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Carmel Bird Carmel Bird i(A31077 works by)
Also writes as: Jack Power
Born: Established: 1940 Launceston, Northeast Tasmania, Tasmania, ;
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 John Kinsella : Beam of Light Carmel Bird , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 31 August - 6 September 2024;

— Review of Beam of Light : Stories John Kinsella , 2024 selected work short story

'The first sentence in this powerful collection of short stories ends with the words “uneasy, restless” – a signature of what is to come. John Kinsella is a poet at the top of his game. His fiction reveals a further flowering of his imagination, sending the reader back into the narrative to search for solace.' 

1 y separately published work icon Arabella Carmel Bird , Jace Rogers (illustrator), Castlemaine : Treasure Street Press , 2024 28620583 2024 single work picture book children's 'Arabella is a rhyming, engaging tale tells of the power of kindness to cancel the terrors of the past. There is fear, overcome by gentleness and understanding. Underlying the charming story is the reality of a traumatised creature gradually learning to conquer the shadows of yesterday, and to face the future with courage and joy.' (Publication summary)
1 The King’s White Hound Carmel Bird , 2023 single work short story
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 7-13 October 2023;
1 Round and Round the Garden Carmel Bird , 2023 single work prose
— Appears in: Verge 2023 2023;
1 Love Letter to Lola : Extract Carmel Bird , 2023 extract short story (Love Letter to Lola)
— Appears in: The Newtown Review of Books , May 2023;
1 1 y separately published work icon Love Letter to Lola Carmel Bird , Strawberry Hills : Spineless Wonders , 2023 26023357 2023 selected work short story

''You clamber up, heading for the exit, the circle of faint light, as the radiance of the pre-dawn leads you on toward freedom. I follow. You spread your darling wings. You enter the net that awaits you.'

'Bold, tender, and often fantastical, Love Letter to Lola enters the very pain of loss and grief while preserving a wise, sly, humorous, and ironic point of view. The thylacine, the dodo, the passenger pigeon, the blue macaw are all candidates to return from extinction, and here each is given its own moving narrative. The meaning of the British monarchy is challenged by a green spider; a unicorn and the rainbow serpent contemplate the end of the world; an angel gives his perspective on human life and love with a thoughtful and exquisite mischief. The author's own 'Reflection' on the inspiration and the construction of the stories is a swift and penetrating conversation on how writing happens.

'Carmel Bird won the Patrick White Award for Literature in 2016. She has published novels, short stories, and non-fiction, her 2022 memoir Telltale foregrounding her Tasmanian origins, as well as her lifelong interest in the natural world, and in reading and writing. The Stolen Children - Their Stories, which she published in 1998, is an early landmark work in the promotion of indigenous issues. Love Letter to Lola is the latest offering of an author who is known for the sharpness and originality of her narratives.' (Publication summary) 

1 Gregory Day The Bell of the World Carmel Bird , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 4-10 March 2023;

— Review of The Bell of the World Gregory Day , 2023 single work novel

'Among the literary honours awarded to Gregory Day is the 2021 prize from The Nature Conservancy Australia. A profound commitment to the future of the planet as well as a passion for all forms of music and language and a keen awareness of the truths of Indigenous culture form the fabric of his soaring, astonishing new novel.' (Introduction)

1 The Third Angel of Chernobyl Carmel Bird , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: Island Online - 2022 2022;

'I write this in February 2022, beginning on Valentine’s Day. The whole world, suffering from the pestilence of COVID, is focused on the question of whether Russia is or is not going to invade Ukraine, which has been a separate and troubled country since 1991. By 17 February, the suspense continues, and perhaps Russia will invade, perhaps it won’t. Naturally, the world watches on television as snow falls on the troops, on the tanks, on people in bright puffer jackets. Aside from what may or may not be happening on the physical borders, Ukrainian banks report widespread cyber attacks, described by newsreaders as ‘malicious internet traffic’.' (Introduction)

1 Resurrecting Martha Carmel Bird , 2022 single work short story
— Appears in: Phase Change 2022;
1 The Naming of Place Carmel Bird , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Island , no. 166 2022; (p. 111-113)
'If you go to Launceston -  and I am certainly not suggesting for one moment that you do that - you might take a little walk along Elphin Road until you come to College Street. At number three College Street there's a charming Edwardian house which used to be a maternity hospital. I keep a photograph of this building on my hallstand - two reasons, I was born there, and I think I am perhaps a bit eccentric. It's not everybody who has a picture on their hallstand displaying the building in which they entered the world.' (Introduction)
1 Gail Jones Salonika Burning Carmel Bird , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 19-25 November 2022;

