Anders Villani Anders Villani i(8158367 works by)
Born: Established: Melbourne, Victoria, ;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Dinner Call i "You’re playing Age of Empires.", Anders Villani , 2024 single work poetry
— Appears in: Island Online - 2024 2024;
1 Songs Unfolding : The Completion of Judith Bishop’s Trilogy Anders Villani , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , July no. 466 2024; (p. 47-48)

— Review of Circadia Judith Bishop , 2024 selected work poetry

'In Poetry’s Knowing Ignorance, Joseph Acquisto borrows a definition of poetry from Phillipe Jaccottet: ‘that key that you must always keep on losing’. Attempting to know its subject, poetry reveals that there is always more to know. But the French poet’s metaphor, for Acquisto, does not mean ‘simple contingency’. It suggests ‘a complex play of certainty and doubt … that actively resists coming to a conclusion’. We might say that poetry expresses the friction in human experience between time and permanence.'  (Introduction)

1 Calm Voice i "On a fatherhood weekend, the men drag", Anders Villani , 2024 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , April no. 463 2024; (p. 12)
1 Strange Communion : Questions of Poetic Resistance Anders Villani , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , January - February no. 461 2024; (p. 44-45)

— Review of Parallel Equators Nathan Shepherdson , 2023 selected work poetry ; Camping Underground Greg McLaren , 2022 selected work poetry

'‘Poems reawaken in us,’ writes James Longenbach, ‘the pleasure of the unintelligibility of the world.’ They do so via ‘mechanisms of self-resistance’: disjunctive strategies that work, for Longenbach, to ‘resist our intelligence almost successfully’. What ‘almost’ means here is, of course, a matter of taste – and style. Nonetheless, this Romantic mandate – that poems achieve clarity by integrating opacity – invites a question fundamental to poetics: how much resistance is too much, or not enough?' (Introduction)          

1 Berries i "Rupture is measure. I’ve lost you", Anders Villani , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 68 no. 2 2023; (p. 54-55)
1 Falling into a Dream : Joel Deane’s Visceral Novel Anders Villani , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , November no. 459 2023; (p. 30)

— Review of Judas Boys Joel Deane , 2023 single work novel

'Early in Joel Deane’s third novel, the point of view shifts from the first to the third person as the narrator, Patrick ‘Pin’ Pinnock, reflects on a moment in boyhood, standing atop a diving board at night:

'He looks down and sees the white frame of the rectangular pool, but everything inside the white frame is black. The darkness within the frame is his past and future, he thinks, and the diving board is his present. To make the leap from one to the other, therefore, is an act of faith.' (Introduction)           

1 Wallpaper i "I stick shut scissors in the doorhandle’s cavity and twist. He’s on his bed on his", Anders Villani , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 457 2023; (p. 47)
1 Valour i "If he were angrier, it would be better", Anders Villani , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , no. 109 2023;
1 Death in Secrecy : Shannon Molloy’s New Memoir Anders Villani , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , April no. 452 2023; (p. 19)

— Review of You Made Me This Way Shannon Molloy , 2023 single work autobiography
'Shannon Molloy’s 2020 memoir, Fourteen, recounted a childhood and adolescence of grisly homophobic violence. Yet many readers of that book – a bestseller, adapted for the stage and optioned for a film production – may find You Made Me This Way noteworthy in part because it reveals what Fourteen left out: the sexual abuse Molloy suffered, beginning at age five, at the hands of an older boy. This omission underscores one of the book’s central theses, that on average male victims of child sexual abuse find it harder than female victims to disclose their experiences. A conditioned reticence with grave implications – ‘[t]here is death in secrecy’. Molloy’s book, a hybrid of autobiography and journalism, takes socially important steps in assessing – and humanising – these implications.' (Introduction) 
1 Mordant Marvels : A Wondrous, Disquieting Poetry Collection Anders Villani , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , October no. 447 2022; (p. 55)

— Review of Mirabilia Lisa Gorton , 2022 selected work poetry

'Mirabilia is the plural form of the Latin mirabile: wonderful thing, marvel. Since the publication of her first book, Press Release, in 2007, Lisa Gorton has cultivated such a voice in Australian poetry. Mordant political wit, formal and thematic bricolage, a liquid control of the line, and the ability to trace patterns across the strata of history and society – to rove between time and the timeless – have long characterised Gorton’s oeuvre. She showcases the full complement of her gifts in this wondrous and disquieting new collection.'  (Introduction)

