Accessibility Tools

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

October 2013, no. 355

Welcome to the October issue! The ABR Elizabeth Jolley Prize is now firmly established as one of Australia’s most prestigious and lucrative short story competitions. 1200 people entered this year. Our judges have whittled them down to a shortlist of three stories, and we publish them in the new issue. The winner will be announced at a ceremony in Sydney on 28 October. Otherwise, it’s a peak season for new fiction, and several major new novels are reviewed – Richard Flanagan’s The Narrow Road to the Deep North (James Ley), Alex Miller’s Coal Creek (Brian Matthews), Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam, and Roger McDonald’s The Following. In our Theatre column, Ben Eltham finds little to like in David Williamson’s new play, Rupert.

Open Page with Sheila Fitzpatrick
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Open Page
Custom Article Title: Open Page with Sheila Fitzpatrick
Review Article: No
Show Author Link: Yes
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

I like words, though making music is even better. Writing is almost as good as playing the violin.

Non-review Thumbnail:
Display Review Rating: No

Why do you write?

I like words, though making music is even better. Writing is almost as good as playing the violin.

Are you a vivid dreamer?

I don’t know about vivid, but ever since I was an exchange student in Moscow in the 1960s I have had a repetitive dream about trying to pack and get to Sheremetevo airport, with my Soviet visa run out, but without an exit visa.

Read more: Open Page with Sheila Fitzpatrick

Write comment (0 Comments)
Bec Kavanagh reviews Cry Blue Murder by Kim Kane and Marion Roberts
Free Article: No
Contents Category: YA Fiction
Custom Article Title: Bec Kavanagh on the new YA title: 'Cry Blue Murder'
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Cry blue murder
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Kim Kane and Marion Roberts co-write this eerie Melbourne-based thriller seamlessly. In this story that is every parent’s worst nightmare, we see schoolgirls snatched from the middle of their routine, presumed safe, suburban life.

Book 1 Title: Cry Blue Murder
Book Author: Kim Kane and Marion Roberts
Book 1 Biblio: University of Queensland Press, $19.95 pb, 213 pp, 9780702239267
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Display Review Rating: No

Kim Kane and Marion Roberts co-write this eerie Melbourne-based thriller seamlessly. In this story that is every parent’s worst nightmare, we see schoolgirls snatched from the middle of their routine, presumed safe, suburban life.

Celia and Alice don’t know the first girl taken or each other, but they connect on Facebook through their shared grief that this could happen to someone they have seen, played sport against, pushed past on the bus. As the two girls share emails, their friendship becomes about more than the tragedy of a missing friend and they begin to unfold their lives for each other, sharing their hopes, dreams, and secrets. But the teenage gossip always has a sinister overtone. A second girl goes missing, even closer this time. Alice or Celia could be next.

Read more: Bec Kavanagh reviews 'Cry Blue Murder' by Kim Kane and Marion Roberts

Write comment (0 Comments)
Susan Lever reviews Antipodes, Vol. 27, No. 1, edited by Mark Klemens
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Journals
Custom Article Title: Susan Lever reviews 'Antipodes, Vol. 27, No.1'
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Antipodes, Vol. 27, No. 1
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

No matter what the state of local publishing of Australian literature and criticism, twice a year the loyal members of AAALS continue to produce the readable and enlightening Antipodes. The June 2013 issue includes some splendid poetry by Tom Shapcott, Jan Owen, and Ali Alizadeh, and several less well-known names, and a mix of stories that move beyond fiction in Jeremy Fisher’s memoir of his father’s war experience and Graeme Kinross-Smith recalling his work teaching creative writing. Lucy Neave and John Kinsella contribute engaging, if more conventional, fiction.

