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Alex Cothren Alex Cothren i(7098989 works by)
Born: Established:
c
United States of America (USA),
c
Americas,
;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 ‘Cli-fi’ Might Not Save the World, but Writing It Could Help with Your Eco-anxiety Rachel Hennessy , Alex Cothren , Amy T. Matthews , 2024 single work column
— Appears in: The Conversation , 9 January 2024;

'The consequences of climate change weigh on all of us, especially as we face an El Niño summer, with floods and fires already making themselves felt in the Australian environment.' (Introduction)          

1 Author Experiences of Researching, Writing and Marketing Climate Fiction Alex Cothren , Amy T. Matthews , Rachel Hennessy , 2023 single work essay
— Appears in: TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs , October vol. 27 no. 2 2023;
'There is a growing body of literature that studies the emotional impact of engaging regularly with climate change in a professional capacity, with a particular focus on climate scientists and activists. However, the experience of climate fiction writers is yet to be investigated, despite the many years such writers must spend deeply focusing on the issue. This project fills this gap by interviewing 16 Australian and New Zealand writers of climate fiction, focusing on how the different stages of the publishing cycle – research, writing and marketing – affected their wellbeing. While there was a diversity of experiences, we have identified a number of trends. Despite some confronting moments, the research and writing phases represented a positive experience, with writers gaining a sense of control and purpose in the face of the immense climate change problem. For many writers, though, the post-publication phase produced more difficult emotions, including feelings of guilt over inaction in the face of the crisis, frustration at reader responses, and the pressure of being construed as climate change experts in interviews and at festival events.' (Publication abstract) 
1 The Art of Losing : Briohny Doyle’s Third Novel Alex Cothren , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 457 2023; (p. 36)

— Review of Why We Are Here Briohny Doyle , 2023 single work novel

'Briohny Doyle’s third novel, Why We Are Here, threads together just about every literary, philosophical, and pop culture perspective on death and aftermath there is. But nothing represents the heart of the book better than its exploration of both/and thinking. Embraced by the fields of business, psychology, and beyond, both/and thinking is a method of overcoming paradoxes, not by solving them but by honouring how two apparently contradictory truths can co-exist. There’s no explaining the singular effect of this book without it.'(Introduction)

1 Ocean Paradise Alex Cothren , 2023 single work short story
— Appears in: Overland , Autumn no. 250 2023; (p. 71-75)
1 Just More Unravelling : AI Infiltrates ABR Alex Cothren , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 454 2023; (p. 32)

— Review of The Terrible Event : Stories David Cohen , 2023 selected work short story

'Hassled by deadlines and stricken by illness, I made a very modern deal with the devil. I asked ChatGPT to help me review David Cohen’s new short story collection, The Terrible Event. For the past few months, this text generating tool has made news by using AI technology to write everything from A+ high-school essays to faux-Nick Cave lyrics. Surely, then, it could provide some scaffolding for a thousand-word book review, a few handholds to help a tired reviewer scurry over this task and on to the next?' (Introduction)

1 Put Arm Here Alex Cothren , 2022 single work short story
— Appears in: Island , no. 166 2022; (p. 78-81)
1 Australians at Work Alex Cothren , 2022 single work short story
— Appears in: Overland , Winter no. 247 2022; (p. 81-86)
1 Experimental Flair : Three New Short Story Collections Alex Cothren , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , October no. 447 2022; (p. 49-50)

— Review of Cautionary Tales for Excitable Girls Anne Casey-Hardy , 2022 selected work short story ; Here Be Leviathans Chris Flynn , 2022 selected work short story ; Everything Feels like the End of the World Else Fitzgerald , 2022 selected work short story

'There’s a theory that short fiction is the perfect panacea for modern life. As our attention spans grow weak on  a diet of digital gruel and as our free time clogs up with late-night work emails, enter the short story as an efficient fiction-booster administered daily on the commute between suburb and CBD. I love this theory, and I will forever resent Jane Rawson for exposing its flaws in a 2018 Overland article on the subject. Rawson explains that most time-poor readers prefer to dip in and out of long novels, where they can greet familiar worlds without the awkward orientation period required by a new text. In contrast, says Rawson, collections of ‘stories plunge you back into that icy pool of not-knowing every 500, 800, 2000 or 5000 words. Who wants that? Pretty much no-one, if bestseller lists are anything to go by.’' (Introduction)

