Patrick Holland Patrick Holland i(A71623 works by)
Born: Established: 1976 ;
Gender: Male
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.

Works By

Preview all
1 7 y separately published work icon Oblivion Patrick Holland , Yarraville : Transit Lounge , 2024 27927266 2024 single work novel

'Lyrical and atmospheric. As the influence of the West falls away, an unnamed narrator drifts through the East’s floating world of non-places – chain hotels, airports, mega-cities – finalising often covert operations and deals. When he meets the enigmatic and beautiful Tien, a 21st-century floating world courtesan, he becomes involved with people and events that threaten his plan to escape life via various forms of oblivion.

'Evocative and sparely written, in the tradition of The Mary Smokes Boys, this is a novel where the journey becomes the story, filled with acute observation, desire and dreams.' (Publication summary)

1 The Author Patrick Holland , 2021 single work prose
— Appears in: TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs , vol. 25 no. 2 2021;
1 Fugitives : Brian Castro's Verse Novel Patrick Holland , 2017 single work review essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 394 2017; (p. 40-41)

'Lucien Gracq, the hero of Brian Castro’s verse novel Blindness and Rage, wishes to be a writer, though he has written only love letters to women, which achieved tragicomic results, or none at all. When Gracq retires from his job as a town planner in Adelaide, it seems he will have the time and freedom to write the epic he has dreamed of, but he is diagnosed with terminal cancer and given fifty-three days to live, enough time, perhaps, to compose something worthwhile. But Gracq must overcome a more fundamental problem: he is terrified of leaving his mark upon the blank page, and on the world.' (Introduction)

1 The Engagement Patrick Holland , 2017 single work short story
— Appears in: Review of Australian Fiction , vol. 21 no. 3 2017;
1 7 y separately published work icon One Patrick Holland , Yarraville : Transit Lounge , 2016 9173047 2016 single work novel historical fiction

'Though Ned Kelly popularly gets the title, Australia’s last bushrangers were Patrick and James Kenniff, horse and cattle thieves whose operations were at their height at the turn of the 20th century. In One, troops cannot pull the Kenniff Gang out of the ranges and plains of Western Queensland – the brothers know the terrain too well, and the locals are sympathetic to their escapades. A policeman and a station manager go out on patrol from tiny Upper Warrego Station and disappear. Sergeant Nixon makes it his mission to pursue the gang, especially, Jim Kenniff, who becomes for him an emblem of the violence that resides in the heart of the country.

'In the literary tradition of Cormac McCarthy and Peter Carey, One is a novel of lyrical beauty that traverses the intersections between violence and love. It is a love story that reveals the sometimes slippery nature of the truth. What right does a man have to impose his will on the world? Can the written law can ever answer the law of the heart?' (Publication summary)

1 7 y separately published work icon Navigatio Patrick Holland , Yarraville : Transit Lounge , 2014 7939009 2014 single work novel fantasy

'Navigatio tells the story of Saint Brendan of Clonfert, a sixth century monk and adventurer, and his legendary quest for the Isle of the Blessed via a gauntlet of monsters, devils, angels, prophets and beautiful maidens. Brendan's battles with the sea and the cosmos bear out what William Faulkner once called ‘the human heart in conflict with itself’. This haunting parable of darkness and light, of temptation and belief, of voice and silence, is told with the utmost economy of words, making it a small masterpiece of compassionate perception.' (Publication summary)

1 Review : Alfonso Patrick Holland , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , May no. 361 2014; (p. 51)

— Review of Alfonso Félix Calviño , 2013 single work novel
1 The Ghost of Richard Dawkins Patrick Holland , 2013 single work short story
— Appears in: Review of Australian Fiction , vol. 10 no. 3 2013;
1 All-Night Movie Marathon Patrick Holland , 2013 single work short story
— Appears in: Etchings , no. 12 2013; (p. 119-129)
1 [Essay] : The Complete Stories Patrick Holland , 2013 single work essay
— Appears in: Reading Australia 2013-;

'There are always two landscapes in a Malouf story. The one you can touch with your hands, and the one that is dreamed – discoverable by language, always on the verge of disappearing. In medieval Japanese art and letters, this quality was known as yūgen (幽玄),which might be translated as ‘shadow-filled’ or ‘beyond words’ or ‘that which resists being clearly seen’. Arthur Waley, translating fifteenth century playwright and pioneer of Noh, Zeami Motokiyo, said that wandering in a great forest without thought of return is a path to yūgen, as is standing on a shore and gazing after a fishing boat that disappears behind an island, or seeing wild geese disappearing into white clouds. Kamo-no-Chomei (1155–1216) wrote in his Mumyō-sho (Treatise Without a Name), that yūgen occurs, ‘when an unseen world hovers in the atmosphere’.' (Introduction)

