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February–March 1987, no. 88

Gerard Windsor reviews James Duhig by T.P. Boland
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Subtle-tasting experience, dating back more than ten years, has made me suspicious of ideologues who take pen to comment on Their Own. Whether they’re, say, reviewing the fiction or writing the history of Their Own, the continuing good of the Cause tends to be a primary consideration. So my sceptical heart sank when I heard that the biography of James Duhig, Catholic Archbishop in Brisbane from 1912 to 1965, was being written by Father T.P. Boland, a priest of that diocese.

Book 1 Title: James Duhig
Book Author: T.P. Boland
Book 1 Biblio: University of Queensland Press, 435 pp, $40 hb
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Subtle-tasting experience, dating back more than ten years, has made me suspicious of ideologues who take pen to comment on Their Own. Whether they’re, say, reviewing the fiction or writing the history of Their Own, the continuing good of the Cause tends to be a primary consideration. So my sceptical heart sank when I heard that the biography of James Duhig, Catholic Archbishop in Brisbane from 1912 to 1965, was being written by Father T.P. Boland, a priest of that diocese.

Read more: Gerard Windsor reviews 'James Duhig' by T.P. Boland

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David Matthews reviews Running Backwards Over Sand by Stephanie Dowrick
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With her first novel (published in 1985 and now available in paperback), publisher and writer Stephanie Dowrick has created a long and uneven though often absorbing work, tracing the life of Zoë Delighty from birth to mature womanhood. It is a testament to the heroine’s survival of the vicissitudes of her active life, and her struggle to counter the malign influences of her girlhood which dog her through her attempts to engage herself creatively in life.

Book 1 Title: Running Backwards Over Sand
Book 1 Subtitle: Stephanie Dowrick
Book 1 Biblio: Penguin, 349 pp, $6.95 pb
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With her first novel (published in 1985 and now available in paperback), publisher and writer Stephanie Dowrick has created a long and uneven though often absorbing work, tracing the life of Zoë Delighty from birth to mature womanhood. It is a testament to the heroine’s survival of the vicissitudes of her active life, and her struggle to counter the malign influences of her girlhood which dog her through her attempts to engage herself creatively in life.

Running Backwards over Sand is divided roughly into thirds, with the first section covering Zoë’s New Zealand childhood and its important events – the separation of her parents, the death of her beloved mother and her resultant rebelliousness. The second part details Zoë’s life as a young woman abroad, and centres around her relationship with Gabriel, a German sculptor she meets in London and moves with to Berlin. This complex, often painful relationship remains central to Zoë’s life and a major preoccupation of the rest of the book, even after Gabriel leaves Zoë at the close of the second section. In the final section Zoë returns to London, trying to rebuild her life, making new friends and finding a fulfilling new job. Gradually she moves towards a resolution of her relationship with Gabriel and explores an emergent aspect of her sexuality in two important relationships with women.

Read more: David Matthews reviews 'Running Backwards Over Sand' by Stephanie Dowrick

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Self Portrait by Carmel Bird
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When I read fiction I want the words to take my spirit into the places beneath the surface of the everyday world. I want the freshness of dreams to be again revealed to me. I want to know the loveliness and terror of what lies beyond the last star, of what lies sweetly cradled in the blood and juices of the human heart. I long to feel the shock when the tulip spikes the damp soil, feel the blissful impact of the truth, see the glint, the glimmer, the shimmer of another reality. When I read I wish to enjoy the company of the writer and the company of the people and the things in the story, to participate with all of them in the seductive mystery. I desire to be enchanted.

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When I read fiction I want the words to take my spirit into the places beneath the surface of the everyday world. I want the freshness of dreams to be again revealed to me. I want to know the loveliness and terror of what lies beyond the last star, of what lies sweetly cradled in the blood and juices of the human heart. I long to feel the shock when the tulip spikes the damp soil, feel the blissful impact of the truth, see the glint, the glimmer, the shimmer of another reality. When I read I wish to enjoy the company of the writer and the company of the people and the things in the story, to participate with all of them in the seductive mystery. I desire to be enchanted.

