Accessibility Tools

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

October 1998, no. 205

Jenny Pausacker reviews The Divine Wind by Garry Disher
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Fiction
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: Parallel times
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Ten years ago historical novels were an unwanted rarity in Australian children’s publishing. Instead, there was a vogue for time-slip novels where a contemporary kid went travelling back into the past, as though history would be too hard for younger readers to handle without some sort of tour guide.

Book 1 Title: The Divine Wind
Book Author: Garry Disher
Book 1 Biblio: Hodder Headline, $14.95 pb, 151 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Book 1 Readings Link: https://www.booktopia.com.au/the-divine-wind-garry-disher/book/9780734419316.html
Display Review Rating: No

Ten years ago historical novels were an unwanted rarity in Australian children’s publishing. Instead, there was a vogue for time-slip novels where a contemporary kid went travelling back into the past, as though history would be too hard for younger readers to handle without some sort of tour guide.

At the time I can remember worrying that this represented a kind of ‘dumbing down.’ But I needn’t have worried. History moves in cycles and the historical novel is currently among the most vigorous and varied genres in Australian children’s fiction – sometimes set in Australia, sometimes focusing on children in concentration camps or street kids in fourteenth-century Jerusalem.

One of the most notable turning points in this particular cycle was Garry Disher’s The Bamboo Flute. Disher’s first person, present-tense narrative had an immediacy that whisked the reader across time and space faster than Doctor Who’s Tardis, subtly pointing out the parallels between the Great Depression of the 1930s and the recession of the 1990s.

Read more: Jenny Pausacker reviews 'The Divine Wind' by Garry Disher

Write comment (0 Comments)
Peter Craven reviews Reading the Holocaust by Inga Clendinnen
Free Article: No
Contents Category: History
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

The Holocaust is a subject which numbs the mind and petrifies the soul. This is the point at which Inga Clendinnen starts her remarkable set of essays about it. The Holocaust is a Gorgon and the only way to destroy it, Perseus-like, is to hold it’s image on the screen of the shield and stare back. The historian of The Aztecs, this remarkable woman who has always attended to the inflections of human pain, says at the outset that extreme suffering should be paid attention. She has lived in interesting times without partaking of the horror and this is her amends. This remarkable exercise in metahistory, this sustained meditation about the nature of historiography – an essay in which criticism and representation keep coming together and breaking apart – began with Clendinnen’s sense of the inadequacy of her own response to the Demidenko controversy and it ends, not inappropriately, with a discussion of the relative claims of literature and historical writing in the face of the Holocaust Medusa.

Display Review Rating: No

The Holocaust is a subject which numbs the mind and petrifies the soul. This is the point at which Inga Clendinnen starts her remarkable set of essays about it. The Holocaust is a Gorgon and the only way to destroy it, Perseus-like, is to hold it’s image on the screen of the shield and stare back. The historian of The Aztecs, this remarkable woman who has always attended to the inflections of human pain, says at the outset that extreme suffering should be paid attention. She has lived in interesting times without partaking of the horror and this is her amends. This remarkable exercise in metahistory, this sustained meditation about the nature of historiography – an essay in which criticism and representation keep coming together and breaking apart – began with Clendinnen’s sense of the inadequacy of her own response to the Demidenko controversy and it ends, not inappropriately, with a discussion of the relative claims of literature and historical writing in the face of the Holocaust Medusa.

Read more: Peter Craven reviews 'Reading the Holocaust' by Inga Clendinnen

Write comment (0 Comments)
Anthony Lawrence reviews Whirling by Chris Wallace-Crabbe
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Poetry
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Chris Wallace-Crabbe’s ability to reveal the marvellous in the seemingly mundane layers of the quotidian is a striking aspect of this new book. There are compassionate, fluid meditations on many aspects of urban life, ageing, and a quirky cast of characters from the poet’s life and wide reading.

Book 1 Title: Whirling
Book Author: Chris Wallace-Crabbe
Book 1 Biblio: OUP, $19.95 pb, 52 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Display Review Rating: No

Chris Wallace-Crabbe’s ability to reveal the marvellous in the seemingly mundane layers of the quotidian is a striking aspect of this new book. There are compassionate, fluid meditations on many aspects of urban life, ageing, and a quirky cast of characters from the poet’s life and wide reading.

Read more: Anthony Lawrence reviews 'Whirling' by Chris Wallace-Crabbe

Write comment (0 Comments)
David McCooey reviews Australian Lives: An Oxford Anthology edited by Joy Hooton
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Biography
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Joy Hooton must know more about Australian autobiography than anyone else. Her critical and bibliographical works are now complemented by this marvellous anthology – humorous, plangent, and surprising. It replaces the more literary Penguin anthology by the Colmers (an important collection, though now somewhat outdated), and more than accounts for the period not dealt with in Gillian Whitlock’s impressive UQP anthology of contemporary Australian autobiography.

Book 1 Title: Australian Lives
Book 1 Subtitle: An Oxford Anthology
Book Author: Joy Hooton
Book 1 Biblio: OUP, $39.95 hb, 298 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Editor
Display Review Rating: No

Joy Hooton must know more about Australian autobiography than anyone else. Her critical and bibliographical works are now complemented by this marvellous anthology – humorous, plangent, and surprising. It replaces the more literary Penguin anthology by the Colmers (an important collection, though now somewhat outdated), and more than accounts for the period not dealt with in Gillian Whitlock’s impressive UQP anthology of contemporary Australian autobiography.

Read more: David McCooey reviews 'Australian Lives: An Oxford Anthology' edited by Joy Hooton

Write comment (0 Comments)
Dennis Altman reviews Two Nations: The causes and effects of the rise of the One Nation Party in Australia edited by Robert Manne
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Politics
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Even if Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party were to self-destruct after the next federal election, which I suspect is a real possibility, it has earned itself a position in Australian political history. Hanson herself must be one of our most remarkable political figures, having risen within three years from the obscurity of a Liberal nominee for an unwinnable electorate to a politician with media coverage almost equivalent to that of the major party leaders.

Book 1 Title: Two Nations
Book 1 Subtitle: The causes and effects of the rise of the One Nation Party in Australia
Book Author: Robert Manne
Book 1 Biblio: Bookman Press, $19.95 pb, 194 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Editor
Display Review Rating: No

Even if Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party were to self-destruct after the next federal election, which I suspect is a real possibility, it has earned itself a position in Australian political history. Hanson herself must be one of our most remarkable political figures, having risen within three years from the obscurity of a Liberal nominee for an unwinnable electorate to a politician with media coverage almost equivalent to that of the major party leaders.

Read more: Dennis Altman reviews 'Two Nations: The causes and effects of the rise of the One Nation Party in...

Write comment (0 Comments)