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December 2012–January 2013, no. 347

Welcome to our mega summer issue. Readers (and authors!) are always keen to know what our key writers regard as the ‘Books of the Year’. This year 26 critics nominate their favourite books – and tell us why they like them. They include Alex Miller, Brenda Niall,Kerryn Goldsworthy and Tony Birch. Nick Hordern reviews John Cantwell’s strikingly candid book Exit Wounds. We have reviews of new fiction by David Foster, J.K. Rowling and Christopher Koch; a short story by John Bryson; and a new poem by John Kinsella.

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ABR Critic in Residence

In one of our major initiatives since the creation of the Calibre Prize and the launch of ABR Online Edition, we will appoint the first ABR Critic in Residence in February. This twelve-month appointment (funded by our Patrons) is valued at $10,000. The ABR Critic in Residence will write a number of substantial reviews and articles and will contribute to the intellectual course of the magazine.

Announcing the residency, Peter Rose commented: ‘We all know that arts commentary is under serious threat in this country. The time is right to champion the work of Australia’s senior critics and commentators – not to neutralise or commodify it. This new position represents a major extension of our existing programs. It will enhance the magazine and allow an outstanding critic to explore major themes at considerable length.’

Critics with established national reputations have until 15 January 2013 to apply. See here for the full guidelines.

Grattan makes a stand

Traditionally, over summer, prime ministers have time to catch up with their reading, when they are not guest-commentating at the cricket. The Grattan Institute has just published its fourth ‘Summer Reading List for the Prime Minister’. The nominated books and essays say things about this country and the world that the Grattan folk think the PM, and Australians in general, should contemplate.

And what should Ms Gillard be reading over Christmas? Here are the six chosen titles: Robert Manne and Chris Feik’s The Words That Made Australia (Black Inc.), Laura Tingle’s Great Expectations: Government, Entitlement and an Angry Nation (Quarterly Essay 46, Black Inc.), Adrian Hyland’s Kinglake-350 (Text Publishing), Emma Marris’s Rambunctious Garden: Saving Nature in a Post-wild World (Bloomsbury), Enrico Moretti’s The New Geography of Jobs (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing), and Daniel Kahneman’s Thinking, Fast and Slow (Penguin). See www.grattan.edu.au for more details.

Kinglake   QE   Words-that-Made

Island and the future

For most literary magazines – indeed, for many arts organisations – these are not halcyon times. Dale Campisi, the new Editor of Island, is candid about the problems that the magazine has faced in its thirty-third year. ‘2012 has been a particularly difficult year for Island too, but it’s perhaps also been its most exciting year,’ he writes in the new issue. He concludes by foreshadowing new programs in 2013: ‘And if not then three cheers to more than three decades of publishing and promoting Tasmanian talent.’

Highlights of Island 130 include John Kinsella on ‘lost texts, dream states and [bracingly] the responsibility of poets’, and poems by Jennifer Maiden, Philip Neilsen, and Felicity Plunkett. To support your local Island, visit the website: www.islandmag.com.

Dale Campisi – industrious fellow that he is – will write for us for the first time in our next issue: fittingly, a review of a new collection of stories from Tasmania (Deep South, edited by Ralph Crane and Danielle Wood, published by Text Publishing).

Island-130   Deep-South

Crowning glory

The Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award, the world’s largest award for children’s and Young Adult literature, is worth a mere five million Swedish crowns (approximately $730,000). Since the presentation of the first award in 2003, it has twice been won by Australians – Sonya Hartnett (2008) and Shaun Tan (2011). This year there are four Australians and two New Zealanders among the 270 nominees: Australian authors Ursula Dubosarsky, Jackie French, Morris Gleitzman, and Melina Marchetta; and, from New Zealand, Joy Cowley and author–illustrator Lynley Dodd. Presented in recognition of ‘lifelong achievement’, the award will be announced on 26 March 2013 in Stockholm.

Fellowships galore

Kerryn_GoldsworthyThe ABR Fellowship program continues apace. These writers’ fellowships – each worth $5000 – are variously funded by philanthropic foundations and our many private patrons.

Kerryn Goldsworthy – one of Australia’s most respected literary critics and a former Editor of ABR – is the inaugural ABR Ian Potter Foundation Fellow. Our Fellowships are themed, and the subject of this one (the first of three to be funded by The Ian Potter Foundation in 2013) is literary studies. Dr Goldsworthy will examine the current state of book reviewing in Australia (online and off). We will publish her long article in May.

The subject of our next Fellowship – the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship – is the visual arts, with a decided emphasis on cogent, lucid, entertaining journalism. Australian writers with a significant publication record have until 20 January to apply.

The Fellow will be named in February, and his or her article will be the centrepiece of our 2013 Art issue (to be published in July). For the complete guidelines see the Programs section of our website.

Give a free gift subscription

Subscribers who renew their subscriptions before 31 December become eligible to give a free six-month subscription to a friend or colleague. Renew your current subscription at any stage (even before it lapses) to qualify for this special offer. Renew for two years and give away two free subs, etc. What a great way to introduce ABR to probing readers. Just complete the online renewal form, or contact us on (03) 9699 8822 (quoting your subscriber number, ideally). This special offer, perfect for Christmas, is open only to print and online subscribers who renew before the end of the year.

