y separately published work icon Australian Book Review periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2024... no. 467 August 2024 of Australian Book Review est. 1961 Australian Book Review
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2024 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Bearing Witness : Not a Journey but a Pilgrimage, Danielle Clode , single work review
— Review of Everything Is Water : A River-Walking Journey Simon Cleary , 2024 single work autobiography ;

'There are few places more restful than a riverbank on a fine day, few sights more enticing than a disappearing river bend, few places more intriguing to follow than the tumbled rocks of a creek line. Following the water, to its source or destination, seems hard-wired into our psyche.'  (Publication summary)

(p. 14)
Beyond the Mundane : Popular Science Writing in Our Literary Landscape, Robyn Arianrhod , single work essay

'After Netflix’s intriguing sci-fi thriller 3 Body Problem streamed into Australia earlier this year, readers rushed out in droves to buy the book on which the series is based: Liu Cixin’s The Three-Body Problem (2008), which was first translated into English in 2014. Most reviews have focused on the philosophical, literary, and cultural aspects of the book – and they are, indeed, fascinating. But the thing that interests me here is the accurate scientific detail that Liu uses to drive the story. Of course, this is sci-fi, so ultimately he presses real concepts into unreal (but imaginative) service. Still, much more physics and maths appear in his book than in the Netflix series, which, according to Tara Kenny’s review in The Monthly (April 2024), ‘offers a welcome workaround’ the science through visual effects. In the book, by contrast, ‘Lengthy passages are spent dutifully explaining physics theories and technological functionality, which is likely to deter readers who haven’t thought about science since they dissected a rat in high-school biology.’'  (Introduction)

(p. 19-21)
Itineranti"A citizen of a difficult", Gavin Yuan Gao , single work poetry (p. 21)
Futureshock : Glimpsing the Fullness of Time, Ben Brooker , single work review
— Review of Big Time Jordan Prosser , 2024 single work novel ;

'Given the global resurgence of interest in compounds such as psilocybin, LSD, and ayahuasca, it is a wonder more contemporary novelists have not turned to psychedelic experience for inspiration. It is, after all, hard to think of the golden age of psychedelics – roughly the mid-1960s to mid-1970s – without recalling the trippy, Zeitgeist-capturing literature it produced, including Hunter S. Thompson’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1971) and Tom Wolfe’s (highly fictionalised) Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (1968).' (Introduction)

(p. 26)
Ineffectual Incarnations : Temporarily Entangled Heroines, Laura Woollett , single work review
— Review of Bird Courtney Collins , 2024 single work novel ;
'Stories about women from disparate times and places leading parallel lives are almost a genre unto themselves. In Michael Cunningham’s The Hours, a well-known literary example, Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway, connects the lives of three twentieth- century women (one of them Woolf herself) in an intergenerational portrait of queerness and mental illness. In Evie Wyld’s The Bass Rock, a trio on the Scottish coast are linked over several centuries through themes of violence against women. In Tracey Chevalier’s The Virgin Blue, an American woman living in France noses out the story of a persecuted ancestor.' (Introduction)
(p. 27)
Violence and Desire : Echoing the Australian Gothic, Diane Stubbings , single work review
— Review of The Echoes Evie Wyld , 2024 single work novel ;

'When we first meet Max in Evie Wyld’s The Echoes, he is dead. He does not believe in ghosts, he tells us, yet that it precisely what he is: ‘a transparent central nervous system floating about like a jellyfish’. Max lingers in the house he shared with his partner, Hannah. He tries to make his presence felt, to signal to Hannah that he is still there, but he lacks any supernatural ability. Hannah moves on with her life, and all Max can do is ‘watch as the flat becomes the home of others – the moths, the spiders, the silverfish, the dust motes and … the leftovers of the dead’.' (Introduction)

(p. 28)
Echoes of Truth : A Classic Novel of Manners, Giselle Au-Nhien Nguyen , single work review
— Review of Jade and Emerald Michelle See-Tho , 2024 single work novel ;

'In the opening pages of Michelle See-Tho’s début novel, Jade and Emerald, an unnamed narrator is avoiding someone’s gaze. That someone is ‘pristine, poised like a goddess’ to the narrator’s vision of herself: haircut ‘like an eight-year-old boy’s’, smudged make-up, dress the wrong colour. There is a secret between these two young women, blown open by the prologue’s end.'  (Introduction)