1 The Candle Dancer Patrick Holland , 2012 single work short story
— Appears in: Review of Australian Fiction , vol. 4 no. 5 2012;
2 9 y separately published work icon The Darkest Little Room Patrick Holland , Yarraville : Transit Lounge , 2012 Z1886550 2012 single work novel crime thriller

'An atmospheric literary thriller, it tells the story of a foreign journalist living in Saigon who, shortly after reporting on a murdered girl washed up in Saigon River, is approached by a foreigner describing a brothel known as "the darkest little room in Saigon". The mysterious man shows him a photograph of a beautiful woman covered in wounds and the journalist investigates, not only out of suspicion that women are being maltreated, but also in the hope of finding someone from his past.

Rich in setting and characterisation, and pure in voice, The Darkest Little Room explores the elemental dilemmas of being an outsider, the nature of desire, and the risks of loving, especially in a world where no one is who they seem.' (Source: http://www.patrickholland.com.au/) (Sighted 11/09/2012).

1 Cuong : A Beggar's Story Patrick Holland , 2012 single work autobiography
— Appears in: Griffith Review , Spring no. 37 2012; (p. 101-105)
1 6 y separately published work icon Riding the Trains in Japan : Travels in the Sacred and Supermodern East Patrick Holland , Yarraville : Transit Lounge , 2011 Z1813965 2011 single work prose travel 'Arriving late in Kyoto Patrick Holland cannot find a room for the night. Homeless and disorientated and in a place where loitering is not encouraged his only solution is to ride the trains. The train journey becomes a thread in book that journeys on rivers in Saigon, mountains in the Chinese Himalaya, lost cities of the Silk Road, mist-swathed cemeteries in Japan and the flat plains of Australia, and subtly questions the nature of travel and identity through reflections on place, mortality and the changing Asian landscape.' (From the publisher's website.)
1 The Question : Does Religion Unite or Divide Us? Randa Abdel-Fattah , Patrick Holland , 2011 single work column
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 22-24 April 2011; (p. 12)
'At a time when the opposing sides of the world's deepest conflicts seem more apart than ever, four commentators discuss the possibilities for a meeting of minds.' (Editor's abstract)
1 7 y separately published work icon The Source of the Sound Patrick Holland , Salt Publishing , 2010 Z1747600 2010 selected work short story The Source of the Sound traces the journeys of exiles in search of home, through the terrestrial infernos and purgatories of supermodernity. In almost every story there is some elemental contact with light and sound; the characters' longing for simple, uncorrupted signs that would render life in the 21st century meaningful and justified. 'The City Lost to Heaven' revives the medieval miracle play in the unlikely setting of Beijing, pitting the quiet of winter snow and whispering traditions against the noise of progress. 'Integrity' imagines an obscure, unloved place on a western Queensland plain, that by Providence or otherwise, is protected by the play of light and shadow on the landscape, and which, unlike history-snubbing non-places, possesses a memory. Source: www.saltpublishing.com/ (Sighted 06/12/2010)
1 12 y separately published work icon The Mary Smokes Boys Patrick Holland , Yarraville : Transit Lounge , 2010 Z1708003 2010 single work novel

'Grey's mother dies giving birth to his sister Irene and the tragedy haunts his life in the small town of Mary Smokes. Grey prays that his mother will be returned to him in some form, so he might protect her from the world as his father did not. This prayer, Grey believes is answered in his sister Irene. He becomes obsessed with protecting her purity and innocence.

'Also with his mother gone and his father turned to drink, Grey begins running with the wild boys, horse-handlers and fox hunters and part-time timber workers - members of a small, vanishing tribe who find themselves caught between an old relationship with place and a new one that is exemplified by the highway that threatens their town. A rash gamble by Grey and Irene's broken father means he and the Mary Smokes boys must steal horses to ensure Irene's safety. The consequences seem set to fall on Greys' closest friend, 'Ook' Eccleston. As Grey's, Eccleston's and Irene's lives are put at stake his allegiances falter and the world of Mary Smokes slips into a heightened state of darkness and threat.

'With the passion of Emily Bronte in Wuthering Heights and the distilled beauty of Ondaatje, Patrick Holland captures the fragility and grace of small town life and how one fateful moment can forever alter the course of our lives.' (From the publisher's website.)

1 The Composer Patrick Holland , 2009 single work short story
— Appears in: Griffith Review , Summer no. 26 2009; (p. 80-88)
1 A Haunted Solitude Patrick Holland , 2009 single work short story
— Appears in: Etchings , no. 6 2009; (p. 48-57)
1 Integrity Patrick Holland , 2008 single work short story
— Appears in: Wet Ink , Summer no. 13 2008; (p. 52-57) The Best Australian Stories 2009 2009; (p. 77-88)
X