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November 1982, no. 46

Welcome to the November 1982 issue of Australian Book Review!

Clyde Cameron reviews The Shearers by Patsy Adam-Smith
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Contents Category: Australian History
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The Shearers by Patsy Adam-Smith is worth a place in the best of libraries if only for its superb collection of photographs and reproductions – 291 of them! She is to be commended for including reproductions of an 1891 ‘Loyalty’ certificate, an 1890 Queensland Shearers’ Union ticket and three ‘shearing ticket’ versions of the Amalgamated Workers’ Union. I wish I could claim possession of an original of these. I do, however, have a complete collection of every membership certificate issued in what is now called The Australian Workers’ Union right from its very beginning in 1886, when it was called the Australasian Shearers’ Union.

Book 1 Title: The Shearers
Book Author: Patsy Adam-Smith
Book 1 Biblio: Nelson, 416 pp, $25.00, 0 17 005884 0
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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The Shearers by Patsy Adam-Smith is worth a place in the best of libraries if only for its superb collection of photographs and reproductions – 291 of them! She is to be commended for including reproductions of an 1891 ‘Loyalty’ certificate, an 1890 Queensland Shearers’ Union ticket and three ‘shearing ticket’ versions of the Amalgamated Workers’ Union. I wish I could claim possession of an original of these. I do, however, have a complete collection of every membership certificate issued in what is now called The Australian Workers’ Union right from its very beginning in 1886, when it was called the Australasian Shearers’ Union.

Ms Adam-Smith makes the mistake so often made, even by W.G. Spence, of describing the Australasian Shearers’ Union as the ‘Amalgamated Shearers’ Union’. It was not until after the amalgamation of the various shearers’ unions that the Creswick based union changed its name to Amalgamated Shearers’ Union of Australasia. And, in 1894, when that union extended its constitution to embrace general labourers, it became The Australian Workers’ Union.

Read more: Clyde Cameron reviews 'The Shearers' by Patsy Adam-Smith

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Peter Steele reviews Selected Poems by R.A. Simpson and Selected Poems by Vincent Buckley
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Contents Category: Poetry
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If any volume of Selected Poems must be in part the autobiography of an imagination, it is subject to the vicissitudes and ironies which attend all autobiography. One gazes at it and finds familiar lineaments, but one also finds mobilities and stands made more evident than a more partial acquaintance can show. The very title is a warning that the whole story –whatever that might be – is not to be found here: a ‘Selected Poems’ is the outcome of recurrent options.

Book 1 Title: Selected Poems
Book Author: R.A. Simpson
Book 1 Biblio: VQP. 164 p., $10.95, $5.95 pb
Book 2 Title: Selected Poems
Book 2 Author: Vincent Buckley
Book 2 Biblio: Angus & Robertson, 136 p., $5.95 pb
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If any volume of Selected Poems must be in part the autobiography of an imagination, it is subject to the vicissitudes and ironies which attend all autobiography. One gazes at it and finds familiar lineaments, but one also finds mobilities and stands made more evident than a more partial acquaintance can show. The very title is a warning that the whole story –whatever that might be – is not to be found here: a ‘Selected Poems’ is the outcome of recurrent options.

            Often, in the face of this, reviewers lodge their complaint that something has, inappropriately as they take it, been left out, or something unhappily been left in. I shall not do that here. After all, if ever there is a place for the de gustibus dictum, this must be it. Rather, I should like to remind the potential reader what kind of thing he may expect to find in either R.A. Simpson’s or in Vincent Buckley’s Selected Poems.

Read more: Peter Steele reviews 'Selected Poems' by R.A. Simpson and 'Selected Poems' by Vincent Buckley

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Frances McInherny reviews Sister Kate by Jean Bedford
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Contents Category: Fiction
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Article Title: The madness of the flesh that we call love
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This is a very fine first novel by Jean Bedford. Her first publication was the collection of short stories, Country Girl Again, published by Sisters Press in 1978. Sister Kate justly deserves to be one of the two bestsellers in Melbourne.

