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May 2015, no. 371

Welcome to the May Issue! Highlights include Sophie Cunningham's 2015 Calibre Prize-winning essay 'Staying with the trouble', and the Peter Porter Poetry Prize shortlist. Also, we ask critics and editors what would most improve Australian critical culture, Scott McCulloch visits Tehran, Sheila Fitzpatrick delves into Ramona Koval's memoir, Stephen Edgar reviews Les Murray's new poetry collection, and Ruth A. Morgan reviews a new book on Gunns. Plus Chris Flynn on Steve Toltz' new novel Quicksand, Doug Wallen on a live performance by Paul Kelly, Bernadette Brennan on Helen Garner's 1984 novella The Children's Bach, Luke Slattery on David Malouf’s Being There, and David McCooey is our Poet of the Month.

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Contents Category: Poem
Custom Article Title: Poem of the Week - 'As Wasps Fly Upwards' by Judith Beveridge (2015 Peter Porter Poetry Prize Winner)
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In ABR's sixth 'Poem of the Week' Judith Beveridge discusses and reads her poem 'As Wasps Fly Upwards'

Our sixth 'Poem of the Week' is 'As Wasps Fly Upwards' by Judith Beveridge. ABR's Poetry Editor, Lisa Gorton, introduces Judith who then discusses and reads her poem. 'As Wasps Fly Upwards' won the 2015 Peter Porter Poetry Prize and was published in the May issue of Australian Book Review.


 

 

As Wasps Fly Upwards

I’m walking home in the dying light of a summer’s day.
I do not know that within the minute
a tiny beetle will veer into my left eye,
its blade-like parts meant for slicing plant tissue,
slicing my cornea.
I do not know that within an hour
my eye will feel as though it has undergone a corneal graft
with razor blades, burning match heads
and acid rinses – Christmas eye, a doctor will call it.

I’m remembering this
because I’m reading about entomologist Justin Schmidt,
who once clung to a tree
suspended over a Costa Rican gorge
while enraged wasps squirted venom into his eyes;
a man stung by more winged insects than anyone,
who has classified all the piercing, irreverent,
bold, electric, smoky aches down to precise
decimal gradations
on a five-point Sting Pain Index.
I’ve also been reading a study that describes how Catholics
feel the ferocity of pain ease
if they contemplate images of Mary;
atheists if they watch documentaries
featuring David Attenborough – so I wonder,
when Schmidt steps on a nest of red harvester ants
and pain shoots like mordant dye through his body,
what angelic or analgesic image does he conjure
to demobilise the piercing, crunching agony;
or can he just sigh
and look into the distance and let his mind find relief
in the palliative cotton of wind-blown clouds?

I recall, once or twice in childhood, the pencil-point pressure
of a fang shooting an aggregation
of misery along my arm
as a spider discharged its voltage before dropping from my wrist
like decommissioned fuse wire.
And then there are the pangs that spasmodically flare
along the nerves on the underside of my upper right arm –
and I wonder if this is like the pain
Schmidt feels in his fingers
when digging up a colony of fire ants.

I remember, too, when an abundance of work and worry
has made my cranium feel as if it belonged
to a large-headed baby undergoing hours of obstructed labour.
Though perhaps if I’d been bitten by a bullet ant —
which Schmidt likens to fire-walking over flaming charcoal
with a three-inch rusty nail
grinding into your heel –   I might have a better point
of comparison and without hesitation
be grateful I’ve never had to invent a pain scale,
drawing and quartering metaphors for the way toxins
can burst open cellular membranes, or for the way
suffering can be internally transacted,
made dangerous and monstrous
by the fallacies of the self.

Sometimes I lie awake at night and remember
that death will come – perhaps, suddenly, from a tree
or an overhanging rock, or from a sliding shadow
in the grass; or from a knot of dark blood
bivouacking in my brain.
Or perhaps from a fever, my skin crawling
as though I were lying in the path of a horde of bull acacia ants;
or intense itching and burning as if I’d been
rubbed with a concoction of wasabi, hot mustard
and the necrotising venom of a white-tailed spider.
Or perhaps, just from a build-up over the years
of light, ephemeral stings –
barely noticed, no pain worth recording –
just a remote hum in a honey-vault of light
                                    then a smoky drifting away.

 

Judith Beveridge won the 2015 Peter Porter Poetry Prize. Her latest poetry publications are Devadatta’s Poems and Hook and Eye, which has just been published by George Braziller for the US market. She currently teaches creative writing at the University of Sydney and is the poetry editor for Meanjin.

