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November 1989, no. 116

Welcome to the November 1989 issue of Australian Book Review!

Don Dunstan reviews Flawless Jade by Barbara Hanrahan
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Contents Category: Fiction
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Barbara Hanrahan has set much of her work on studies of childhood, sometimes childhood which is involved with fantasy and evil. Always, however, the children are presented through their memories of the minutiae of daily life, vignettes formed by detail, which is vividly presented, conveying the remembered sights, sounds, and smells of childhood and adolescence. Amongst the pictures of plants and pets, houses and relatives, one finds often rather scrofulous details; the hairs in grandpa’s nose, the squeezing of grandma’s blackheads, the smell in the pit dunny, the scurf on aunt’s scalp, the wetting of a bed, the snot discards on the carpet, the persistence of the dog’s penis, glimpses of adult (usually unattractive) bodies, spied­on sexual activity, and the groping of old men under girls’ skirts.

Book 1 Title: Flawless Jade
Book Author: Barbara Hanrahan
Book 1 Biblio: University of Queensland Press, $29.95 hb, 142pp, 0702222461
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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Barbara Hanrahan has set much of her work on studies of childhood, sometimes childhood which is involved with fantasy and evil. Always, however, the children are presented through their memories of the minutiae of daily life, vignettes formed by detail, which is vividly presented, conveying the remembered sights, sounds, and smells of childhood and adolescence. Amongst the pictures of plants and pets, houses and relatives, one finds often rather scrofulous details; the hairs in grandpa’s nose, the squeezing of grandma’s blackheads, the smell in the pit dunny, the scurf on aunt’s scalp, the wetting of a bed, the snot discards on the carpet, the persistence of the dog’s penis, glimpses of adult (usually unattractive) bodies, spied­on sexual activity, and the groping of old men under girls’ skirts.

In this study of the growing to adulthood of a girl from a poor Chinese family, forced by the wars to move from Canton to Macao, back to Canton, and then to Hong Kong, Ms Hanrahan has endeavoured sympathetically to portray the physical and emotional constraints of such a life. As a picture it succeeds. The author has used some spareness of expression to convey the essentials. Wing-yee recounts not only the poverty and hardship, but the inhibitions, superstitions, traditional forms, and frequent harshness of life in a Chinese family. Through it all there comes a picture of a pleasant, good-natured, and not very bright child, who struggles and works hard to contribute to the family.

Read more: Don Dunstan reviews 'Flawless Jade' by Barbara Hanrahan

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Rosemary Sorensen reviews Boat by Ania Walwicz
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Contents Category: Fiction
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The kind of writing that is to be found in Ania Walwicz’s collection Boat is the kind that angers many people. Eschewing punctuation as benevolent and therefore inferior signposts to meaning, Walwicz’s prose is uncompromisingly difficult. Plot is virtually absent. Syntax defies convention. The ugly, both visually and verbally, is preferred to the beautiful.

Book 1 Title: Boat
Book Author: Ania Walwicz
Book 1 Biblio: Angus & Robertson/Sirius, $12.99 pb, 266pp, 0-207-16296-4
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The kind of writing that is to be found in Ania Walwicz’s collection Boat is the kind that angers many people. Eschewing punctuation as benevolent and therefore inferior signposts to meaning, Walwicz’s prose is uncompromisingly difficult. Plot is virtually absent. Syntax defies convention. The ugly, both visually and verbally, is preferred to the beautiful.

Her tradition is that of Dadaism and the Surrealists, which in effect dates this vigorous and rigorous prose. The avant-garde experimentations of Tristan Tzara’s clique and later the more committed (and ultimately more conformist) band clustered around Breton were defiant reactions, and such bursts of energy are hard to sustain. In the case of the more organised Surrealist movement, the efforts to sustain it showed up most painfully the inherent anomalies in an anarchic movement that seeks to impose its own rules. There was a bizarre streak of conservatism running through even the wicked arrogance of Tzara. As for Breton, an example like his fantastically self-indulgent Nadja, a story purporting to be that of a mysteriously brilliant woman but really the narcissistic story of Breton’s own fun-and-games experimentation with the unconscious, suffices to reveal his mauvaise foi.