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Christina Thompson reviews The Delinquents and Down by the Dockside by Criena Rohan
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Given the appetite of the literary industry, it’s hard to believe that a good thing can go unnoticed for long. But it happens. Occasionally the manuscript of an unheard-of author, or the out-of-print book of a forgotten one, finds its way into the hands of an influential member of the literary establishment – and from there to the rest of us. It’s a big event. Not only does it lend credibility to the old Shakespeare’s sister story (or one of its variants), but it indicates that, even in this over-determined world, it is still possible to be surprised.

Book 1 Title: The Delinquents
Book Author: Criena Rohan
Book 1 Biblio: Penguin, 192 pp, $6.95 pb
Book 2 Title: Down by the Dockside
Book 2 Author: Criena Rohan
Book 2 Biblio: Penguin, 256 pp, $7.95 pb
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Given the appetite of the literary industry, it’s hard to believe that a good thing can go unnoticed for long. But it happens. Occasionally the manuscript of an unheard-of author, or the out-of-print book of a forgotten one, finds its way into the hands of an influential member of the literary establishment – and from there to the rest of us. It’s a big event. Not only does it lend credibility to the old Shakespeare’s sister story (or one of its variants), but it indicates that, even in this over-determined world, it is still possible to be surprised.

Read more: Christina Thompson reviews 'The Delinquents' and 'Down by the Dockside' by Criena Rohan

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Mark Roberts reviews The Nightmarkets by Alan Wearne
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In the early seventies, the rock band Skyhooks asked ‘Whatever happened to the revolution?’ They answered themselves in the next line: ‘We all got stoned and it drifted away.’

Book 1 Title: The Nightmarkets
Book Author: Alan Wearne
Book 1 Biblio: Penguin, 292 pp, $14.95 pb
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In the early seventies, the rock band Skyhooks asked ‘Whatever happened to the revolution?’ They answered themselves in the next line: ‘We all got stoned and it drifted away.’

Back in the early seventies it seemed that the rebellion of the sixties had resulted in something concrete. Whitlam was in power, the army had been withdrawn from Vietnam, the Australia Council had been established ... It was a good time to get stoned and watch things drift away, and that is precisely what a number of the main characters in Alan Wearne’s verse novel The Nightmarkets seem to have done.

Read more: Mark Roberts reviews 'The Nightmarkets' by Alan Wearne

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Brian Matthews reviews Literary Links: Celebrating the literary relationship between Australia and Britain by Roslyn Russell
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Contents Category: Literary Studies
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I’ve always wanted to begin by declaring an interest. Roslyn Russell’s Literary Links gives me at last the opportunity I’ve been waiting for: so, I declare an interest – and only some very stern editing will prevent me from saying why!

Book 1 Title: Literary Links
Book 1 Subtitle: Celebrating the literary relationship between Australia and Britain
Book Author: Roslyn Russell
Book 1 Biblio: Allen & Unwin, $29.95 pb, 249 pp
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I’ve always wanted to begin by declaring an interest. Roslyn Russell’s Literary Links gives me at last the opportunity I’ve been waiting for: so, I declare an interest – and only some very stern editing will prevent me from saying why!

Read more: Brian Matthews reviews 'Literary Links: Celebrating the literary relationship between Australia...

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Vane Lindesay reviews Women and Men by Bruce Petty
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More than in any other way, Australian humour has evolved and found its greatest expression not through the nation’s writers, entertainers, or film makers, but by the means of cartoonists drawing for the Australian press. This humour had two significant periods of development - the first beginning with the founding of the Bulletin a little over a century ago when the editors of this illustrated publication, notably J.F. Archibald, encouraged and fostered native talent, especially those artists of the day with comic graphic skills.

Book 1 Title: Women and Men
Book Author: Bruce Petty
Book 1 Biblio: Allen & Unwin, 148 pp, $15.95 pb
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More than in any other way, Australian humour has evolved and found its greatest expression not through the nation’s writers, entertainers, or film makers, but by the means of cartoonists drawing for the Australian press. This humour had two significant periods of development - the first beginning with the founding of the Bulletin a little over a century ago when the editors of this illustrated publication, notably J.F. Archibald, encouraged and fostered native talent, especially those artists of the day with comic graphic skills.