— Review of Salonika Burning Gail Jones , 2022 single work novel

'Salonika Burning, the ninth novel from Gail Jones, is an enthralling narrative that transports readers to the battlefields of Greece in 1917. Jones, whose book The Death of Noah Glass won the Prime Minister’s Literary Award for Fiction in 2019, is one of Australia’s most distinguished and highly awarded writers. This latest novel, like much of her work, brings the settings and dramas of the past into sharp and vivid focus.' (Introduction)   

1 Sophie Cunningham This Devastating Fever Carmel Bird , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 17-23 September 2022;

— Review of This Devastating Fever Sophie Cunningham , 2022 single work novel

'Angry and enthralling, this novel challenges the reader’s understanding of what a novel might be.'

1 Journey into the Unknown Carmel Bird , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 6 August 2022; (p. 17)

— Review of Nimblefoot Robert Drewe , 2022 single work novel

' One of the beauties of historical fiction lies in its ability to peel back layers of accepted “facts” in order to dramatise events as they might have been. Robert Drewe is a master of this technique, and something of a magician who delights in delivering the jolt of the reveal. Fascinated by an 1866 faded sepia portrait of a small 10-year-old Australian boy, Johnny Day, displayed in the National Library of Australia, the author began researching the boy’s history. The photograph is reproduced in his novel, Nimblefoot.' (Introduction)

1 The Fly on the Wall Carmel Bird , 2022 single work short story
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 2-8 July 2022;
1 Completing the 1080 Project Carmel Bird , 2022 single work short story
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 14-20 May 2022;
1 4 y separately published work icon Telltale : Reading Writing Remembering Carmel Bird , Yarraville : Transit Lounge , 2022 24382636 2022 single work prose

'‘I was confined, locked into my library, tracing my heartbeats from way, way back.’ 

'In Telltale, Carmel Bird seizes on the enforced isolation of the pandemic to re-read a rich dispensary of books from her past. A rule she sets herself is that she can consult only the books in her house, even if some, such as the much-loved Thornton Wilder’s The Bridge of San Luis Rey, appear to be stubbornly elusive. Her library is comprehensive, and each book chosen – or that cannot be refused – enables an opening, a connection to people, time, place, myth, image, and the experience of a writing life. From her father’s bomb shelter to her mother’s raspberry jam, from a lost Georgian public library with ‘narrow little streets of books’ to the memory of crossing by bridge the turbulent waters of the Tamar River, to a revelatory picnic at Tasmania’s Cataract Gorge in 1945, this is the most intimate of memoirs.

'It is one that never shies from the horrors of world history, the treatment of First Nations People, or the literary misrepresentations of the past. 

'Original, lyrical, and hugely enjoyable, Telltale, with its finely wrought insight and artful storytelling, is destined to delight.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 Ceridwen Dovey and Eliza Bell Mothertongues Carmel Bird , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 23-29 April 2022;

— Review of Mothertongues Eliza Bell , Ceridwen Dovey , 2022 single work prose

'Almost the first thing you find in Mothertongues is a QR code to the soundtrack that singer–songwriter Keppie Coutts created to be part of the reading experience. This work, co-written by Ceridwen Dovey and Eliza Bell, is in a category all its own, exploring the living concept of motherhood across a multitude of forms that move from whisper to cacophony, from tragedy to hysteria. It’s sweet and sour. Ivory tower academic meets music hall meets melody.' (Introduction)

1 The Thorns and Petals of Kirribilli’s Titled Rose Carmel Bird , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 10 July 2021; (p. 14)

— Review of The Countess from Kirribilli : The Mysterious and Free-spirited Literary Sensation Who Beguiled the World Joyce Morgan , 2021 single work biography

'Countess who? Mary Annette Beauchamp was born in Kirribilli in 1866. She married a German count, acquiring the name “von Arnim”. When she published her first book in 1898, Elizabeth in her German Garden, the author was simply “Elizabeth”, but these days her 22 books are all attributed to Elizabeth von Arnim. She grew up in England from the age of three, and lived in Europe and America, dying in South Carolina in 1941.' (Introduction)

1 Yes, My Darling Daughter Carmel Bird , 2021 short story
— Appears in: South of the Sun : Australian Fairy Tales for the 21st Century 2021; (p. 4-7)
1 Sheer Magic in the Pages Carmel Bird , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 9 January 2021; (p. 15)

— Review of French Fairy Tales Sophie Masson , 2020 selected work short story
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