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y separately published work icon The Weekend Australian newspaper issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2019... 16 March 2019 of The Weekend Australian est. 1977 The Weekend Australian
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Contents

* Contents derived from the 2019 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Children Take Control of Their Lives in an Adult World, Mandy Sayer , single work review
— Review of Hare's Fur Trevor Shearston , 2019 single work novel ; Driving into the Sun Marcella Polain , 2019 single work novel ;

'Bad parents often make good literature: the egotistical and controlling Sam Pollit in Christina Stead’s tour-de-force The Man Who Loved Children; the abusive father and alcoholic mother in Edward St Aubyn’s masterful trilogy Some Hope; and, in William Faulkner’s gothic novel, As I Lay Dying, the cowardly and manipulative Anse Bundren who, among his many misdeeds, forces his pregnant teenage daughter to forgo her savings for an abortion so he can buy a set of new false teeth and attract a second wife.' (Introduction) 

(p. 24)
Love and Fame in Spiky Terrain, Ed Wright , single work review
— Review of Lucida Intervella John Kinsella , 2018 single work novel ;

'John Kinsella is best known for poetry that is often characterised as anti-­pastoral: the ecological underpinnings, the rootedness in the wheat belt of Western Australia, the postmodern aesthetic awareness. Rather than the celebration of humanised nature, Kinsella’s poems deal with the exploitation of the land and its consequences as well as the often anti-romantic lives of those on the land. It’s a poetry of silos and heat, trail bikes, drought and death.' (Introduction)

(p. 24)
Drawn to Beasts in the Reich Period, Diane Stubbings , single work review
— Review of The Hollow Bones Leah Kaminsky , 2019 single work novel ;

'It’s not difficult to understand why the story of German zoologist Ernst Schafer might be ­attractive to a novelist. A doctoral student in ornithology, Schafer made a name for himself in the 1930s, travelling with American expeditions to Tibet and China.' (Introduction)

(p. 25)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 23 Oct 2019 11:05:43
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