As could be expected and as we now acknowledge as part of our lore, the favoured subjects for comic ridicule (apart from the politicians, Queen Victoria, and Asians) were based on our rural origins and economy, on some aspect of ‘outback’ or bush life as it affected drovers, shearers, bullock-team drivers, bush parsons, cocky farmers – and Aborigines.

Read more: Vane Lindesay reviews 'Women and Men' by Bruce Petty

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Bronwen Levy reviews Was Your Dad A Russian Spy? The personal story of the Combe/Ivanov Affair by David Combe’s wife by Meena Blesing
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As Meena Blesing explained in an interview on Sixty Minutes, writing an autobiographical account of her life during the Combe-Ivanov Royal Commission was something she needed to do. Writing the book allowed her to discuss the events of 1983 and their consequences in a way that gave expression to and ordered her anger. For the reader, Blesing’s very personal story provides a perspective on the Combe Affair which has not been canvassed in the other published material: media reports, the Hope Report, David Marr’s The Ivanov Trail. That the book concludes on a note of somewhat ironic hope is but one indication of the emotional complexity of the material story, she covers. For, in telling her own story, Blesing also presents us with what can be read as a rare discussion of the impact on private, family life of state actions and policies.

Book 1 Title: Was Your Dad A Russian Spy?
Book 1 Subtitle: The personal story of the Combe/Ivanov Affair by David Combe’s wife
Book Author: Meena Blesing
Book 1 Biblio: Macmillan, 223 pp, $9.95 pb
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As Meena Blesing explained in an interview on Sixty Minutes, writing an autobiographical account of her life during the Combe-Ivanov Royal Commission was something she needed to do. Writing the book allowed her to discuss the events of 1983 and their consequences in a way that gave expression to and ordered her anger. For the reader, Blesing’s very personal story provides a perspective on the Combe Affair which has not been canvassed in the other published material: media reports, the Hope Report, David Marr’s The Ivanov Trail. That the book concludes on a note of somewhat ironic hope is but one indication of the emotional complexity of the material story she covers. For, in telling her own story, Blesing also presents us with what can be read as a rare discussion of the impact on private, family life of state actions and policies.

Read more: Bronwen Levy reviews 'Was Your Dad A Russian Spy? The personal story of the Combe/Ivanov Affair by...

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Contents Category: Commentary
Custom Article Title: U.S. Reporting
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Contemporary Australian literature was among the less obscure topics discussed at the recent Modern Language Association convention held in New York. About 15,000 delegates came to the bazaar, some looking for jobs or friends, others attending a boggling array of literary discussions on bat fantasy in Dickens, the future of East European nature poetry and the shape of language in Thea Astley’s work. This last one was a fine lecture given by Robert Ross, tireless president of the American Association for Australian Literary Studies, which will hold its own conference in March at Penn State University. Marcia Allentuck gave a lively talk about Australian Yiddish literature – in particular Herz Bergner’s Light and Shadows, which portrayed the bitter angst of the immigrant almost thirty years before the current wave of immigrant writing.

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Contemporary Australian literature was among the less obscure topics discussed at the recent Modern Language Association convention held in New York. About 15,000 delegates came to the bazaar, some looking for jobs or friends, others attending a boggling array of literary discussions on bat fantasy in Dickens, the future of East European nature poetry and the shape of language in Thea Astley’s work. This last one was a fine lecture given by Robert Ross, tireless president of the American Association for Australian Literary Studies, which will hold its own conference in March at Penn State University. Marcia Allentuck gave a lively talk about Australian Yiddish literature – in particular Herz Bergner’s Light and Shadows, which portrayed the bitter angst of the immigrant almost thirty years before the current wave of immigrant writing.

