Shannon Burns Shannon Burns i(A99282 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 The Untouched Country : Familiar Territory from Robbie Arnott Shannon Burns , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , October no. 469 2024; (p. 29)

— Review of Dusk Robbie Arnott , 2024 single work novel

'Readers familiar with Robbie Arnott’s fiction will have some expectations about the kind of book the author is likely to conjure. Dusk sits comfortably inside the thematic and narrative territories he has previously explored, particularly in The Rain Heron (2020) and the wonderful Limberlost (2022). Dusk features Arnott’s typically vivid descriptive prose and his concern with the natural world and our place within it. Dusk generates pathos with delicate expertise and mixes genres while retaining a strong semblance of realism.'  (Introduction)

1 His Father’s Eyes : A Memoir of Roads Not Taken Shannon Burns , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 468 2024; (p. 45)

— Review of Running with Pirates Kári Gíslason , 2024 single work autobiography

'Kári Gíslason’s memoir of escape and adventure during his early adulthood begins in transit: he is freshly eighteen, ‘sleeping on the floor next to hot air vents at the back of a grand old ferry that connected Brindisi in the heel of Italy with Athens’. Kári is travelling with an ‘often-jolly, sometimes sarcastic’ Scotsman named Paul, and their relationship has begun to fray. Worse, they are low on money, which means their travels and ‘freedom’ may soon be over. Gíslason notes: ‘We were unemployable. I was sickly thin, and my hair past my shoulders and knotted. Paul always looked like he’d just woken up.’ Both are searching for ways to forget their troubles and orient themselves as they take the first steps into manhood, but the pressures that come with such a task have left them feeling oppressed and alienated.' (Introduction) 

1 To Share Breath : Christos Tsiolkas’s Tangy New Novel Shannon Burns , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , November no. 459 2023; (p. 28-29)

— Review of The In-Between Christos Tsiolkas , 2023 single work novel

'When the London theatres closed due to plague in the late 1590s, a still-young William Shakespeare composed and published ‘Venus and Adonis’, a poem about unrequited love, lust, and devotion to beauty. Shakespeare evokes a desire to touch, to kiss, to smell, to taste, to share breath. Christos Tsiolkas’s book  (2021), written and published under similar circumstances, embodies some of this Shakespearean spirit, but his conception of beauty extends to a fuller range of sensual experience, accommodating everything that is human and alive – the stench as well as the perfume – while rejecting whatever seeks to diminish beauty and liveliness. It is the work of a writer who is in love with this world, despite its cruelties. The In-Between mirrors and extends that sensibility.' (Introduction)          

1 Notes of an Anxious Son Shannon Burns , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , October 2023;

— Review of Anam André Dao , 2023 single work novel
1 Late Fictions : Gerald Murnane’s Retrospective Intention Shannon Burns , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 456 2023; (p. 53)

— Review of Murnane Emmett Stinson , 2023 single work biography

'Emmett Stinson’s brief critical survey centres on Gerald Murnane’s four major ‘late fictions’, beginning with Barley Patch (Giramondo, 2009) and ending with Border Districts (Giramondo, 2017). It is a timely and illuminating companion to Murnane’s recent fiction and works well as an extension of the first monograph on his work, Imre Salusinszky’s Gerald Murnane (Oxford University Press, 1993)Although the two books have different points of focus, they are slim yet substantial studies, each dealing with a distinct period of Murnane’s literary career, and both are eminently readable.' (Introduction)

1 Insider-Outsider Shannon Burns , 2022 single work prose
— Appears in: Family : Stories of Belonging 2022;
1 The Wound That Does Not Heal : Brian Castro's Literary Career Shannon Burns , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: Meanjin , December vol. 81 no. 4 2022; (p. 188-195)

'Brian Castro dramatises and even valorises forms of literary and artistic failure throughout his fiction, but his body of work is a raging success by mortal standards. None of his novels disappoint on close inspection. Double-Wolf and Shanghai Dancing are endlessly rewarding; The Swan Book is gorgeously written and deeply moving; After China is conceptually neat, seductive and stylish. Others, such as Drift and The Bath Fugues, appeal to select readers but are dazzlingly rich and structurally brilliant. Even Stepper—which Castro sees as a relatively conventional spy novel—is a satisfying and affecting Nabokovian game. Every novel is stamped by a talent that induces envy as much as gratitude. You want to know what it feels like to write that way.' (Publication abstract)

1 9 y separately published work icon Childhood : A Memoir Shannon Burns , Melbourne : Text Publishing , 2022 24807055 2022 single work autobiography

'A breathtaking, confronting memoir that examines class, poverty, neglect, masculinity, and the transformative power of books

'Things may have been good for a while, but it didn't last- they argued fiercely and he left. Weeks later, she tracked him down and said she was pregnant. So he moved back in with her and they prepared themselves for parenthood.

'Eleven months later I was born. By the time my father discovered the deception, it was too late.

'There is something chastening about this mode of conception, about knowing that, by most standards, your beginning was aberrant.

'In this arresting memoir, Shannon Burns recalls a childhood spent bouncing between dysfunctional homes in impoverished suburbs, between families unwilling or unable to care for him. Aged nine, he beats his head against the pillow to get himself to sleep. Aged ten, he knows his mother will never be able to look after him- he is alone, and can trust no-one.

'Five years later, he is working in a recycling centre-hard labour, poorly paid-yet reading offers hope. He begins reciting lines from Dante, Keats, Whitman, speeches by Martin Luther King, while sifting through the filthy cans and bottles. An affair with the mother of a schoolfriend eventually offers a way out, a path to a life utterly unlike the one he was born into.

