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Patrick Allington Patrick Allington i(A33829 works by)
Born: Established: South Australia, ;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Well Read Patrick Allington , single work review
1 I Don't Know What I'm Looking At Patrick Allington , 2023 single work prose
— Appears in: The Writing Mind : Creative Writing Responses to Images of the Living Brain 2023;
1 Untitled Patrick Allington , 2023 single work prose
— Appears in: The Writing Mind : Creative Writing Responses to Images of the Living Brain 2023;
1 Don’t Be Difficult Patrick Allington , 2023 single work short story
— Appears in: Saltbush Review , no. 4 2023;
1 Big-picture Questions : Fiona McFarlane’s Panoramic Fiction Patrick Allington , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December no. 449 2022; (p. 46)

— Review of The Sun Walks Down Fiona McFarlane , 2022 single work novel

'Early in The Sun Walks Down, Mary Wallace – mother to six-year-old Denny, who has gone missing in a dust storm – throws her husband a ‘general look of bafflement at having found herself here, in this place, with these people’. It’s a symptomatic moment early in a novel that contains myriad displays of perplexity by various characters – at each other, at situations they create or must navigate, at the meaning of life.' (Introduction)

1 All Futures Are Possible Patrick Allington , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , December 2022;

— Review of Song of Less Joan Fleming , 2022 selected work poetry ; Every Version of You Grace Chan , 2022 single work novel

'Early in Grace Chan’s novel Every Version of You, Tao-Yi and her partner Navin pass a monument erected at Melbourne’s Federation Square that commemorates the deaths caused by a US airstrike in 2041 – the attack, by now, a distant memory. At one point in Joan Fleming’s verse novel Song of Less, a character called Cousin Groundpigeon says ‘Remember countries?’ ' (Introduction)   

1 Other Ways of Living Patrick Allington , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , September 2022;

— Review of Summertime : Reflections on a Vanishing Future Danielle Celermajer , 2021 single work prose

'At its start and end, Summertime is about two pigs: Jimmy and Katy. Jimmy survived the catastrophic fires of 2019-20. Katy died, even though her human companions had moved the pigs to what they believed was safer ground. Those human companions are Summertime’s author, sociologist Danielle Celermajer, and her partner, called T in the book.'  (Introduction)

1 Silence and Screams : The End of Steven Carroll’s T.S. Eliot Quartet Patrick Allington , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , April no. 441 2022; (p. 29-30)

— Review of Goodnight, Vivienne, Goodnight Steven Carroll , 2022 single work novel

'Early in Steven Carroll’s novel Goodnight, Vivienne, Goodnight, a middle-aged woman contemplates her own existence: ‘Vivienne, Vivie. Viv. Now distant, now near. Who was she? The Vivienne now sitting in the gardens of Northumberland House, Finsbury Park, is contemplating the question.’ This Viv is Vivienne Haigh-Wood, the first wife of T.S. Eliot – or Carroll’s fictional rendition of her. Northumberland House is an asylum where, by 1940, Viv has lived for several years. Her previous actions include not accepting the end of her relationship with Eliot, dabbling in fascism (‘Did you tell him I just liked the uniform?’), and asking a police officer at five one morning if it’s true her husband has been beheaded. Institutionalised, she now lives in quiet defiance of other people’s perceptions and diagnoses of her. And with the help of her friend Louise and a group called the Lunacy Law Reform Society, she is about to do a runner.' (Introduction)

1 The Personal Landscape Patrick Allington , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , February 2022;

— Review of Imaginative Possession: Learning to Live in the Antipodes no. February 2022 periodical issue

'For a slim and mostly mild-mannered book, Belinda Probert’s Imaginative Possession provokes a multitude of thoughts and feelings. As I read it, I had an urge to talk back to Probert – to offer counter-views if not, exactly, to argue with her. But I also wanted to let the narrative wash over me, to enjoy its simple pleasures. In the end, I did some of each.' (Introduction)

1 y separately published work icon Tumarkin Patrick Allington , Carlton : Miegunyah Press , 2022 22127697 2022 single work biography

'A personal reflection and an ambitious, overarching reading of Maria Tumarkin as a writer, and her place in the contemporary Australian literary zeitgeist.

'Why is Maria Tumarkin a significant writer today?

'What are the worlds-personal, social, and intellectual-that have helped to form her perspective? Where does she fit within the circles of key Australian writers and thinkers? What are the boundaries that her work pushes against? And what future does she see for us in Australia and beyond?

'In Tumarkin, which inaugurates the Contemporary Australian Writers series, noted critic and author Patrick Allington registers his intellectual and emotional reaction to Maria Tumarkin's witty, often blunt, always complex interpretations of Australia and the world.