The novel traces the life of Kate Kelly, sister of the famous Ned, and opens when Kate is twelve and Edward just returned from a three-year stint in Pentridge. He is shocked and outraged to learn that his brother, Jim, a mere sixteen-year-old, has been arrested for horse stealing and sent to Pentridge also. Ned is nineteen. Kate remarks:         

Book 1 Title: Sister Kate
Book Author: Jean Bedford
Book 1 Biblio: Penguin, $4.95
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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This is a very fine first novel by Jean Bedford. Her first publication was the collection of short stories, Country Girl Again, published by Sisters Press in 1978. Sister Kate justly deserves to be one of the two bestsellers in Melbourne.

The novel traces the life of Kate Kelly, sister of the famous Ned, and opens when Kate is twelve and Edward just returned from a three-year stint in Pentridge. He is shocked and outraged to learn that his brother, Jim, a mere sixteen-year-old, has been arrested for horse stealing and sent to Pentridge also. Ned is nineteen. Kate remarks:         

Read more: Frances McInherny reviews 'Sister Kate' by Jean Bedford

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Mary Lord reviews Scenes of Revolutionary Life by Judah Waten
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At seventy-one Judah Waten is not just another old soldier who refuses to fade away. Nor is he a man who keeps writing books out of habit. He is a born storyteller who writes when he has something to tell us. And the more he writes, the more powerful and persuasive his fictions become.

Book 1 Title: Scenes of Revolutionary Life
Book Author: Judah Waten
Book 1 Biblio: Angus & Robertson, 176 pp, $9.95 hb
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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At seventy-one Judah Waten is not just another old soldier who refuses to fade away. Nor is he a man who keeps writing books out of habit. He is a born storyteller who writes when he has something to tell us. And the more he writes, the more powerful and persuasive his fictions become.

Scenes of Revolutionary Life is a brilliant achievement; the work of a man at the peak of his power. Subtle, richly panoramic, and at the same time a splendid character study, this book tells the story of Torn Graves from youth to retirement age, his dedication to the Communist movement and his yearning to be a great writer, his love affair with Maggie Carlton, a brilliant student at Melbourne and later an Oxford don, and his unconsummated passion for Nadine Rose, Secretary for the Bloomsbury Branch of the Communist Party.

Read more: Mary Lord reviews 'Scenes of Revolutionary Life' by Judah Waten

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Rod Hagen reviews Aboriginal Australian Art: A visual perspective by Ronald M. Berndt & Catherine H. Berndt with John E. Stanton
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Contents Category: Art
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Article Title: Rod Hagen reviews 'Aboriginal Australian Art: A visual perspective'
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Custom Highlight Text: Despite the upsurge in the publication of books about Aboriginal life in recent years and the increased interest in traditional or ‘primitive’ art around the world, very few attempts have been made in this country to either reproduce substantial collections of photographs of Aboriginal art, or to provide serious, but readable. discussions of its relationship to the broader aspects of Australian society. This offering from the Berndts goes some way towards filling the gap between the coffee table glossies and the specialist publications of bodies such as the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
Book 1 Title: Australian Art
Book 1 Subtitle: A visual perspective
Book Author: Ronald M. Berndt, Catherine H. Berndt, and John E. Stanton
Book 1 Biblio: Methuen, 176 pp, 153 colour plates
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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Despite the upsurge in the publication of books about Aboriginal life in recent years and the increased interest in traditional or ‘primitive’ art around the world, very few attempts have been made in this country to either reproduce substantial collections of photographs of Aboriginal art, or to provide serious, but readable. discussions of its relationship to the broader aspects of Australian society. This offering from the Berndts goes some way towards filling the gap between the coffee table glossies and the specialist publications of bodies such as the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.

The Berndts have been producing good. thoughtful books about Aboriginals, aimed at a general readership, for more than thirty years. This volume carries on the tradition that they have established in works such as The World of the First Australians. The Australian Aboriginal Heritage and Pioneers and Settlers. The book is beautifully presented. It contains 153 plates, almost all in excellent colour, all relevant to the text at the point of insertion (descriptive annotations at the end of the book provide further information for those seeking it). On this score alone it can certainly hold up its end of the coffee table in the terraces of Carlton or Paddington.

Read more: Rod Hagen reviews 'Aboriginal Australian Art: A visual perspective' by Ronald M. Berndt &...

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