Linda Martin Linda Martin i(18131667 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 1 y separately published work icon Three Can Keep a Secret : Flash Fiction by Western Australian Writers Laura Keenan (editor), Linda Martin (editor), Perth : Night Parrot Press , 2022 27399326 2022 anthology short story

'The eagerly awaited third anthology of flash and microfiction by Night Parrot Press!

'A captivating collection of flash fiction, Three Can Keep a Secret showcases work from eighty-one established and emerging Western Australian writers. One hundred stories simmer with shadows, secrets and silences beneath the surface of everyday lives. Playful and reflective, comic and raw, the collection explores human relationships, grief, vulnerability and celebrates the extraordinary in the ordinary.' (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon Twice Not Shy : One Hundred Short Short Stories Laura Keenan (editor), Linda Martin (editor), Nedlands : Night Parrot Press , 2021 22030647 2021 anthology short story 'Sixty writers present new flash and micro stories that reveal the extraordinary in everyday life. From suburbia to country Australia, international cities to zero-gravity space, the characters in these one hundred brief stories seek connection, finding unlikely companions among ghosts, aliens, animals and nature. Tender, ironic and honest, these stories invite you to focus on what’s unspoken, overlooked, and left behind.' (Publication summary)
1 Maar Bidi : Carving Sovereignty and Desire in Indigenous Youth Storytelling Linda Martin , Nadia Rhook , Elfie Shiosaki , 2021 single work essay
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , no. 100 2021;

'Academia has inherited a long history of non-Indigenous people speaking for Indigenous people and defining Indigeneity and Indigenous cultural heritage – each recurring act erasing Indigenous voices and agencies to speak. Within the discipline of Indigenous Studies, scholars are carving out new transformative pedagogical spaces to create Indigenous-determined stories and storylines. We advocate that, now more than ever, next-generation Indigenous storytelling is needed to nurture intergenerational story cycles which imagine and enliven Indigenous-determined futures.' (Introduction)

1 1 y separately published work icon Maar Bidi : Next Generation Black Writing Elfie Shiosaki (editor), Linda Martin (editor), Broome : Magabala Books , 2020 20272391 2020 anthology prose poetry short story

'In this beautifully crafted, evocative and poignant anthology of prose and fiction, a diverse group of young black writers are encouraged to find strength in their voices and what is important to them. maar bidi is a journey into what it is to be young, a person of colour and a minority in divergent and conflicting worlds. All talk to what is meaningful to them, whilst connecting the old and the new, the ancient and the contemporary in a variety of ways. 

'These young essayists, critics, novelists, poets, authors shake down words and works to find styles, forms and meanings that have influenced them and all their writings. These pieces are snapshots of peoples, places and perception.' (Publication summary)

1 I Went Looking for Mr Facey, Dad Linda Martin , 2020 single work prose
— Appears in: Westerly , July vol. 65 no. 1 2020; (p. 100-106)
1 y separately published work icon Once : A Selection of Short Short Stories Linda Martin (editor), Laura Keenan (editor), Perth : Night Parrot Press , 2020 18131694 2020 anthology short story

'Once: A selection of short short stories' brings together the best of new flash, micro and hybrid fiction in Western Australia. The collection showcases thirty new, rising and established authors who write big ideas in small spaces. Funny, ironic, thoughtful and sharp, these eloquent stories of extreme brevity are sure to have you laughing, thinking and ultimately hooked on this exciting new genre.'  (Publication summary)

1 Nyungar Placenames : Looking Out from Kaart Geenunginyup Bo Len Collard , Linda Martin , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 64 no. 2 2019; (p. 213-231)
'Sitting on the Nedlands foreshore, looking out across the stretch of clear blue water, it is easy to forget the noise of city life. Gentle waves lap softly onto the bank, sun catches the movement of the water, occasionally dolphins splash in the deep. It is tranquil and prepossessing. Dotted along the grassy banks, groups of people laugh, talk and picnic. Children run and dive into the water. Further up the hill at Kaarta gar-up (Mount Eliza, Kings Park) friends and families gather under the tall eucalyptus trees where the djiti djiti (willie wagtail) call. From there they can see the water curve and snake from Elizabeth Quay to the University of Western Australia (UWA) and all the way across to Attadale. Derbal Yaragan, the estuary at the foot of the City of Perth and part of the beeliar (Swan River) that has nourished people and activity for more than 50,000 years, a waterway that continues to course its way into the Nyungar way of life.' (Introduction)
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