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Issue Details: First known date: 2018... 2018 'The Art of Navigation' by Rose Michael
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'Conceptually, The Art of Navigation is as intriguing as it is ambitious. The narrative is part near-future time travel, part historical drama, part nostalgic Australian Gothic – and all slipstream fiction. The novel braids, unbraids, and rebraids three main threads of time and place: suburban Melbourne in 1987; the royal courts of Elizabeth I and Rudolph II in 1587; and the outskirts of a new, not-quite-Melbourne in 2087. Yet there is practically nothing simple about this book – not the style or structure, nor the way it resolves. This complexity is both the greatest strength and the greatest weakness of slipstream stories. Slipstream fiction is difficult to process; it’s demanding, often frustrating. It functions because it is strange, because it estranges. Readers are not made welcome, not offered clear or complete pictures, but are instead asked to decipher dream-like visions glimpsed sideways through a warped scrying glass.' (Introduction)

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  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Australian Book Review ABR no. 398 January–February 2018 12801891 2018 periodical issue 2018 pg. 38
Last amended 25 Jan 2018 08:07:30
38 'The Art of Navigation' by Rose Michaelsmall AustLit logo Australian Book Review
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