Patrick White Award

Amanda Lohrey has won this year’s Patrick White Award. The award, now worth $23,000, was established by Patrick White with the proceeds from his Nobel Prize for Literature. See David Carter’s commentary for an intriguing exploration of the award and its history.

Summer giveaways

This month, courtesy of Melbourne University Publishing, ten prompt new subscribers will each receive a copy of Exit Wounds: One Australian’s War on Terror by John Cantwell with Greg Bearup (which Nick Hordern reviews in this issue).

Renewing subscribers will have the chance to snaffle a double pass to see one of two films that open on Boxing Day. Thanks to Paramount Pictures, we have twenty-five in-season double passes to see Quartet, which is directed by Dustin Hoffman and stars Maggie Smith, Michael Gambon, and Billy Connolly.

We also have twenty-five double passes to the new film adaptation of Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables, thanks to Universal Pictures. The film stars Anne Hathaway, Hugh Jackman, Amanda Seyfried, and Russell Crowe.

ExitWounds   Les-MIs   quartet_billy_connolly_tom_courtenay_andrew_sachs_pauline_collins_1

Farewell to 2012

This year 225 critics and writers have contributed to ABR. We thank all of them. This is one of two double issues we publish each year. We’ll be back in February with another issue, but the office will of course remain open for business over summer. Meanwhile, best wishes from ABR to our readers and supporters.

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Don Anderson reviews Lost Voices by Christopher Koch
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Contents Category: Fiction
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‘There is another world, but it is in this one.’ That is Paul Éluard, channelled by Patrick White as one of four epigraphs to The Solid Mandala (1966), a ‘doubleman’ of a novel avant la lettre.Other quotations appended to this story of Waldo and Arthur Brown are taken from Meister Eckhart (‘It is not outside, it is inside: wholly within’) and Patrick Anderson (‘… yet still I long / for my twin in the sun …’).

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Book 1 Title: Lost Voices
Book Author: Christopher Koch
Book 1 Biblio: Fourth Estate, $32.99 pb, 464 pp, 9780732294632
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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‘There is another world, but it is in this one.’ That is Paul Éluard, channelled by Patrick White as one of four epigraphs to The Solid Mandala (1966), a ‘doubleman’ of a novel avant la lettre.Other quotations appended to this story of Waldo and Arthur Brown are taken from Meister Eckhart (‘It is not outside, it is inside: wholly within’) and Patrick Anderson (‘… yet still I long / for my twin in the sun …’).

Read more: Don Anderson reviews 'Lost Voices' by Christopher Koch

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Sky Kirkham reviews The Tower Mill by James Moloney
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A good novel can use personal drama to humanise history. A small story becomes powerful because of the ideas it represents, and the political, removed from the realm of theory and made concrete, has a tangible impact that can foster empathy and understanding. When done poorly, as it is here, the reverse occurs and the large concepts are reduced, lessened into triviality by the hollowness of the tale.

Book 1 Title: The Tower Mill
Book Author: James Moloney
Book 1 Biblio: University of Queensland Press, $29.95 pb, 302 pp, 9780702249327
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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A good novel can use personal drama to humanise history. A small story becomes powerful because of the ideas it represents, and the political, removed from the realm of theory and made concrete, has a tangible impact that can foster empathy and understanding. When done poorly, as it is here, the reverse occurs and the large concepts are reduced, lessened into triviality by the hollowness of the tale.

Read more: Sky Kirkham reviews 'The Tower Mill' by James Moloney

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Denialism

Dear Editor,

Jan McGuinness is right to conclude that wading through two books on Gina Rinehart is not exactly one of life’s pleasures, but her review (November 2012) is a fine assessment of both Rinehart’s world of privilege, profits, and power, and of the qualities of Rinehart’s two biographers (Debi Marshall and Adele Ferguson) in capturing it.

Marshall and Ferguson, however, both bypass the opportunity to hold Rinehart’s religion of free market capitalism up to political and moral scrutiny. A negative judgement of whether the extreme inequality in wealth and influence between Rinehart and the rest of us is a good thing for society is at best implicit in both books, but they flub the chance to draw out this conclusion. Given that they are both business journalists with the mainstream press, the limits to their scrutiny are not surprising, and their awe and fascination with a capitalist titan, as well as large dollops of human interest padding and dynastic soap opera plot, do not help to make the case for radical economic transformation.

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Robert Horne reviews An Unknown Sky and Other Stories by Susan Midalia
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From the opening page of this her second collection of stories, Susan Midalia propels her uncertain and wavering female character into an alien environment. Enter the concrete world of Moscow airport, its people who think you are simple if you smile at them, its ‘prowling men straight out of gangster movies’, tension as the blank, unblinking woman at immigration ‘held up a rubber stamp for ten, fifteen seconds, and then thumped it down on the passport. Petra felt her legs untighten.

Book 1 Title: An Unknown Sky and Other Stories
Book Author: Susan Midalia
Book 1 Biblio: UWA Publishing, $24.95 pb, 184 pp, 9781742584270
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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From the opening page of this her second collection of stories, Susan Midalia propels her uncertain and wavering female character into an alien environment. Enter the concrete world of Moscow airport, its people who think you are simple if you smile at them, its ‘prowling men straight out of gangster movies’, tension as the blank, unblinking woman at immigration ‘held up a rubber stamp for ten, fifteen seconds, and then thumped it down on the passport. Petra felt her legs untighten.’

Read more: Robert Horne reviews 'An Unknown Sky and Other Stories' by Susan Midalia

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