A group of actors from Pirra Arts Centre near Geelong will tour California, Kansas and Minnesota later this year to present a program called ‘Australian Sounds and Images’. Organizer of the trip is playwright Keith Harrison, now at Carleton College in Minnesota. Harrison hopes the program will go beyond the image of Australia which is presented in Crocodile Dundee. Talking of which People magazine chose Paul Hogan as one of its people of the year. Among its other choices was Sarah Ferguson…

Richard Allen is a young Australian poet currently living in New York. He recently returned to Sydney for the launching of his book, The Way Out At Last & Other Poems (Hale and Iremonger), and now has a busy schedule of performances of his mixed-media  poetry/dance/video works in New York and around the country. Enthusiastic reviewers have praised Allen’s ‘bold physicality’ and Twyla Tharp-style post-modernism.

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Robert Pascoe reviews The Oxford History of Australia, Volume 4: The Succeeding Age by Stuart Macintyre
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Contents Category: Australian History
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Article Title: The Historian’s History
Article Subtitle: A critique of origins
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The appearance of a volume in the Oxford History of Australia would be an important event in its own right, but coming on the eve of the Bicentennial flood of historical publications it assumes special significance. The publishers and the general editor of the series had hoped to launch all five volumes in the series well before the market is awash with books, but this plan might now be shipwrecked on the rocks of misfortune.

Book 1 Title: The Oxford History of Australia, Volume 4
Book 1 Subtitle: The Succeeding Age
Book Author: Stuart Macintyre
Book 1 Biblio: Oxford University Press, 399 p., index, $35.00 hb
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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The appearance of a volume in the Oxford History of Australia would be an important event in its own right, but coming on the eve of the Bicentennial flood of historical publications it assumes special significance. The publishers and the general editor of the series had hoped to launch all five volumes in the series well before the market is awash with books, but this plan might now be shipwrecked on the rocks of misfortune.

The Oxford History series differs from the main twelve-volume Bicentennial History Project in method and design. Each volume is being penned by a single author, rather than collectively, and each will cover a specific span of years (such as 1860-1900). The larger Project focusses on single years (for instance, 1888, 1938) hoping to offer a sense of micro-historical detail which is not always evident in conventional narrative history.

Read more: Robert Pascoe reviews 'The Oxford History of Australia, Volume 4: The Succeeding Age' by Stuart...

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Chris Tiffin reviews Poetry in Pictures: The Great Barrier Reef by Mark O’Connor and Neville Coleman
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Contents Category: Poetry
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Article Title: Romanticism and the Reef
Article Subtitle: Appropriations of nature
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Illustrations are almost mandatory for certain types of books, technical manuals, travel books. Illustrated poetry is not unheard of, but neither is it a common phenomenon in Australia, the normal perception being that poetry is a discrete and competent medium. Nevertheless, there are times when pictorial complementation has been thought desirable. Such a book is O’Connor and Coleman’s Poetry in Pictures: The Great Barrier Reef, which collects some of O’Connor’s reef poems and matches them up with some superb photographs of the birds and marine forms described. The result is a handsome book of the sort you might buy at a reef resort for a Thinking Friend back home.

Book 1 Title: Poetry in Pictures
Book 1 Subtitle: The Great Barrier Reef
Book Author: Mark O’Connor and Neville Coleman
Book 1 Biblio: Hale & Iremonger, $9.95
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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Illustrations are almost mandatory for certain types of books, technical manuals, travel books. Illustrated poetry is not unheard of, but neither is it a common phenomenon in Australia, the normal perception being that poetry is a discrete and competent medium. Nevertheless, there are times when pictorial complementation has been thought desirable. Such a book is O’Connor and Coleman’s Poetry in Pictures: The Great Barrier Reef, which collects some of O’Connor’s reef poems and matches them up with some superb photographs of the birds and marine forms described. The result is a handsome book of the sort you might buy at a reef resort for a Thinking Friend back home.

Read more: Chris Tiffin reviews 'Poetry in Pictures: The Great Barrier Reef' by Mark O’Connor and Neville...