Read more: Rosemary Sorensen reviews 'Boat' by Ania Walwicz

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Peter Craven reviews The Clean Dark by Robert Adamson
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Contents Category: Poetry
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Robert Adamson has as secure a reputation as any poet in this country apart from Les Murray. He rose to prominence in the latter part of the 1960s at the same time as John Tranter, but his affinity was not with the New York poets like John Ashbery and Frank O’Hara, but with the poets of Black Mountain: Charles Olson, Gary Snyder, and, most particularly, with the late Robert Duncan.

Book 1 Title: The Clean Dark
Book Author: Robert Adamson
Book 1 Biblio: Paperbark Press, $35 hb, 94 pp, 0958780129
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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Robert Adamson has as secure a reputation as any poet in this country apart from Les Murray. He rose to prominence in the latter part of the 1960s at the same time as John Tranter, but his affinity was not with the New York poets like John Ashbery and Frank O’Hara, but with the poets of Black Mountain: Charles Olson, Gary Snyder, and, most particularly, with the late Robert Duncan.

Adamson took from these clean-lined Americans the notion that poetry could be bent to any subject matter, but he also took some sense of the mission of high art. If the world was to be bent, language remained the bender.

Read more: Peter Craven reviews 'The Clean Dark' by Robert Adamson

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Gerard Windsor reviews Maestro by Peter Goldsworthy
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Contents Category: Poetry
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The current literary enterprise of this country is greatly indebted to Peter Goldsworthy. Yet his name is not one of those that trip off the reflex tongues of journalists, and not only journalists. He has only recently started to appear in the anthologies. He is granted all of two lines in Ken Gelder and Paul Salzman’s jerky traverse of our recent fiction. Yet his accomplishment in a diversity of genres is unique.

Book 1 Title: Maestro
Book Author: Peter Goldsworthy
Book 1 Biblio: Collins/Angus & Robertson, $24.95 hb, 167 pp, 0-207-16318-9
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The current literary enterprise of this country is greatly indebted to Peter Goldsworthy. Yet his name is not one of those that trip off the reflex tongues of journalists, and not only journalists. He has only recently started to appear in the anthologies. He is granted all of two lines in Ken Gelder and Paul Salzman’s jerky traverse of our recent fiction. Yet his accomplishment in a diversity of genres is unique.

Read more: Gerard Windsor reviews 'Maestro' by Peter Goldsworthy

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Katharine England reviews The Bay of Contented Men by Robert Drewe
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Contents Category: Short Stories
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‘When Australians run away, they always run to the coast.’ Robert Drewe has already debunked the myth of the bush as Australia’s heartland, and in The Bodysurfers pictured us living and loving on the very rim of the continent, precariously perched in salty, sweaty, and essentially temporary hedonistic bliss between the threat of the empty outback, the incendiary bush, and the menace of the ocean with its sharp­toothed predators and secret stingers.

Book 1 Title: The Bay of Contented Men
Book Author: Robert Drewe
Book 1 Biblio: Pan Books, $24.95 hb, $12.99 pb, 216pp, 0-330-27172-5, 0-330-27092-3pb
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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‘When Australians run away, they always run to the coast.’ Robert Drewe has already debunked the myth of the bush as Australia’s heartland, and in The Bodysurfers pictured us living and loving on the very rim of the continent, precariously perched in salty, sweaty, and essentially temporary hedonistic bliss between the threat of the empty outback, the incendiary bush, and the menace of the ocean with its sharp­toothed predators and secret stingers.

Australians – so rarely portrayed in their real element – recognised themselves. The Bodysurfers went to seven editions in five years, an amazing endorsement for a book of contemporary and quite challenging short stories.

Read more: Katharine England reviews 'The Bay of Contented Men' by Robert Drewe

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