war’.

The book opens in the late 1980s, when the teenage Holt entered the conflict in Angola as part of South Africa’s compulsory two-year military conscription for white males. Holt describes the carnage and fear that he and his fellow servicemen frequently experienced. The author also discusses his struggle with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in the war’s aftermath.

Book 1 Title: At Thy Call
Book 1 Subtitle: We did not falter
Book Author: Clive Holt
Book 1 Biblio: Paradigm Media Trust, $32.95 pb, 210 pp
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At Thy Call is Clive Holt’s account of his experience as a soldier in the Angolan War. The author aims to convey the enormity of this event and the impact it has had upon the servicemen involved. In doing this, he provides an alternative to those writings that have addressed only ‘the tactical components of the war’.

Read more: Jay Thompson reviews ‘At Thy Call: We did not falter’ by Clive Holt

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Contents Category: Poem
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Article Title: Howe Hill
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We came for a death,
climbed the highest mountain
cast ash
reclined on a granite slab,
our old faces tinted rose
pinked by a collapsing sun.
And for our mate, scattered about us,
grey wafers for our communion,
a slow recitation of the mountains spread,

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for Steve

Read more: ‘Howe Hill’ by Bruce Pascoe

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Miklos Radnoti, marched from forced labour
in Yugoslavia back into Hungary, came to rest
near a bend in the Radca, at what his translator
describes as ‘a strange lonely place’ where

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Miklos Radnoti, marched from forced labour
in Yugoslavia back into Hungary, came to rest
near a bend in the Radca, at what his translator
describes as ‘a strange lonely place’ where

Read more: ‘The Greenshank’ by Robert Adamson

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Owen Richardson reviews ‘Vale Byron Bay’ by Wayne Grogan and ‘Tuvalu’ by Andrew O’Connor
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Article Title: Deeply not at home
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These two novels are both strong in their sense of locale, and take their settings as part of the subject, linked to pictures of isolation and barely functioning relationships, and with catastrophe not averted.

Book 1 Title: Vale Byron Bay
Book Author: Wayne Grogan
Book 1 Biblio: Brandl & Schlesinger, $26.95 pb, 312 pp
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Book 2 Title: Tuvalu
Book 2 Author: Andrew O’Connor
Book 2 Biblio: Allen & Unwin, $22.95 pb, 348 pp
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These two novels are both strong in their sense of locale, and take their settings as part of the subject, linked to pictures of isolation and barely functioning relationships, and with catastrophe not averted.

Tuvalu, by Andrew O’Connor, not yet in his thirties, is set in Japan, so the alienation is perhaps part of the given. Noah Tuttle teaches English semi-competently to semi-interested Japanese businessmen (the set-up, with its cubicles in which you never meet the same student twice, sounds like a cross between a call centre and a massage parlour). Noah’s only friend is a vain, arrogant model called Patrick, whom he doesn’t like very much. His girlfriend is in Australia; while she is away, he gets mixed up with a wayward rich Japanese woman, Mami, who does what she wants and says what she likes and never feels guilty. She is frankly toying with him, happy to tell him that his appeal for her is that he is from somewhere else – not just geographically but socially hopeless, and thus an easy mark. Noah tepidly puts up a fight and allows himself to be walked over by Mami, who seems to have come straight out of one of those ‘cruel story of youth’ movies that the Japanese made with such style in the 1960s. Meanwhile, his family life in Australia is disintegrating.

Read more: Owen Richardson reviews ‘Vale Byron Bay’ by Wayne Grogan and ‘Tuvalu’ by Andrew O’Connor

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Contents Category: Children's and Young Adult Fiction
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Article Title: This sporting life
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Life’s not easy when … (fill in the blank according to your main story issue). It is a line that appears frequently on back covers and in press releases for junior fiction. But life is getting a lot easier for parents and teachers of reluctant readers who would far rather race around with a ball than curl up with a book. With the arrival of the sports novel, they can now read about somebody else racing around with a ball – or surfing, swimming, pounding the running track, wrestling, or cycling (the genre covers a wide field). Balls, however, seem to predominate. And problems. Life isn’t easy for publishers without a sports series. Hoping to emulate the success of the ‘Specky Magee’ books written by Felice Arena and Garry Lyon, publishers have been busy throwing authors and sport stars together, one to do the creative business, and the other to add verisimilitude and sporting cred.

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Life’s not easy when … (fill in the blank according to your main story issue). It is a line that appears frequently on back covers and in press releases for junior fiction. But life is getting a lot easier for parents and teachers of reluctant readers who would far rather race around with a ball than curl up with a book. With the arrival of the sports novel, they can now read about somebody else racing around with a ball – or surfing, swimming, pounding the running track, wrestling, or cycling (the genre covers a wide field). Balls, however, seem to predominate. And problems. Life isn’t easy for publishers without a sports series. Hoping to emulate the success of the ‘Specky Magee’ books written by Felice Arena and Garry Lyon, publishers have been busy throwing authors and sport stars together, one to do the creative business, and the other to add verisimilitude and sporting cred.

Read more: Ruth Starke reviews seven children's books

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Stuart Macintyre reviews ‘To Exercise Our Talents: The democratization of writing in Britain’ by Christopher Hilliard
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Contents Category: Literary Studies
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Once the prerogative of connoisseurs and bibliographers, the study of the book has become an increasingly popular field of cultural history. Earlier scholarship was concerned with rare and variant editions of canonical texts; recent work is more inclusive, comprehending a wide range of popular and ephemeral literature that extended the reach of print. Attention has turned from production to consumption, tracing the spread of literacy and analysing the changing interests of readers. Hence Martyn Lyons and Lucy Taksa’s Australian Readers Remember (1992) sits alongside a number of similar studies for other countries.

Book 1 Title: To Exercise Our Talents
Book 1 Subtitle: The democratization of writing in Britain
Book Author: Christopher Hilliard
Book 1 Biblio: Harvard University Press, $59.95 hb, 390 pp
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Once the prerogative of connoisseurs and bibliographers, the study of the book has become an increasingly popular field of cultural history. Earlier scholarship was concerned with rare and variant editions of canonical texts; recent work is more inclusive, comprehending a wide range of popular and ephemeral literature that extended the reach of print. Attention has turned from production to consumption, tracing the spread of literacy and analysing the changing interests of readers. Hence Martyn Lyons and Lucy Taksa’s Australian Readers Remember (1992) sits alongside a number of similar studies for other countries.

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