Issue Details: First known date: 2025... 2025 Home Is Where the Haunt Is : Exorcising the Ghosts of Places Past
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.

AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'I BELIEVE we are all haunted by the place of our birth – which is chosen without our consent. Unlike a place of residence, which implies some agency in the matter, the place we are born becomes part of the psychological, sociological inheritance that is ours as much as a genetic inheritance is. To understand social life, which is always an aspect of the world-building energy of fiction, one must confront the ghostly aspects of it: the spirits who lingered in that place of our birth, the ones who blessed or cursed us as we were born, the ones pleased or displeased with a new human offering. Writing and reading fiction is the best (maybe only) way I have of exploring the unfinished business of the past, both immediate and deep historical.' (Introduction)  

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Griffith Review no. 87 February 2025 29689883 2025 periodical issue

    'Sometimes, If I can't get to sleep, I imagine I'm back in the house where I grew up. ('Grew up' is probably a stretch - we lived there for nearly seven years, beginning when I was eight, but it was the longest we'd lived anywhere and when the time finally came, I found it hard to countenance the idea of leaving.) It was an old cottage on a hill in south-east England, and it had creaking floorboards, beamed ceilings and a long, unruly garden. There'd been a death upstairs the year before we moved in - one of the previous owners had had cancer and passed away in the master bedroom, surrounded by his family - but it was a peaceful house, and at well over a hundred years old must have witnessed more than one life reach its end. I like to go back there in my mind's eye, conjuring the slightly crooked hallway, the doors that never neatly fit their frames, the tiny kitchen with its overwhelmingly wheaten spectrum of 1980s browns. Like handwriting on old foolscap, the more specific details have long faded with time, but the feeling remains: that ineffable sense of calm and familiarity that I associate with being home.' (Publication summary)

    2025
    pg. 16 - 18
Last amended 4 Mar 2025 16:08:32
16 - 18 Home Is Where the Haunt Is : Exorcising the Ghosts of Places Pastsmall AustLit logo Griffith Review
Newspapers:
    Powered by Trove
    X