Book 1 Title: Antipodes, Vol. 27, No.1
Book Author: Nicholas Birns
Book 1 Biblio: AAALS, US$47 p.a., 120 pp, 08935580
Book 1 Author Type: Editor
Display Review Rating: No

No matter what the state of local publishing of Australian literature and criticism, twice a year the loyal members of AAALS continue to produce the readable and enlightening Antipodes. The June 2013 issue includes some splendid poetry by Tom Shapcott, Jan Owen, and Ali Alizadeh, and several less well-known names, and a mix of stories that move beyond fiction in Jeremy Fisher’s memoir of his father’s war experience and Graeme Kinross-Smith recalling his work teaching creative writing. Lucy Neave and John Kinsella contribute engaging, if more conventional, fiction.

Read more: Susan Lever reviews 'Antipodes, Vol. 27, No. 1', edited by Mark Klemens

Write comment (0 Comments)
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Children's Fiction
Custom Article Title: Ruth Starke reviews new titles in Children's Fiction
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Liberties
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

You think you know what Jackie French’s Refuge (Angus & Robertson, $15.99 pb, 261 pp, 9780732296179) is going to be about, with its front cover photograph of a young boy, his dark eyes full of apprehension and sorrow. You still think you know when the refugee boat carrying the boy, Faris, and his grandmother, Jedda, to Australia is swamped by a huge wave and sinks. So you are almost as puzzled as Faris when he awakes to find himself in a sunlit bedroom with palm trees and a blue sky outside, and his beloved Jedda making breakfast for him. She encourages him to play on the beach, where a strange assortment of children is playing ball, and a naked, dark-skinned youth is spearing fish in the shallows. Faris is invited to join the game, with one proviso: on the beach he must never speak of the past. Faris agrees; there is too much pain in his past to talk about it.

Non-review Thumbnail:
Display Review Rating: No

You think you know what Jackie French’s Refuge (Angus & Robertson, $15.99 pb, 261 pp, 9780732296179) is going to be about, with its front cover photograph of a young boy, his dark eyes full of apprehension and sorrow. You still think you know when the refugee boat carrying the boy, Faris, and his grandmother, Jedda, to Australia is swamped by a huge wave and sinks. So you are almost as puzzled as Faris when he awakes to find himself in a sunlit bedroom with palm trees and a blue sky outside, and his beloved Jedda making breakfast for him. She encourages him to play on the beach, where a strange assortment of children is playing ball, and a naked, dark-skinned youth is spearing fish in the shallows. Faris is invited to join the game, with one proviso: on the beach he must never speak of the past. Faris agrees; there is too much pain in his past to talk about it.

Read more: Ruth Starke reviews 'Refuge' by Jackie French, 'Caesar the War Dog' by Stephen Dando-Collins,...

Write comment (0 Comments)
Jo Scanlan reviews The Boy Colonel: Lieutenant Colonel Douglas Marks, the Youngest Battalion Commander in the AIF by Will Davies
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Military History
Custom Article Title: Jo Scanlan reviews 'The Boy Colonel' by Will Davies
Custom Highlight Text:

So many Australian scholars and writers stand tall alongside C.E.W. Bean that you have to wonder: is there much more that can be said about World War I? Well, no. And yes. Almost one hundred years on, writers such as battlefield historian Will Davies continue to seek illumination through unfamiliar characters and fresh angles. Such is his intention in his latest book, The Boy Colonel ...

Book 1 Title: The Boy Colonel
Book 1 Subtitle: Lieutenant Colonel Douglas Marks, the Youngest Battalion Commander in the AIF
Book Author: Will Davies
Book 1 Biblio: Vintage, $34.95 pb, 428 pp, 9781742755984
Book 1 Author Type: Author

So many Australian scholars and writers stand tall alongside C.E.W. Bean that you have to wonder: is there much more that can be said about World War I? Well, no. And yes. Almost one hundred years on, writers such as battlefield historian Will Davies continue to seek illumination through unfamiliar characters and fresh angles. Such is his intention in his latest book, The Boy Colonel.

Read more: Jo Scanlan reviews 'The Boy Colonel: Lieutenant Colonel Douglas Marks, the Youngest Battalion...

Write comment (0 Comments)