image of person or book cover 5678674339504700520.jpg
This image has been sourced from online.
y separately published work icon Aurealis periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2016... no. 90 9 May 2016 of Aurealis : Australian Fantasy and Science Fiction est. 1990 Aurealis
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 , 2016 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
From the Cloud, Stephen Higgins , single work essay
The Beasts and the Birthday, Marlee Jane Ward , single work
'Nanny’s forever going on and on about what things were like before the march, when there was so much. Whose got carrots enough to throw bits of them away? Mumma and Daddy though, they don’t say a word about it, or the march itself. Neither of them say much at all, really. Me? I wasn’t born before but during, and I don’t remember none of it. Polly says she can recall a few things here and there, flashes of the beasts, the way they sunk their teeth in at the necks and made people into puppets. When she tells me things like that, I’m glad I don’t remember.' (Publication abstract)
Death and Mildred, Nick Nedelijkovic , single work short story

'Mildred was only six when she met Death, but she wasn’t afraid.

'He looked nothing like the pictures. He wasn’t a skeleton in a dark robe or a gaunt figure wielding a shining silver pennant (she hadn’t yet learned the word scythe). Instead he wore a ragged but serviceable coat and carried a leather briefcase, and looked a little bit like her father and grandfather and Mr Makras, the lion-voiced librarian at her school, all rolled into one. If Mildred had ever known her mother, Death might have looked a little something like her too.' (Publication abstract)

Drift, Alex Hardison , single work short story

'What happened to the ship wasn’t my fault. At least, I don’t think that it was. Things like that are hard to work out in the moment.

'My last clear memory is of working on the exterior, the humans crowded safely inside. They always felt so distant, locked down in the dark with the warmth and oxygen. It was better, out on the hull. Moving quickly and gracefully, all six limbs planting temporary rivets and pulling me along. It’s what I was made for. The humans were shouting at me to move faster, to fix the damage. I didn’t know what had gone wrong with the ship, but that was okay. Fixing things is what I do. They were insulting me, their voices high and thin with panic. So fragile and so strange. (Publication abstract)

The Opposite of Romance, Chris Large , single work interview
Part one of an entertaining and enlightening interview with Jennifer Fallon.
Why Human Beings Will Never Colonise Other Planets, Daniel Thompson , single work essay
Secret History of Australia : Cyrus Handapple, Michael Pryor , single work short story
'Intellectual, freethinker and solipsist, Cyrus Handapple was the youngest in a family of fifteen, born in 1904 and growing up in the Western Australian town of Bunbury.' (Publication abstract)
X