1 Bleak Times : The Uber-Burdens of Authorship Alex Cothren , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , July no. 444 2022; (p. 48)

— Review of Open Secrets : Essays on the Writing Life 2022 anthology essay

'In her introduction to Sydney Review of Book’s latest anthology, Open Secrets: Essays on the writing life, Catriona Menzies-Pike quickly establishes what readers should not expect. ‘There are no precious morning rituals here,’ the editor promises, ‘no magic tricks for aspiring writers.’ It’s true that these essays, each a mix of disarming honesty and polymathic intelligence, hover far above the glut of literary listicles clogging the internet. And thank goodness: if I have to suffer Hemingway mansplaining show-don’t-tell one more time, I may go out and shoot a lion myself.' (Introduction)   

1 Creating New Climate Stories : Posthuman Collaborative Hope and Optimism Rachel Hennessy , Alex Cothren , Amy T. Matthews , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Text : Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs , vol. 26 no. 1 2022;
'This paper considers an evolving project about climate change that will explore
using collaborative creative writing strategies to emotionally support and engage
writers, primarily focusing on how narratives of hope and optimism might counter
affective responses of anxiety, and the resultant solipsistic inertia or surrender. We
ask: what role could collaborative fiction play in helping to create positive futures
that emotionally strengthen us to manage what may come and what already is? We
outline the inspiration and background to our project and begin to theorise
justification for applying posthuman approaches to the question of reimagining
climate fiction. We review a number of collaborative climate change projects
located outside of traditional writing but still drawing on narrative storytelling, and
consider how our project – which focuses on genre fictions – might add to the
horizon point; one that is not delusional, but also does not lead to dystopian despair.'

(Publication abstract)

1 Warm Broth : A Second Novel from Sean Rabin Alex Cothren , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , May no. 442 2022; (p. 37)

— Review of The Good Captain Sean Rabin , 2022 single work novel

'Just when you thought there wasn’t enough to worry about, along come bottom trawlers. While the fishing technique of dragging a heavy net along the bottom of the seabed is     nothing new – indeed, there was a British commission inquiry into the practice as far back as 1866 – the sheer size of modern super trawlers maximises their destructiveness. Centuries-old sea coral forests are bulldozed by the thirty-tonne nets, non-targeted fish and turtles become indiscriminately tangled in the web, and the disturbed sediment releases more carbon than the entire aviation industry each year.' (Introduction)

1 Shadowboxing : The Story of an American Pugilist Alex Cothren , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , April no. 441 2022; (p. 34)

— Review of The Sawdust House David Whish-Wilson , 2022 single work novel

'In David Whish-Wilson’s new historical novel, The Sawdust House, it’s 1856 San Francisco, where the citizen-led Committee of Vigilance has convened to purge foreign undesirables from a city populace swollen beyond control by the gold rush. Of course, armed nativists ‘enthralled by their own performance’ are a common feature of U.S. history, from the Virginian lynch mobs of the late 1700s to that guy in the fuzzy Viking hat parading around the Capitol Building just last year. In an intriguing twist, however, the pitchforks are aimed this time at those ‘vermin from some hellish southern continent’, aka Australians, particularly a criminal element who congregate in a lawless quarter nicknamed Sydney-town.' (Introduction)

1 Wastrels Out West : Max Easton’s Impressive Début Alex Cothren , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December no. 438 2021; (p. 39)

— Review of The Magpie Wing Max Easton , 2021 single work novel
'In July 1999, ABC’s 7:30 Report ran a story on the Western Suburbs Magpies, an NRL club struggling financially and playing out its final season before a merger with the nearby Balmain Tigers. For that human touch, the story featured shots of a family decking out their children in the Magpies’ black and white, their relationship with the ninety-year-old club described as ‘something in the heart’. It was all very warm and fuzzy, at least until the camera cut away and a voiceover delivered a neoliberal sucker punch: ‘love does not necessarily deliver dollars’. Set in the same Western Sydney suburbs still mourning the loss of their team, Max Easton’s terrific début novel, The Magpie Wing, tracks a trio of Millennials as they similarly battle to retain their identities in a rapidly gentrifying world.' (Introduction)
1 Elevator Pitches : Three Experimental Novels Alex Cothren , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 434 2021; (p. 55-56)

