Only literary material by Australian authors individually indexed. Other material in this issue includes:
Tree poem by Joanna Cleary
James Gobbey reviews Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar
Violence, Pain and Blistering Power: Women in Lauren Groff’s Matrix by Az Cosgrove
Naomi Milthorpe reviews H.D. Hilda Doolittle by Lara Vetter
Caroline van de Pol reviews Slipstream by Catherine Cole
'When I first picked up Willo Drummond’s debut poetry collection, Moon Wrasse, I was torn between a deep panic of knowing I wanted to become mixed up in the muck, blood, and bloom of the work and wanting to also turn away from the words. Words are spells. Words are little invisible ties between what is captured and what is lost, and somehow, as if by magick, portals are opened for us to walk through. In a true sense, this is an offering from Drummond of a portal of initiation—you choose which kind—one you’ve already been in parallel with, one you have no memory of, or one you care enough to walk along with to experience and become more completely human.' (Introduction)
'The Djinn Hunters is a literary fusion of colours, words, shapes, and heritage, which has been carefully crafted in very interesting and distinct poetic styles. Nadia Niaz plays with the strands of her memories of Lahore to build evocative narratives in the short space of her poems, which occasionally carry elements of horror and the uncanny. Each of her fifty-one poems in this collection exhibits a wide range of expression and literary finesse that provides a refreshing, consistently engaging reading experience.' (Introduction)