'In the era of the rushed think piece, Allington explores the depth of Tumarkin's persistent, historically informed concern with questions of personal and social belonging, disruption and dislocation. He asks how we might most usefully respond to a body of writing that is urgent, important and unsettling but contains no simple manifesto.' (Publication summary)

1 Night and Day Patrick Allington , 2020 single work prose
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , April no. 58 2020;
1 5 y separately published work icon Rise and Shine Patrick Allington , Melbourne : Scribe , 2020 18465500 2020 single work novel fantasy

'Each morning, the last humans start their day with graphic footage from the front. This is what sustains them — literally. In a world where eight billion souls have perished, the survivors huddle together apart, perpetually at war, in the city-states of Rise and Shine. Yet this war, far from representing their doom, is their means of survival. For their leaders have found the key to life when crops, livestock, and the very future have been blighted — a key that turns on each citizen being moved by human suffering. The question is, with memories still bright of all the friends they’ve lost, all the experience they’ll never know, will compassion be enough? Or must they succumb to, or even embrace, darker desires?'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 Prepping Patrick Allington , 2019 single work short story
— Appears in: Griffith Review , August no. 65 2019;
1 Soldiers Patrick Allington , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 413 2019; (p. 55-56)

— Review of Bodies of Men Nigel Featherstone , 2019 single work novel
'From its raw and revelatory prologue, Nigel Featherstone’s novel Bodies of Men offers a thoroughly humanising depiction of Australians during World War II. In telling the story of two soldiers, William – too young to be a corporal – and his childhood friend James, Featherstone reflects upon the brutality, drudgery, and absurdity of war but also on the two men’s love and regard for each other: ‘The private smiles and William allows himself to smile too. Something passes between them: a wish, or an echo, or something beyond a soldier’s imagination.’' (Introduction)
1 Introduction : ‘Climates of Change’, Papers from the 2017 AAWP Annual Conference Patrick Allington , Piri Eddy , Melanie Pryor , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 51 2018;

'As we were proofreading this introduction, the new(ish) Prime Minister of Australia, Scott Morrison, responded to the warnings of a special report by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change by defending the Australian coal industry (Hannam & Latimer 2018). In reference to the Green Climate Fund, set up by the nations that make up the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in support of developing nations responding to climate change, Morrison added, ‘Nor are we bound to go and tip money into that big climate fund. We’re not going to do that either. I’m not going to spend money on global climate conferences and all that nonsense’ (Karp 2018).' (Introduction)

1 Writing about Asia from Australia : Notes Towards Avoiding a Firm View Patrick Allington , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 47 2017;

'This discursive essay – part exegesis, part literary analysis – analyses the act of writing about Asia from Australia (and from the west). I use the circumstances of my early childhood to frame my interest in ‘Asia’, suggesting that Australia is a genuinely diverse nation that is engaged with the region but that it also retains and values a monocultural outlook. In turn, I analyse several novels by westerners about Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge (including my own novel, Figurehead) to reflect on, first, cultural appropriation, and, second, the limits of empathy in fiction.'

1 On Necessary Disjointedness : The Pol Pot Period in Alice Pung’s Memoirs Patrick Allington , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Life Writing , vol. 14 no. 4 2017; (p. 465-474)

'This paper analyses the memoirs of Australian writer Alice Pung in the contexts of her suburban Melbourne upbringing, her parents’ status as refugees, and Cambodia’s Pol Pot period. The author discusses the changed way Pung deals with the Pol Pot period from Unpolished Gem (2006) to Her Father’s Daughter (2011), and in particular the necessary disjointedness that is a consequence of the latter memoir’s more direct and deep focus on Pung’s father’s experiences during the Pol Pot period. The author concludes by locating Pung’s works, particularly Her Father’s Daughter, among various other memoirs of the Pol Pot period, including poet U Sam Oeur’s memoir, Crossing Three Wildernesses (2005). Placed among other memoirs of survival and loss, the author suggests, Pung brings a distinctive perspective as the child of a survivor of the Pol Pot period.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Emily and Tom Patrick Allington , 2017 single work essay review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 394 2017; (p. 16-17)

'In his fiction, Steven Carroll stretches and slows time. He combines this with deliberate over-explaining and repetition, the echoing of memories and ideas, coincidence, and theatricality. A distinctive rhythm results: when reading his work, I often find myself nodding in time to the words. Occasionally – and it happens now and again in his new novel, A New England Affair – the prose starts to resemble a pizza with too many toppings. Mostly, though, Carroll’s approach to fiction succeeds even when it seemingly shouldn’t. If it’s a mystery – a minor miracle, even – that the various techniques he employs come together to create stylised and yet fresh prose, then that mystery itself becomes part of the pleasure of reading a Carroll novel.' (Introduction)

1 Bob Dylan’s Last Interview Patrick Allington , 2017 single work short story
— Appears in: Review of Australian Fiction , vol. 23 no. 3 2017;
1 ‘No Award’: The Miles Franklin in 1973 Patrick Allington , 2017 single work essay
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , August 2017;

1974 – Ronald McKie The Mango Tree

1973 – No award

1972 – Thea Astley The Acolyte

'When adjudicating on novels published in 1973 — the year Gough Whitlam’s Labor government bought Jackson Pollock’s ‘Blue Poles’, the year the delightfully awful Alvin Purple was released, and the year Patrick White won the Nobel Prize for Literature — the judges of the Miles Franklin Literary Award decided not to name a winner. Their statement read:

''This is the first time since the Award was established in 1957 that the judges have failed to find an Australian novel of sufficient merit among the entries to warrant the prize. … One of the Judges, Professor Colin Roderick … said it was regrettable that more eligible published novels were not entered for such a substantial Award ($1,250).''

(Introduction)

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