Jack Rowland Jack Rowland i(14732334 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Structures of Obsession : A Partial Appreciation of Philip Tyndall’s Words and Silk Jack Rowland , 2021 single work review essay
— Appears in: Senses of Cinema , July no. 99 2021;
1 Patrick Allington Rise & Shine Jack Rowland , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 13-19 June 2020;

— Review of Rise and Shine Patrick Allington , 2020 single work novel

'Patrick Allington’s second novel, Rise & Shine, drops us headfirst into a future in the wake of an ecological catastrophe that claimed the lives of more than eight billion people. The survivors reside in the city-states of Rise and Shine, which are constantly at war with each other, and the bloody footage is broadcast to the populace’s “autoscreens” as the sole source of nourishment. These graphic images of human suffering keep the residents alive as they obsess over the gory details and the military heroes featured.' (Introduction)

1 y separately published work icon Review : A Season on Earth Jack Rowland , Melbourne : Bad Producer Productions , 2019 23464596 2019 single work review
— Review of A Season on Earth Gerald Murnane , 2019 single work novel

'It’s not rare for an author to feel misgivings about the ways their early works make their way into print.' (Introduction)

1 The Second Cure by Margaret Morgan Jack Rowland , 2018 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , October no. 405 2018; (p. 26)

— Review of The Second Cure Margaret Morgan , 2018 single work novel

'A plague with myriad weird effects spreads throughout the world in Margaret Morgan’s début, a speculative political thriller. The disease’s name is toxoplasmosis pestis: it causes people to develop intense synaesthesia, to act in impulsive and dangerous ways, or to lose their religious faith. In Sydney, scientist Charlie Zinn attempts to synthesise a cure, while in Brisbane, journalist and ‘political tragic’ Brigid Bayliss tries to ‘shine daylight’ on the rise of a far-right Christian politician who is exploiting his state’s fear to gain power. There is a lot to set up in the novel’s first half, and not all of it is done with equal grace. Occasionally, Morgan’s reliance on scientific jargon can be difficult to wade through, especially when she outlines the disease’s ‘genetic mutation’. A number of chapters are heavily freighted with exposition.'  (Introduction)

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