Harry Cummins Harry Cummins i(A26554 works by)
Born: Established: 1961 Townsville, Townsville area, Marlborough - Mackay - Townsville area, Queensland, ;
Gender: Male
Departed from Australia: ca. 1970
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1 y separately published work icon Magnetic Island: A Novel Harry Cummins , West End : Connor Court Publishing , 2019 15506724 2019 single work novel

'Amazing and very funny, Magnetic Island is also a rumination on art, history and politics as original as it is shocking.

'Patrick Mynts, the owner of a London art gallery, has arrived Australia on a government junket. In Australia’s National Gallery, he is stunned by the work of an artist called Tray Beautous. As Tray’s paintings are unknown in London and New York, Mynts is convinced that he can make a fortune by selling them there.

'Patrick also meets Dewy Popkiss in Canberra, the Prime Minister of Australia. Dew warns Mynts that only he will be able to arrange for the Londoner to get in touch with Beautous because Tray is a recluse who has hidden himself away on Magnetic Island in remote, tropical North Queensland. Dew will only agree to make the arrangements that will bring the two together, however, if Pat agrees to persuade Tray to paint a married couple of Dew’s acquaintance when they are “making the beast with two backs”. If Mynts manages to arrange this ménage à trois, Dew promises that the couple who are determined to perform in it will reward him stupendously.

'Patrick agrees to the deal and goes off to visit an elderly Canberra relative. Suddenly, however, the spirit of Brooklana Fagan - the dead wife of Australia’s former Prime Minister  - seems to ventriloquise his kinswoman’s dementia-muzzled body. “Brookee” tells Pat that the couple whom Dew wants Tray to paint will use the sitting to murder the artist because they feel that one of the sculptures he has created insults the goddess that they worship, Christina Stead, the famous Australian novelist. (In the fashion of deceased Roman Empresses, Christina is now worshipped by millions worldwide).

'Pat now faces a Hamlet-like dilemma. Should he reject Dewy’s commission? Or should he act on it and embrace, perhaps, eternal damnation for accepting the Premier’s 30 pieces of silver?'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 Avenues of Ash Trees i "In England, there are a lot of houses in the country,", Harry Cummins , 2001 single work poetry
— Appears in: Quadrant , December vol. 45 no. 12 2001; (p. 68)
1 Fool's Gold i "A Sussex drive, oak trees like Weetabix.", Harry Cummins , 2000 single work poetry
— Appears in: The Adelaide Review , March no. 198 2000; (p. 45)
1 The Subject of This Poem i "Was a woman of less than average height.", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 70-74)
1 The Empty Golden Steppe i "The great valley of the Circus Maximus lay before the", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 66-69)
1 Mount of Olives i "All of them went into the garden. There was James, John,", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 64-65)
1 August Day i "The parched air reeled in reams,", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 63)
1 Easter i "You're a river that breaks its banks,", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 62)
1 Christmas Eve i "Once, when I was trying to believe in Christmas,", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 61)
1 The Cricketers at Downside i "The Cricketers at Downside,", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 59-60)
1 In Keeping i "What was that part for other people that I'd touched?", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 58)
1 Alaric's Goths Plunder Greece, 395 AD i "The dead were white as chickenbones;", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 57)
1 A Strange Change that Must Have Taken Place in Greece, Around 600 AD i "He had ridden far, the eager poet, sentimental pagan.", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 56)
1 A Timetable at Waterloo i "Liss, Liphook and Petersfield;", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 55)
1 Revolution i "The rich man in his castle,", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 54)
1 The First Year at College i "How strange it is to think of that first year,", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 53)
1 Kensington Gardens i "He sat there, full moustache, frills - face,", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 52)
1 Early Autumn i "The willow leaves look yellow and grey at the bottom of the", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 51)
1 The Beautiful City i "The blurred blue, black sky; then, bright wet,", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 50)
1 In the Charing Cross Road i "A man with yellow patches under his eyes where he had had", Harry Cummins , 1995 single work poetry
— Appears in: Townsville 1995; (p. 49)
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