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Jacinta Le Plastrier reviews The Weekly Poem edited by Jordie Albiston
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Contents Category: Poetry
Custom Article Title: Jacinta Le Plastrier reviews 'The Weekly Poem' edited by Jordie Albiston
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Book 1 Title: The Weekly Poem
Book 1 Subtitle: 52 Exercises in closed and open forms
Book Author: Jordie Albiston
Book 1 Biblio: Puncher & Wattman, $29.95 pb, 183 pp, 9781922186577
Book 1 Author Type: Editor
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Discussing the genesis of a poem, W.H. Auden told Paris Review that at any given time he had two things on his mind: ‘a theme that interests me and a problem of verbal form, meter, diction, etc. The theme looks for the right form; the form looks for the right theme. When the two come together, I am able to start writing.’ Australian poet Jordie Albiston’s The Weekly Poem, comprising fifty-two one-poem-per-week exercises, is a guide designed around such a synthesis. Able to be used by individual poets or set by teachers for creative writing students, each exercise marries a theme with the task of adhering to Albiston’s instructions and the formal concerns for that week.

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Luke Horton reviews Another Great Day At Sea by Geoff Dyer
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Contents Category: Memoir
Custom Article Title: Luke Horton reviews 'Another Great Day At Sea' by Geoff Dyer
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Book 1 Title: Another Great Day At Sea
Book Author: Geoff Dyer
Book 1 Biblio: Text Publishing, $29.99 pb, 190 pp, 9781922182739
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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Despite their disparate subject matter, the central concerns of Geoff Dyer’s books remain the same. Whether he is writing about photography, D.H. Lawrence, taking you scene-by-scene through Andrei Tarkovsky’s Stalker, or, as in Another Great Day At Sea, spending two weeks aboard a US aircraft carrier, his abiding concerns – the self, the nature of writing, why one would go to the trouble of writing a book in the first place – inevitably rise to the fore. While you are guaranteed to learn a good deal about the subject along the way, it is these reflections that are the greatest pleasures of his books; that, and the fact he is one of the funniest writers working today.

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Carol Middleton reviews Passing Clouds by Graeme Leith
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Contents Category: Memoir
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Book 1 Title: Passing Clouds
Book 1 Subtitle: A winemaker's journey
Book 1 Biblio: Allen & Unwin, $32.99 pb, 314 pp, 9781760111205
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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Graeme Leith’s intention in writing this memoir was to pass on his knowledge and experience as chief winemaker of Passing Clouds winery in Victoria. Along the way, he discovered there was a lot more to say about his seventy-three years of life as an adventurer, larrikin, and family man. The result is almost an autobiography, complete with photographs, tracing his hard-working life from the Melbourne suburb of Preston to the ‘exhilarating rollercoaster ride’ of the vineyard in the Macedon Ranges.

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Andrew Nette reviews Before I Sleep by Ray Whitrod
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Contents Category: True Crime
Custom Article Title: Andrew Nette reviews 'Before I Sleep' by Ray Whitrod
Book 1 Title: Before I Sleep
Book 1 Subtitle: My Life flighting crime and corruption
Book Author: Ray Whitrod
Book 1 Biblio: University of Queensland Press, $32.94 pb, 227 pp, 9780702253409
Book 1 Author Type: Author

The cover of Ray Whitrod’s re-released autobiography, Before I Sleep: My Life Fighting Crime and Corruption, strongly hints at a hard-hitting true crime memoir, dominated by the author’s troubled period as Queensland police commissioner from 1970 to 1976, when, as the blurb suggests, the state was ‘a haven for crooks from both sides of the law’. This impression is reinforced by a foreword from author–journalist Matthew Condon, whose books Three Crooked Kings (2013) and Jacks and Jokers (2014) revived interest in the extent of corruption in pre-Fitzgerald Inquiry Queensland.

Before I Sleep is not quite what it appears. Whitrod’s Queensland years take up just fifty-three of its 227 pages, and his recollections, in keeping with the tone of the book generally, are sober and non-sensationalist. Whitrod was a moderately conservative, deeply religious man, motivated by public service. He consistently downplays the dramatic aspects of his story, avoids personal attacks, and, with a few exceptions, seems reluctant to engage in harsh criticism. This is not a problem, as such. It is Whitrod’s autobiography, and he has the right to define himself as he sees fit. But many readers of Before I Sleep might be expecting a rather different book. For this is a family history as much as it is about Whitrod’s law enforcement career. The prose is competent but not superlative. What elevates it is the author’s incredible recall of detail, which brings to life many scenes that would otherwise be prosaic.

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