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‘If you can’t say something nice,’ my mother always said, ‘don’t say anything at all.’ (I pinch this opening gambit, shamelessly, from Kate Grenville’s Self-Portrait in the last ABR, and hope she does not mind; imitation is the sincerest form etc.) Apropos of parental expectations regarding niceness-or-silence, however, I am reminded of a remark of Elizabeth Jolley’s: ‘I think my mother wanted a princess, and she got me instead.’

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‘If you can’t say something nice,’ my mother always said, ‘don’t say anything at all.’ (I pinch this opening gambit, shamelessly, from Kate Grenville’s Self-Portrait in the last ABR, and hope she does not mind; imitation is the sincerest form etc.) Apropos of parental expectations regarding niceness-or-silence, however, I am reminded of a remark of Elizabeth Jolley’s: ‘I think my mother wanted a princess, and she got me instead.’

All of which is to say that, were this piece a standard book review, I would feel obliged – in the interests of objective judgement, intellectual rigour and such – to look for at least one mildly negative thing to say about each of these books. This, however, is not your basic book review but rather an occasional and celebratory piece which turns a benign eye on the six books which have been shortlisted for the 1987 National Book Council Awards for Australian Literature. I feel free, then, to be as nice as I like, and that will not be at all hard because these six books made lovely summer reading, and my mother will be pleased. By alphabetical order of author, the shortlist is this:

Read more: Survey | Kerryn Goldsworthy reviews the 1987 National Book Council Awards for Australian...

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Paul Marriott reviews Pushed from the Wings: An entertainment by Ross Fitzgerald (illustrated by Alan Moir)
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Article Title: Hanging Out for Tenure
Article Subtitle: Semioticians, hand grenades and the academic novel
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By the time I was 35, I’d spent fifteen years as a student and teacher in universities. I was scornful of those who sneered at ‘Sheltered Workshops’ – a fashionable putdown in the early 70s; at the same time, I mocked Zelman Cowan’s observation – when playing stag at bay and asserting that he really was au fait with academia – that ‘I have spent all my adult life in universities’. But they are real places.

Book 1 Title: Pushed from the Wings
Book 1 Subtitle: An entertainment
Book Author: Ross Fitzgerald (illustrated by Alan Moir)
Book 1 Biblio: Hale & Iremonger 174 pp, $9.95 pb, $19.95 hb
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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By the time I was 35, I’d spent fifteen years as a student and teacher in universities. I was scornful of those who sneered at ‘Sheltered Workshops’ – a fashionable putdown in the early 70s; at the same time, I mocked Zelman Cowan’s observation – when playing stag at bay and asserting that he really was au fait with academia – that ‘I have spent all my adult life in universities’. But they are real places.

Read more: Paul Marriott reviews 'Pushed from the Wings: An entertainment' by Ross Fitzgerald (illustrated by...

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Albert Moran reviews Four Corners: Twenty-five years by Robert Pullan
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Contents Category: Television
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Article Title: Stories from Four Corners
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When Four Corners began on ABC television in 1961 there was little to break what Humphrey McQueen, following Manning Clark, has called the ‘Great Australian Silence’. True, the Sydney fortnightly magazine Nation had started in 1958; but there was little else to offer a toughminded or oppositional outlook on the orthodoxies and consensus that was Australia. So Four Corners was badly needed. In turn it and Nation were joined by others: Oz magazine and the televised Mavis Bramston Show in 1963; The Australian in 1964 and This Day Tonight.

Book 1 Title: Four Corners: Twenty-five years
Book Author: Robert Pullan
Book 1 Biblio: ABC Enterprises, 162 pp, $24.95 hb
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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When Four Corners began on ABC television in 1961 there was little to break what Humphrey McQueen, following Manning Clark, has called the ‘Great Australian Silence’. True, the Sydney fortnightly magazine Nation had started in 1958; but there was little else to offer a toughminded or oppositional outlook on the orthodoxies and consensus that was Australia. So Four Corners was badly needed. In turn it and Nation were joined by others: Oz magazine and the televised Mavis Bramston Show in 1963; The Australian in 1964 and This Day Tonight.