1 ‘It’s Me Talking’ : Poetry’s Vexed First Person Anders Villani , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 443 2022; (p. 43-44)

— Review of Running Time Emily Stewart , 2022 selected work poetry ; Inheritance Nellie Le Beau , 2021 selected work poetry

'The lyric subject, literature’s most intimate ‘I’, has vexed critics for centuries. Is it the poet? Is it a fiction, a device? Or is the relation between author and speaker, as Jonathan Culler suggests, ‘indeterminate’, such that ‘any model … that attempts to fix or prescribe that relationship will be inadequate’? Two new award-winning Australian poetry collections offer fine-grained considerations of personhood and the poem’s capacity to represent it.'  (Introduction)

1 On the Rise i "All morning, the brothers work", Anders Villani , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , 1 June no. 105 2022;
1 Collecting Brown Matter in Lockdown as the Climate Warms i "When the rain lets up, we drive around, pulling over here", Anders Villani , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Overland , Summer no. 245 2022; (p. 55)
1 Deer Knife i "When life hides behind the mulch", Anders Villani , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , April no. 441 2022; (p. 49)
1 1 y separately published work icon Totality Anders Villani , Canberra : Recent Work Press , 2022 23668191 2022 selected work poetry

'With stunning formal range and architectural design, Anders Villani’s second collection explores how violence engenders selfhood by calling it into radical question. What does it mean to suffer in a body that also symbolises power? How can poetry, alert to the ‘blur’ and the ‘panorama’, trace this moral dissonance at its subtlest and most intimate? How do notions of illness and recovery, victim and perpetrator, rest on fraught archetypes, and what alternate understandings emerge when these foundations waver? Villani roves between myth, confession, narrative, and dream to address such questions—not abstractly, but through the experiences of a subject whose capacity to love and be loved is at stake.

'Novelistic in arc and scope, lyrically sensuous and searching, Totality invites readers on a journey of self-inquiry that dredges new channels in the contemporary poetics of trauma. As secrets reveal and conceal themselves, through the crucible of hypermasculinity, and with unstinting compassion, Villani’s poems venture an expansive and timely music.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 No Time Limits : Three New Poetry Collections Anders Villani , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , November no. 437 2021; (p. 58-59)

— Review of How to Make a Basket Jazz Money , 2021 selected work poetry ; Bees Do Bother Ann Vickery , 2021 selected work poetry ; The Open Lucy Van , 2021 selected work poetry

'Good poetry uncovers the secret in the manifest, and the manifest in the secret. Three new collections throw this paradox into vibrant, unsettling relief. Each book deserves a broad readership. Each beats back the lethargic thinking that has invaded society under the cover of the pandemic.' (Introduction)

1 Compassionate Grounds i "Nausea ransoms hour twelve", Anders Villani , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , August no. 102 2021;
1 y separately published work icon Verge 2021 : Home Jessica Phillips (editor), Anders Villani (editor), Georgia White (editor), Clayton : Monash University Publishing , 2021 22018406 2021 anthology poetry short story

'The death of a bird haunts the relationship between two siblings. A lonely narrator waits for a bus that never comes. A boy makes soup with his grandmother and wonders about the memories she has buried.

'For the sixteenth edition of Verge, we asked contributors to reflect on the theme of Home, a word that took on a new meaning after a year of solitude and separation. We chose this theme because we hoped to read about homes of all kinds: unhomely homes, abandoned homes, unlikely homes, forgotten homes, found homes. And we were awed by the beauty, depth and variety in the pieces we received. Our writers explored homes of past, present and future; they probed the bleakness of domesticity and mourned the loss of what was once held close. They wrote about familial ties and found communities, about the painfulness of childhood and the bonds of ancestry. Writing, indeed, to make a home in.'

Source : publisher's blurb

1 Marlin i "A boy appears at school early", Anders Villani , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , April no. 430 2021; (p. 25)
1 Canals i "and the salons remain open and your mother receives", Anders Villani , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , January 2021;
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