y separately published work icon Westerly periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2024... vol. 69 no. 1 August 2024 of Westerly est. 1956 Westerly
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2024 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
We Could Have Gone Wandering Out into the Snowi"We could have gone wandering out into the snow", Andrew Sutherland , single work poetry (p. 11)
Cuspedi"April rolls around again / like the dry leaves", Svetlana Sterlin , single work poetry (p. 12-13)
A Study, Cal Newton , single work short story (p. 14-16)
The Weeping Hands, Melanie Pryor , single work essay (p. 17-25)
The White Toweri"A multidirectional freedom", Diane Fahey , single work poetry (p. 26-27)
Objec Lesson : The Tablei"This table is interested in what", Jill Jones , single work poetry (p. 28-29)
The Story of the Olive Wood Bedi"I bought a bed from a store in an acacia grove", Alan Fyfe , single work poetry (p. 30)
Witold's Realm of Form, Emma-Grace Clarke , single work short story (p. 31-39)
La Nina Diptychi"brown water relaxed", Miriam Jones , single work poetry (p. 40-41)
Surface Tension, Ellie Fisher , single work essay (p. 42-50)
The Housei"I see it floating, walls transparent", Kristian Radford , single work poetry (p. 51)
An Accidenti"I hold him in the towel like a handful of eggs.", Siobhan Hodge , single work poetry (p. 52)
Soli"a spanish sun shines over oxford", Riley Faulds , single work poetry (p. 53)
Mementoi"I chased butterflies across unsealed bark-brown roads", Jake Dennis , single work poetry (p. 54-55)
On the Track to Tourmaline, Samuel J. Cox , single work essay
'Ever since reading Randolph Stow's Tourmaline nearly five years ago, it has held a strange power over me. It might not have been the most highly regarded or publicly well received of Stow's novels within his lifetime, but within the writing community there appears to be quiet and growing recognition that it might be his most resistantly alluring. Bernadette Brennan's 2004 essay 'Words of Water', which describes Tourmaline as deeply poetic' yet 'silent' (144), gestured towards this renewal of interest '  in the novel over the last two decades. A mentor once suggested to me that the prose-poem of a first chapter might be the best opening to an Australian novel ever, and whenever I meet someone who has read Tourmaline, it always feels like something of a shared secret.'

 (Introduction)

(p. 58-75)
I've Been Thinking about Your Birth Latelyi"striving to recall details of how this started,", David Stavanger , single work poetry (p. 76-77)
A Room of Madonnasi"I'd like to see a room of Madonnas.", Elizabeth Smither , single work poetry (p. 78)
Ngaangk : Those Sunstruck Miles, Catherine Noske , single work essay
'I cannot but start with the looming scale of the sun - the half-pictures or contained slice we see in most drawings. Even there, we are obedient to that generic voice, to well-worn wisdom : don't stare direct. The corner of yellow in a child's picture. It's excess and repetition in sunspots and flares on photographic film. The close detail of this Festival's logo, and the scope it implies. Scope and scopic : despite what we are told as children, we are finding ways to see the sun - as Stow did, again and again in his work, from the very beginning, his world viewed through sun-bright lids. Sun in all its power, ripe gold and life miraculous, sun a wild yellow vision. Divine heat and terror, the cognisance of that sun's cataclysm...(Act One 18)' (Introduction)
(p. 79-98)
My Kingdom for a Mark Maggiori Print and Some Blundstonesi"all true things in the world occur at high noon", J. Taylor Bell , single work poetry (p. 99-101)
Keeping Track, Sam Wren Quan Sing , single work short story (p. 102-104)
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