Donald Horne in Years of Hope sees the retirement of Robert Menzies in 1966 as the signal for profound social and political changes to begin in Australia. Yet the Advent of Nation, Four Corners, and the others surely suggests the process began earlier.

Read more: Albert Moran reviews 'Four Corners: Twenty-five years' by Robert Pullan

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Patrick Morgan reviews George Johnston by Garry Kinnane and A Foreign Wife by Gillian Bouras
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Article Title: It’s Who You Are, Not Where You Live
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Like those of Tom and Viv, and Scott and Zelda, the life story of George Johnston and Charmian Clift is a high drama of love, sickness, loyalty, passion, talent and suffering, with a tragic intensity not often found in Australian life. The lives of artists are now often turned into works of art themselves. Garry Kinnane’s biography and the ABC radio documentary based on it make George and Charmian more fascinating than their books, with the possible exception of My Brother Jack.

Book 1 Title: George Johnston
Book 1 Subtitle: A biography
Book Author: Garry Kinnane
Book 1 Biblio: Nelson, $29.95 hb, 330 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 2 Title: A Foreign Wife
Book 2 Author: Gillian Bouras
Book 2 Biblio: McPhee Gribble/Penguin, $9.95 pb, 192 pp
Book 2 Author Type: Author
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Like those of Tom and Viv, and Scott and Zelda, the life story of George Johnston and Charmian Clift is a high drama of love, sickness, loyalty, passion, talent and suffering, with a tragic intensity not often found in Australian life. The lives of artists are now often turned into works of art themselves. Garry Kinnane’s biography and the ABC radio documentary based on it make George and Charmian more fascinating than their books, with the possible exception of My Brother Jack.

The public remembers George Johnston’s triumphal return from Greece in 1964 as the author of My Brother Jack. But behind all the publishing and media hype, we were watching (though we didn’t know it at the time) one of the final acts in a long-drawn-out tragedy: he and Charmian had been tearing each other apart on Hydra, their lives were in disarray and, as it turned out, unrecoverable. Where did it all go wrong?

Read more: Patrick Morgan reviews 'George Johnston' by Garry Kinnane and 'A Foreign Wife' by Gillian Bouras

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Barry Andrews reviews Greg Matthews: The Spirit of Modern Cricket by Roland Fishman
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Article Title: The Spirit of Modern Youth
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I write this review the day after the Fifth Test. Australia has finally won one. I personally wouldn’t give two squirts of goat shit for the Australian selectors but this time they can tell us what to do with our cricket bats. Peter Taylor has taken six for and two for, batted with determination, and won the man of the match. (A shocking decision, by the way. It was Jones, then daylight, then Taylor and Emburey, and I don’t like Victorian batsmen and Poms who played in South Africa.) Twelfth man for Australia was Greg Matthews, who bowls off-spin and bats with determination. Like Taylor, whom Matthews would no doubt call ‘the man’ at the moment. Does this mean Matthews is on the way out, and that Roland Fishman’s mid-career biography, Greg Matthews: The Spirit of Modern Cricket, is one of the sillier Penguins, a book destined to become as popular as Andrew Jones’s autobiography? (Remember Andrew Jones, the oncer in the federal parliament in the mid-sixties? The relevant tome used to be on sale at Mary Martin’s at ten cents, two copies five cents …)

Book 1 Title: Greg Matthews
Book 1 Subtitle: The Spirit of Modern Cricket
Book Author: Roland Fishman
Book 1 Biblio: Penguin, 184 pp, $6.95 pb
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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I write this review the day after the Fifth Test. Australia has finally won one. I personally wouldn’t give two squirts of goat shit for the Australian selectors but this time they can tell us what to do with our cricket bats. Peter Taylor has taken six for and two for, batted with determination, and won the man of the match. (A shocking decision, by the way. It was Jones, then daylight, then Taylor and Emburey, and I don’t like Victorian batsmen and Poms who played in South Africa.) Twelfth man for Australia was Greg Matthews, who bowls off-spin and bats with determination. Like Taylor, whom Matthews would no doubt call ‘the man’ at the moment. Does this mean Matthews is on the way out, and that Roland Fishman’s mid-career biography, Greg Matthews: The Spirit of Modern Cricket, is one of the sillier Penguins, a book destined to become as popular as Andrew Jones’s autobiography? (Remember Andrew Jones, the oncer in the federal parliament in the mid-sixties? The relevant tome used to be on sale at Mary Martin’s at ten cents, two copies five cents …)

