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Contents
* Contents derived from the 2024 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
- Change of Heart, single work prose (p. 12-14)
-
Wall of Fame,
single work
column
'The world is so vast, history so long and the vanished so countless, a person might quail to consider the living. But an artist, a visual artist intent on including himself in the practice of recording the history of the human story, might narrow his focus so that the universal becomes a few living names symbolising the many, and marks upon a surface become strikes against the infinite.'
- No Worries, single work column (p. 15-16)
-
Born of Nightmares,
single work
essay
'On the publication of his latest novel, the postapocalyptic Juice, TIM WINTON reflects on the process and burden of creating an imagined future during a time of climate crisis and existential dread.'
-
On Our Selection : Ten Critics Nominate Their Cultural Highlights for The Monthly Awards 2024,
single work
review
— Review of Trophy Boys 2024 single work drama ; Counting and Cracking 2019 single work drama ; Would That Be Funny? : Growing up with John Clarke 2023 single work autobiography ; 36 Ways of Writing a Vietnamese Poem 2024 selected work poetry ; (p. 26-41) -
Writer's Loch,
single work
column
'Following her 2024 Booker Prize nomination for Stone Yard Devotional, author Charlotte Wood decamped to a writers’ retreat on the west coast of Scotland. She spoke to CATE KENNEDY about solitude and creativity ahead of the shortlist announcement.'
-
Additional Pleasures,
single work
column
'It's almost like being in my teens again, when the lights dim and a hush falls over the audience. Almost. Back then, I saw two movies every week in a Saturday night double feature with my best friend, without ever checking the schedule. Curtains opened on either side of the screen with a tinny hum. We sat upright in stiff leather chairs or slouched in slung canvas at the front, and at the back of the cinema was a glassed-in smoker’s room, filled with puffing patrons and a dense haze. How anyone could see through that was beyond me.' (Introduction)
-
Feat of Clay,
single work
review
— Review of Memoir of a Snail 2023 single work film/TV ;'SOMETIMES IT FEELS AS THOUGH every Australian film is a coming-of-age story. Inside and Memoir of a Snail were two of the best at this year’s Melbourne International Film Festival, and, though they couldn’t be more different, each generates pathos and tension from the awful vulnerability of children shunted into the world of adults' (Introduction)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Last amended 3 Oct 2024 08:00:54