— Review of Night Blue Angela O'Keeffe , 2021 single work novel ; Where the Line Breaks Michael Burrows , 2021 single work novel ; The Speechwriter Martin McKenzie-Murray , 2021 single work novel

'Writers seeking publication are often advised to have an ‘elevator pitch’ ready. These succinct book-hooks are designed to jag a trapped publisher in the wink between a lift door closing and reopening. Has this insane tactic ever actually worked? No idea. But it’s fun to imagine the CEO of Big Sales Books, on their way up to another corner-office day of tallying cricket memoir profits, blindsided by three of the looniest elevator pitches imaginable. A novel narrated by Jackson Pollock’s Blue Poles! A faux political memoir about a prime minister and his shark vendetta! An academic satire cum historical mystery mashup told largely through the – wait, wait, wait! – footnotes of a PhD thesis! That CEO will probably take the stairs next time, but kudos to the independent publishers who saw the potential in these experimental works and their début authors. Whatever the path of weird Australian writing, long may it find its way to these pages.' (Introduction)

1 The Tick Tock Killer Alex Cothren , 2020 single work short story
— Appears in: Island , no. 159 2020; (p. 70)
1 Days of Our Grindr : Wordswarms and Quiet Observations Alex Cothren , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , May no. 421 2020; (p. 37)

— Review of The Adversary Ronnie Scott , 2020 single work novel

'One of the few details we learn about the unnamed narrator of Ronnie Scott’s début novel, The Adversary, is that he is fond of Vegemite. Although only a crumb of information, this affinity for the popular breakfast tar reveals much about our hero. Just as Vegemite ‘has to be spread very thin or you realised it was salty and unreasonable’, his human interactions give him a soupçon of a social life, a mere taste that never threatens to overwhelm his senses.'  (Introduction)

1 Let's Talk Trojan Bee Alex Cothren , 2019 single work short story
— Appears in: Meanjin , Spring vol. 78 no. 3 2019; (p. 90-99) Relatively True : Stories of Truth, Deception, Post Truth from the Indian Subcontinent and Australia 2022;
1 Mirage Alex Cothren , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , May no. 411 2019; (p. 31)

'Care and compassion, a fair go, freedom, honesty, trustworthiness, respect, and tolerance. These were the nine ‘Australian values’ that former Liberal Opposition Leader Brendan Nelson demanded be taught in schools, especially Islamic schools, across the nation in 2005. How? Partly through the tale of John Simpson and his donkey, Murphy. They clambered selflessly up and down Gallipoli’s Shrapnel Valley with the bodies of Anzacs on their backs like Sisyphus’s boulder, their forty days of toil ended by a sniper’s bullet. Never mind that Simpson’s real surname was Kirkpatrick; that he did the equivalent work of many nameless others; or that Simpson was an illegal Geordie immigrant who had enlisted just for the free ticket back to England. ‘The man with the donkey’ has consistently proven too useful a tool to question for war recruiters and other patriotic tub-thumpers.' (Introduction)

1 Chris Lilley’s Lunatics Has Deadpan Cringe, Great Dialogue but Is More Mawkish Than Outrageous Alex Cothren , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: The Conversation , 19 April 2019;

— Review of Lunatics 2019 series - publisher film/TV

'Chris Lilley was in strife almost from the moment he started filming his new mockumentary series Lunatics, which has begun streaming on Netflix. Last year, leaked photos of the comedic actor in African dress and an afro-wig set off a social media firestorm that could essentially be boiled down to two words. Blackface? Again?'  (Introduction)

1 Friday Essay : Why Is Australian Satire So Rarely Risky? Alex Cothren , Robert Phiddian , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Conversation , 15 March 2019;
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