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December 1983–January 1984, no. 57

Welcome to the December 1983–January 1984 issue of Australian Book Review!

Laurie Clancy reviews The Bodysurfers by Robert Drewe
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Contents Category: Short Stories
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This collection of twelve stories by the author of The Savage Crows and A Cry in the Jungle Bar seeks to explore and define what Drewe sees as a part of our national psyche, the preoccupation with the coast and with the ‘careless violent hedonism’, as one of the characters puts it, of beach life. In ‘Looking for Malibu’, David Lang, who appears in several of the stories, defines it for a then fellow expatriate in a discussion about criminals on the run. ‘If their enemies were middle-class Australians they’d know where to look for them,’ he says. ‘You know something? When Australians run away they always run to the coast. They can’t help it. An American vanishes, he could be living in New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, the mountains, the desert, anywhere. Not an Australian-he goes up the coast or down the coast and thinks he’s vanished without a trace.’

Book 1 Title: The Bodysurfers
Book Author: Robert Drewe
Book 1 Biblio: James Fraser, 6.95 pb
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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This collection of twelve stories by the author of The Savage Crows and A Cry in the Jungle Bar seeks to explore and define what Drewe sees as a part of our national psyche, the preoccupation with the coast and with the ‘careless violent hedonism’, as one of the characters puts it, of beach life. In ‘Looking for Malibu’, David Lang, who appears in several of the stories, defines it for a then fellow expatriate in a discussion about criminals on the run. ‘If their enemies were middle-class Australians they’d know where to look for them,’ he says. ‘You know something? When Australians run away they always run to the coast. They can’t help it. An American vanishes, he could be living in New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, the mountains, the desert, anywhere. Not an Australian-he goes up the coast or down the coast and thinks he’s vanished without a trace.’

Read more: Laurie Clancy reviews 'The Bodysurfers' by Robert Drewe

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Lucy Frost reviews Milk by Beverley Farmer
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Contents Category: Fiction
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Greek and English, the Greek father and Australian mother, the child in the middle who looks at one object and sees different creatures – no catch-phrase like ‘culture conflict’ says much about what is happening in Ismini’s life at this moment. The story does, however, in the strong, unblinkered prose of Beverley Farmer as she writes with unfaltering sensitivity about Greece, about Australians in Greece and Greeks in Australia, and, painfully, about couples and the families who mix their cultures with their love and hate.

Book 1 Title: Milk
Book Author: Beverley Farmer
Book 1 Biblio: McPhee Gribble/Penguin, 178 pp, $6.95 pb, 0 14 00 7184 9
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Ismini at sixteen, carefully putting together the surprise birthday dinner for her father, ponders the untranslatable realities of words:

One morning on a hot wooden jetty her father had hauled a squid out of the flashing sea. Dripping, its bright mantle fading, it had shuddered and wheezed at her feet, blind in the white sun, as it died.

Oh what is it, Baba?

Kalamari.

Mummy, Baba’s caught a kalamari!

Oh yes, look. A squid.

In English it was a different creature.

Read more: Lucy Frost reviews 'Milk' by Beverley Farmer

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