Read more: Barry Andrews reviews 'Greg Matthews: The Spirit of Modern Cricket' by Roland Fishman

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Anne Diamond reviews Henry Handel Richardson and Her Fiction by Dorothy Green
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Article Title: Richardson Rebound: How ‘Afterwords’ are never the last words
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Occasionally, there are books of literary criticism which stay in the mind’s eye, so to speak; they endure beyond the point of short-term recall: the central argument, the general impress of thought, the singular, illuminating ideas and catchments of insight. As with Dorothy Green’s massive and intense scrutiny of Henry Handel Richardson, these books have the authority of a kind of passionate clarity, even when they seem paradoxical, or odd.

Book 1 Title: Henry Handel Richardson and Her Fiction
Book Author: Dorothy Green
Book 1 Biblio: Allen & Unwin, 616 pp, $24,95 pb.
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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Occasionally, there are books of literary criticism which stay in the mind’s eye, so to speak; they endure beyond the point of short-term recall: the central argument, the general impress of thought, the singular, illuminating ideas and catchments of insight. As with Dorothy Green’s massive and intense scrutiny of Henry Handel Richardson, these books have the authority of a kind of passionate clarity, even when they seem paradoxical, or odd.

First published under the title Ulysses Bound, this new 1986 edition takes the earlier subtitle: Henry Handel Richardson and Her Fiction. The book will be well-known to many readers, not least for its scrupulous and pioneering research and trenchant discussion. Although the main text remains unchanged – barring minor corrections – the inclusion of a lengthy afterword, thirty photographs, and the new title, mark this edition’s strategic differences from the earlier volume.

Read more: Anne Diamond reviews 'Henry Handel Richardson and Her Fiction' by Dorothy Green

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Manik Datar reviews Man from Arltunga by R.G. Kimber
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Article Title: The Last of the Camel Men
Article Subtitle: A bushman's tale, romantically hued
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Much that is published on the Centre is from the perspective of the jet-and-chopper journalist, so it is with sheer delight that one greets Man from Arltunga, written from the perspective of a local and a bushman. The author’s knowledge of this country is of a rare quality. Not only is he interested in the White settlement of the area but he also has a broader appreciation for the prehistory and for the Black version of their history. In the thirteen years that Dick Kimber has lived in the Centre he has travelled extensively with Aboriginal people through their ancestral country. He has travelled the Aboriginal way, with Aboriginal navigators, journeying slowly, digressing for relatives, or for bush tucker, or for ceremonial business. His first-hand knowledge together with his affinity for the country made him an ideal companion for Walter Smith on their journey to record Walter’s story.

Book 1 Title: Man from Arltunga
Book Author: R. G. Kimber
Book 1 Biblio: Hesperian Press, 193 pp., $22.05
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Much that is published on the Centre is from the perspective of the jet-and-chopper journalist, so it is with sheer delight that one greets Man from Arltunga, written from the perspective of a local and a bushman. The author’s knowledge of this country is of a rare quality. Not only is he interested in the White settlement of the area but he also has a broader appreciation for the prehistory and for the Black version of their history. In the thirteen years that Dick Kimber has lived in the Centre he has travelled extensively with Aboriginal people through their ancestral country. He has travelled the Aboriginal way, with Aboriginal navigators, journeying slowly, digressing for relatives, or for bush tucker, or for ceremonial business. His first-hand knowledge together with his affinity for the country made him an ideal companion for Walter Smith on their journey to record Walter’s story.

Read more: Manik Datar reviews 'Man from Arltunga' by R.G. Kimber

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