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May 2012, no. 341

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Contents Category: Advances

 

New home for ABR

ABR_office

Happily, ABR has a new home, well away from the egregious fashions of Bridge Road, Richmond. Soon we will be moving to a new community hub in Melbourne’s Southbank precinct. The City of Melbourne has renovated the nineteenth-century J.H. Boyd Girls’ High School on City Road, and our new office (not finished when we took this photograph!) will be infinitely superior to our present cramped premises. The Boyd will house a new public library, a café, and a range of arts practitioners. ABR will have access to the elegant function room on the ground floor, which will comfortably seat at least 100 people. Already we are planning an extensive program of events.

 

 

 

 

 

Patrick White at 100Patrick_White_print_1.5_MB

April 12 was quite a night in Canberra, when Patrick White’s long-time agent and literary executor, Barbara Mobbs, and renowned actress Judy Davis spoke at the opening of The Life of Patrick White, an absorbing exhibition of letters, manuscripts, notebooks, photographs, and memorabilia. After a lengthy showing in Canberra (until 8 July), the exhibition will move to the State Library of New South Wales (13 August–29 October).

Continuing our series of reviews and commentaries on the great writer, this month we publish David Marr’s extended article on Patrick White’s vicissitudes as a dramatist and on his difficult but ultimately fertile (if distracting) work in the theatre.

W.H. Chong’s portrait of White (which appeared on our April 2011 cover) has been one of the most popular in his series of ABR portrait prints. Of the thirty prints in this edition, we have ten left. To mark the White centenary, we have reduced the price to $125 for current subscribers, and $150 for non-subscribers (plus postage). Call us on (03) 9429 6700 to buy a print.

 

 

Vale Bruce Bennett 1941–2012

Australian literature has lost an outstanding scholar, educator, and champion with the death of Bruce Bennett AO, who was Professor of English Literature at the Australian Defence Force Academy from 1993 to 2006. His publications include Spirit in Exile: Peter Porter and His Poetry (1991) and The Oxford Literary History of Australia (1998, co-edited with Jennifer Strauss and Chris Wallace-Crabbe). He often wrote for ABR, and late last year he became an ABR Patron. Despite serious illness, he went on writing until the end. Elsewhere in this issue, Australian Scholarly Publishing advertises his new book: The Spying Game: An Australian Angle.

 

 

Back to Clunes

ABR enjoys close ties with various regional literary festivals, including Clunes Booktown Festival, which is on again this year (5–6 May). Featured guests will include ABR regulars Anna Goldsworthy, Geoffrey Blainey, and John Arnold. Bracingly early on Saturday, 5 May, Editor Peter Rose will repeat his workshop on ‘The Art of Reviewing’, and that afternoon he will chair a discussion on ‘Patrick White’s Centenary – Why It Matters’, with Peter Goldsworthy, Michael Heyward, and Nicholas Jose.

P1000561

 

 

Postage toastage

We have copies of most back issues of ABR. So keen are we not to have to carry all of them down City Road to The Boyd that we have dropped the postage charge of $2 if you buy copies online. Now you pay just $9.95 per copy.

 

 

Wired for sound

Robert_DessaixRobert Dessaix’s Seymour Biography Lecture, published in our April 2012 issue, is proving to be one of our most popular features in years. Now readers can listen to ‘Pushing against the Dark: Writing about the Hidden Self’ as it was first delivered by Dessaix, at the National Library of Australia. The podcast is available on our website. In addition, the National Library has made Ian Donaldson’s Australian Book Review 50th Birthday Lecture, also delivered in October 2011, available as a podcast – see www.nla.gov.au/podcasts/talks.html. Robert Dessaix’s podcast is the first of many new audiovisual elements with which we plan to augment our ever-changing website.

 

 

Double lives, double prizes

This month, courtesy of Fremantle Press, ten new subscribers will win a signed copy of The House of Fiction: Leonard, Susan and Elizabeth Jolley by Susan Swingler, which Francesca Rendle-Short describes in her review on page 18 as ‘riveting, explosive even, and also deeply moving’. Twenty-five renewing subscribers will win double passes to the new film Trishna, director Michael Winterbottom’s version of Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the d’Urbervilles. Phone us now to claim your prize: (03) 9429 6700.

 

 

 

 

CONTENTS: MAY 2012

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Patrick White in Adelaide by David Marr
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By the time I found him twenty-five years ago in the Adelaide Hills, Glen McBride was old, tiny, spry, and ready to boast about his career. I doubt many readers have heard of this little man or know of his pivotal role in the literature of this country. That’s what had me knocking at his door. And though he disowned none of it in the hours we spent ranging over his life and times, what really perked him up was confessing his part in the salami and sausage business in that part of the world.

