y separately published work icon The Monthly periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2020... no. 163 February 2020 of The Monthly est. 2005 The Monthly
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2020 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
The Fabulist of Auschwitz : Heather Morris's Bestselling Novels and the Problem of Truth in Historical Fiction, Christine Kenneally , single work essay
'On April 19, 2019, a gleaming, perfect day in Oakland, California, George Kovach and Julia Odegard prepared dinner in their lakeside apartment for an Australian author, Heather Morris, who was visiting that night. She was writing a book about Kovach’s stepmother and father, and, though he hadn’t heard of her before, Kovach had learnt she’d written a book called The Tattooist of Auschwitz, and that it had been immensely successful.' (Introduction)
(p. 36-44)
Kills, Frills and Kelly Aches, Shane Danielsen , single work review
— Review of True History of the Kelly Gang Shaun Grant , 2018 single work film/TV ;
'The arrival of a new Ned Kelly anything, be it book, film, play or even opera, is bound to provoke questions. Chief among them might be “Really? Another one?”… but this, I concede, is a less than charitable view. More useful, perhaps, to ponder precisely which version we’ll be getting, such is the unusual malleability of this particular tale.' (Introduction)
(p. 56-58)
[Review] A Couple of Things Before the End, Adam Rivett , single work review
— Review of A Couple of Things Before the End : Stories Sean O’Beirne , 2020 selected work short story ;
'Hailing “a promising new voice” is a useful cliché of criticism, and one which Sean O’Beirne’s debut collection earns as literally, and as variously, as possible. What we have here are not so much stories as miniature monologues detailing a world somewhere between everyday and apocalyptic, and shaped with some of our lowest forms of utterance: political press conferences, YouTube comments, bucks night speeches. It’s rare to see a book so confident in its ability to convert the linguistic detritus of our era into something of lasting value.' (Introduction)
(p. 65)
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