'With its clarity of purpose and vividness of expression, Childhood is a powerful act of remembering that is destined to be a classic.' (Publication summary)


 

1 Final Sentence Shannon Burns , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: The Monthly , December no. 184 2021; (p. 76-79)

— Review of Last Letter to a Reader Gerald Murnane , 2021 selected work criticism essay
1 Lili and Lyle : Michelle de Kretser's New Novel Shannon Burns , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , October no. 436 2021; (p. 36-37)

— Review of Scary Monsters Michelle De Kretser , 2021 single work novel
1 Bani’s Story : Michael Mohammed Ahmad’s New Novel Shannon Burns , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 434 2021; (p. 42)

— Review of The Other Half of You Michael Mohammed Ahmad , 2021 single work novel

'Bani Adam returns as the narrator–protagonist of Michael Mohammed Ahmad’s The Other Half of You, a sequel to his two previous books. The most recent one, The Lebs (2018), gave us the story of Bani’s teenage years at Punchbowl Boys’ High School: the trials of a Lebanese Muslim boy in a majority Lebanese Muslim community nestled inside the larger, diverse territories of Western Sydney, in post-‘War on Terror’ Australia. The Other Half of You is an account of Bani’s late teens and early twenties, and of an inner conflict between religious, cultural, and romantic pieties.' (Introduction)

1 Lament Shannon Burns , 2021 single work short story
— Appears in: Meanjin , Winter vol. 80 no. 2 2021; Meanjin Online 2021;
1 ‘Rolling Over so Easily’ : Steven Carroll’s Take on Story of O Shannon Burns , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , April no. 430 2021; (p. 31)

— Review of O Steven Carroll , 2021 single work novel

'On the back cover of O, we learn that the protagonist of the novel, Dominique, lived through the German occupation of France, participated in the Resistance, relished its ‘clandestine life’, and later wrote an ‘erotic novel about surrender, submission and shame’, which became the real-life international bestseller and French national scandal, Histoire d’O (1954). ‘But what is the story really about,’ the blurb asks, ‘Dominique, her lover, or the country and the wartime past it would rather forget?’' (Introduction)

1 Where's John? Shannon Burns , 2020 single work essay
— Appears in: A Book of Friends : In Honour of J. M. Coetzee on His 80th Birthday 2020; (p. 20-23)
1 Truth, Fiction and True Fiction Shannon Burns , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: Gerald Murnane : Another World in This One 2020; (p. 29-36)
The novels and collections of fiction that represent Gerald Murnane’s first major period of writing and publishing (1974-95) portray Murnane-like personages and narrators. Clement Killeaton’s boyhood in Tamarisk Row (1974) mirrors Murnane’s experiences in Bendigo as a child; Adrian Shard’s inner life in A Lifetime on Clouds (1976) approximates Murnane’s adolescent awkwardness and obsessive fantasies; the partial Künstlerromane of several Murnane-like writers in Landscape with Landscape (1985) are drawn from their author’s experiences in his late teens, then as a bachelor in his twenties and as a husband and father; Inland (1988) draws from his epiphanic discovery of Hungarian writer Gyula Illyés’ Puszták népe (People of the Puszta) – a book that had a deep and strange impact on Murnane, stimulating a literal and literary haunting – combined with childhood experiences (and, perhaps, a curious but chaste relationship with his female editor at Heinemann);2 and the stories in Velvet Waters (1990) and Emerald Blue (1995) appear to be increasingly personal and revealing, despite the distancing devices that Murnane employs, which serve to deter readerly presumptuousness. Murnane has teased readers with a series of enduring images and motifs (two-storey buildings, blue and gold coloured reflections, flat grasslands, horseraces, nesting areas, etc.) and this tendency has only intensified since the later phase of his writing career began, with the publication of Barley Patch in 2009.' (Introduction)
1 Border Control Shannon Burns , 2020 single work prose
— Appears in: Meanjin , Autumn vol. 79 no. 1 2020;
1 Yes and No Shannon Burns , 2019 single work autobiography
— Appears in: Meanjin , Spring vol. 78 no. 3 2019; (p. 108-113)

'In the very early hours of an otherwise unmemorable day in autumn 2007, I decided that I would never have children.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Easy Virtue Shannon Burns , 2018 single work autobiography
— Appears in: Meanjin Online 2018;
1 Getting Away with It : On Private and Public Shame Shannon Burns , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: Meanjin , Summer vol. 77 no. 4 2018; (p. 70-74)

'I possess a photograph of myself that was taken near midnight on New Year’s Eve two decades ago. I’m on the dance floor at a nightclub and my then-girlfriend has an arm around my shoulder. She is speaking directly into my ear in a stern and purposeful way, trying to impress good sense into a self-certain young man with bulging muscles, blond tips in his hair and an obscene amount of alcohol in his system. The expression on my face is blank: I can hear what she tells me, but I’m not listening because I’ve already made up my mind. The guy who casually groped her as he squeezed past us moments before is destined to greet the New Year in an inauspicious way.'  (Introduction)

1 The Drowned and the Saved: Axiomatic by Maria Tumarkin Shannon Burns , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , November 2018;

'In Otherland (2010), Maria Tumarkin writes: ‘Humility is a big deal to me…’, and her first three nonfiction books – all of which delve deeply, unapologetically and revealingly into ‘serious’ territories – carry the imprint of that Big Deal, in their conception and tone. Tumarkin has previously approached trauma, genocide, war, loss, guilt, systematic oppression, and survival with exploratory urgency. Her newest book, Axiomatic, is written in the same spirit. Here, Tumarkin has taken Australian society and culture as her chief subject for the first time, attending to very real but not obviously historical crises, while expanding on thematic concerns that run through her body of work. It is her most vital, compressed and compelling book to date.'  (Introduction)

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