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By the time I found him twenty-five years ago in the Adelaide Hills, Glen McBride was old, tiny, spry, and ready to boast about his career. I doubt many readers have heard of this little man or know of his pivotal role in the literature of this country. That’s what had me knocking at his door. And though he disowned none of it in the hours we spent ranging over his life and times, what really perked him up was confessing his part in the salami and sausage business in that part of the world.

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Nick Hordern reviews Class Act: A life of Creighton Burns by John Tidey
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Newspapers, they say, are in the throes of ‘far-reaching structural change’, a euphemism for ‘extinction’ that arouses complacency in the breasts of the e-literate; fury in those of the technophobes. But one only has to take a slightly longer view to realise that the golden age of newspapers, over which Creighton Burns presided as editor of The Age, may have only ever been a transitory phase.

Book 1 Title: Class Act
Book 1 Subtitle: A Life of Creighton Burns
Book Author: John Tidey
Book 1 Biblio: Australian Scholarly Publishing, $34.95 pb, 194 pp, 9781921509496
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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Newspapers, they say, are in the throes of ‘far-reaching structural change’, a euphemism for ‘extinction’ that arouses complacency in the breasts of the e-literate; fury in those of the technophobes. But one only has to take a slightly longer view to realise that the golden age of newspapers, over which Creighton Burns presided as editor of The Age, may have only ever been a transitory phase.

Read more: Nick Hordern reviews 'Class Act: A life of Creighton Burns' by John Tidey

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Francesca Rendle-Short reviews The House of Fiction: Leonard, Susan and Elizabeth Jolley by Susan Swingler
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‘Everything should not be told, it is better to keep some things to yourself.’ So begins Susan Swingler’s The House of Fiction with this quote from much-loved Australian novelist Elizabeth Jolley as an epigraph. And what a loaded beginning it is, too, given the subject matter of this memoir: the discovery by Swingler of the fraudulent and secret double life her father Leonard Jolley led with Elizabeth (or Monica Knight, as she was called), his second wife. In this family drama, which began in England, there are two women who were once friends and who look uncannily alike, two daughters whose names begin with S who were born to these women at almost exactly the same time, and, centre-stage, one taciturn father, Leonard Jolley.

Book 1 Title: The House of Fiction
Book 1 Subtitle: Leonard, Susan and Elizabeth Jolley
Book Author: Susan Swingler
Book 1 Biblio: Fremantle Press, $24.95 pb, 322 pp, 9781921888663
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‘Everything should not be told, it is better to keep some things to yourself.’ So begins Susan Swingler’s The House of Fiction with this quote from much-loved Australian novelist Elizabeth Jolley as an epigraph. And what a loaded beginning it is, too, given the subject matter of this memoir: the discovery by Swingler of the fraudulent and secret double life her father Leonard Jolley led with Elizabeth (or Monica Knight, as she was called), his second wife. In this family drama, which began in England, there are two women who were once friends and who look uncannily alike, two daughters whose names begin with S who were born to these women at almost exactly the same time, and, centre-stage, one taciturn father, Leonard Jolley.

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Geoffrey Cains reviews The Censor’s Library: Uncovering the Lost History of Australia’s Banned Books by Nicole Moore
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Contents Category: Australian History
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Even at the age of eighty-four it appears that our censors of old possessed a moral clarity that no longer exists. Censorship was carried out by the state as a force of moral purpose, protecting the population from the consequences of reading banned literature: to wit, moral decline and subversion, particularly among the powerless. This was pertinent to children whose innocence entailed a lack of knowledge of moral turpitude and who were seen as particularly vulnerable.

Book 1 Title: The Censor’s Library
Book 1 Subtitle: Uncovering the Lost History of Australia’s Banned Books
Book Author: by Nicole Moore
Book 1 Biblio: University of Queensland Press, $39.95 pb, 432 pp, 9780702239168
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Even at the age of eighty-four it appears that our censors of old possessed a moral clarity that no longer exists. Censorship was carried out by the state as a force of moral purpose, protecting the population from the consequences of reading banned literature: to wit, moral decline and subversion, particularly among the powerless. This was pertinent to children whose innocence entailed a lack of knowledge of moral turpitude and who were seen as particularly vulnerable.

Read more: Geoffrey Cains reviews 'The Censor’s Library: Uncovering the Lost History of Australia’s Banned...

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