(p. 29)
'I Am the Jungle' : A Deft Take on Virgil, Cassandra Atherton , single work review
— Review of To Sing of War Catherine McKinnon , 2024 single work novel ;
(p. 30)
First Snow, Kerry Greer , single work short story (p. 33-37)
On Being Shyi"Shyness gives you a bouquet of weeds and tells you to exit", Judith Beveridge , single work poetry (p. 48)
Backstage with Andrew Ford, single work interview (p. 51)
The Grey Dress : Breaking through to Life and Change, Brenda Walker , single work review
— Review of For Life Ailsa Piper , 2024 single work autobiography ;

'Shortly after the unexpected death of her husband in 2014, Ailsa Piper put on a grey dress which she wore each day for the next six months. Of all the recurring and often exquisite motifs in her memoir, For Life, this prosaic re-worn grey dress speaks most eloquently of the dullness, constraint, and repetition of grief. Late in the memoir, Piper mentions a photograph that her husband took of her on holiday. She is naked in a thicket of tea-trees, and although she is not, at that point, a swimmer, she is wet from the ocean and thrilled. The contrast between the solitary costume of bereavement and this bare delight could not be more marked.' (Introduction)

(p. 58-59)
Love’s Aftermath : A Memoir about What Endures, Tracy Ellis , single work review
— Review of Love, Death and Other Scenes Nova Weetman , 2024 single work autobiography ;
'In his book Bereavement: Studies of grief in adult life (1972), psychiatrist Colin Murray Parkes wrote: ‘The pain of grief is just as much a part of life as the joy of love; it is, perhaps, the price we pay for love, the cost of commitment.’ His words received a royal edit when Queen Elizabeth II, speaking at a memorial for the victims of 9/11, said, simply: ‘Grief is the price we pay for love.’ Being the queen, she could take such a liberty, denying Parkes his preamble and his ‘perhaps’. She whittled his words into a more essential and potent truth at a time when it was needed (if there’s ever a time when it’s not), ‘queensplaining’ his question as a comforting answer to the bewildered and bereaved.' 

 (Introduction)

(p. 59-60)
Summoned by Bells : Poetry’s Auditory Affordances, David McCooey , single work review
— Review of Tintinnabulum Judith Beveridge , 2024 selected work poetry ;

'Bells are often associated with the sacred. A resonating bell marks out a space for reverence to inhabit. It calls for attention on the part of the devotee, for a shift in perception from the mundane to the sanctified. A ‘tintinnabulum’ is a small bell, and it is the name that the acclaimed poet Judith Beveridge has given to her latest collection of poems. ‘Tintinnabulation’ – the lingering sound of bells – is a word I first came across in the liner notes to Tabula Rasa, an album of music by the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt that explicitly brings together sound and sacredness.'  (Introduction)

(p. 61-62)
Bridge Over Nothing : Reflections of an Understated Narrator, Theodore Ell , single work review
— Review of George Orwell’s Elephant and Other Essays Subhash Jaireth , 2023 selected work essay ;

'Subhash Jaireth is both a writer and a geologist. This collection of essays draws inspiration from the international roaming his geological work has involved. Most of the essays explore memories of the Soviet Union, where he studied, or ancient landscapes in Australia, where he has lived and worked since the 1980s, with personal detours to India and Spain.'  (Introduction)

(p. 63)
Stories Unknown : The Australian Response to Refugees, Seumas Spark , single work review
— Review of The Lucky Ones : Stories of Australian Refugee Journeys Melinda Ham , 2024 multi chapter work biography ;

'On the second page of this book are startling facts about Malawi. In the 1980s and 1990s, this country of around ten million people sheltered more than a million refugees, many of them having fled civil war in Mozambique. Malawians, already suffering the crippling effects of poverty and poor health, provided safe haven to waves of displaced and desperate people coming across their border. Perhaps this succour was not always offered happily, but what mattered is that it was offered. Melinda Ham’s placing of this example so early in her book is surely deliberate. With thoughts of Malawian tolerance and generosity echoing through the text, she forces the reader into making unsettling comparisons with recent Australian responses to refugees.'  (Introduction)

(p. 64)
X