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Image courtesy Australian Book Review.
Kerryn Goldsworthy Kerryn Goldsworthy i(A21881 works by) (a.k.a. Kerryn Lee Goldsworthy)
Born: Established: 1953 South Australia, ;
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Caught in the Fork : The Work, the Life, His Times Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , November no. 459 2023; (p. 19-20)

— Review of Frank Moorhouse : A Life Catharine Lumby , 2023 single work biography
'Near the end of this biography of Frank Moorhouse, author Catharine Lumby tells a story that will strike retrospective fear into the heart of any male reader who has ever climbed a tree. Watching an outdoor ceremony in which a cohort of Cub Scouts was being initiated into the Boy Scout troop to which he belonged himself, and having climbed a tree to get a better view, the young Moorhouse ‘slipped, and he slid a couple of metres down the trunk of the tree with his legs wrapped around it. He came to rest on a jagged branch, his crotch caught in the fork.’' (Introduction)           
1 An Open Heart Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: The Monthly , October 2023; (p. 70-72)

— Review of Unfinished Woman Robyn Davidson , 2023 single work autobiography
'“I’M WORKING ON THIS INFINITE BOOK,” said Robyn Davidson in a 2012 interview, “a memoir based loosely around my mother … It’s quite a difficult book. I started it 12 years ago. I feel absolutely that I have to write it and absolutely that I can’t write it.”'
1 Stories Still to Tell : Creek Baptisms and Other Family Sagas Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 456 2023; (p. 31)

— Review of On a Bright Hillside in Paradise Annette Higgs , 2023 single work novel

'Anyone who watched the recent SBS survival series Alone Australia will have gained a new understanding of western Tasmania: of how wild it is, and how rugged, and how cold. A hand-to-mouth, hardscrabble life of subsistence farming there would be bad enough today; for the nineteenth-century white settlers of Annette Higgs’s novel it is close to unsurvivable, and indeed some of her most vulnerable characters do not survive it.' (Introduction)

1 History as Filigree : Dominic Smith’s Sixth Novel Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 454 2023; (p. 35)

— Review of Return to Valetto Dominic Smith , 2023 single work novel

'A few pages in to Return to Valetto, the narrator Hugh Fisher is on a train from Rome to Orvieto and is being eyed suspiciously by an elderly Italian woman, who can see the photograph of himself with his daughter that he is using as a bookmark:

I looked up from my book and into her Old Testament face. Mia figlia, I said, my daughter. For good measure, I told her in Italian that I was a widower, that it had taken me the better part of five years to remove my wedding band, that Susan was getting her PhD in economics at Oxford … This information passed through her like a muscle relaxant as she returned to knitting a tiny mauve sock.' (Introduction)

 

1 Swatting the Drones : Philip Salom’s Realist Fiction Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , November no. 448 2022; (p. 41)

— Review of Sweeney and the Bicycles Philip Salom , 2022 single work novel
'Philip Salom, now in his early seventies, has been a steady presence in Australian literature for more than four decades. Until a few years ago he was mainly known as a poet. He has published fourteen collections and won two awards for lifetime achievement in that field. Having turned to fiction in 2015, he has now published six novels. In Sweeney and the Bicycles, he returns to themes that have woven their way through much of his fiction: identity and selfhood, family and friendship, damage and healing, unlooked-for and unlikely middle-aged love.'  (Introduction)
1 Other Dimensions : Bodies and Time in Philip Salom’s Fifth Novel Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December no. 427 2020;

— Review of The Fifth Season Philip Salom , 2020 single work novel

'In Western culture’s calendar year, is there some hidden fifth season, and if there is, what is it? The main character of Philip Salom’s fifth novel, a writer called Jack, asks himself near the end of the book whether the fifth season might be ‘Time, which holds the seasons together’, or perhaps the fifth season is simply ‘the Unknown’. Jack is preoccupied with the lost: with those people whose bodies are found but never identified, or those who, suffering amnesia, can’t be identified, but who need ‘to find their proper location in the story. In the seasons. A lost person must be allowed other dimensions.’' (Introduction)

1 Collaborations : An Insider's Look at Paul Kelly Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 424 2020; (p. 20)

— Review of Paul Kelly : The Man, The Music and The Life In-Between Stuart Coupe , 2020 single work biography

'The voice on the car radio was not immediately recognisable, nor was the song familiar to me. There was just a smoky laid-back piano and someone singing a song that sounded as though it was from the 1940s: ‘Young lovers, young lovers …’ I thought the voice, whomever it belonged to, had a real musicality in it, a precision of pitch and phrasing in tandem with a kind of liquid sweetness.'  (Introduction)

1 Not What They Used to Be : Pre-Pandemic Reflections on Elders Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June-July no. 422 2020; (p. 50-51)

— Review of Grandmothers : Essays by 21st-century Grandmothers 2020 anthology biography ; A Lasting Conversation : Stories on Ageing 2020 anthology short story prose
'Grandmothers are not what they used to be, as Elizabeth Jolley once said of custard tarts. It’s a point made by several contributors to Helen Elliott’s lively and thoughtfully curated collection of essays on the subject, Grandmothers, and it partly explains why these two books are not as similar as you might expect.' (Introduction)
1 Outliers : Intersections in Australian Literature Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , May no. 421 2020; (p. 28-29)

— Review of Friends and Rivals : Four Great Australian Writers Brenda Niall , 2020 selected work biography

'Armed with more than half a century’s worth of knowledge, experience, the fermentation of ideas and approaches in literary history and criticism over that period, and her own formidable reputation as a scholar and teacher of Australian literature, Brenda Niall returns in her latest book to the territory of her earliest ones. In Seven Little Billabongs: The world of Ethel Turner and Mary Grant Bruce (1979), Niall broke new ground not just in writing a serious and scholarly full-length treatment of Australian children’s literature, but also in departing from the orthodox biographical tradition of focusing on a single figure.'  (Introduction)

1 Home and Haven Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , March no. 419 2020; (p. 40)

— Review of Love Is Strong as Death 2019 anthology poetry

'The assertion that ‘love is strong as death’ comes from the Song of Solomon, a swooning paean to sexual love that those unfamiliar with the Old Testament might be startled to find there. Songwriter and musician Paul Kelly has included it in this hefty, eclectic, and beautifully produced anthology of poetry, which has ‘meaningful gift’ written all over it. ' (Introduction)

1 Heat and Succour Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , January / February no. 418 2020; (p. 38)

— Review of Damascus Christos Tsiolkas , 2019 single work novel

'The man traditionally held to have written about half of the New Testament is variously known as Saul of Tarsus, Paul the Apostle, and St Paul. Initially an enthusiastic persecutor of the earliest Christians, he underwent a dramatic conversion shortly after the Crucifixion, and it is on this moment that his life, and Christos Tsiolkas’s new novel, both turn. Damascus covers the period 35–87 CE, from shortly before Paul’s conversion until twenty or more years after his death. This chronology is not straightforwardly linear, with an assortment of narrators recounting their personal experiences, at various times and from various points of view, of Christianity’s birth and spread amid the brutal realities of the Roman Empire.' (Introduction)

1 Truth and Fiction Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June - July no. 412 2019; (p. 32)

'In 1961 the great Australian poet Judith Wright published an influential essay called ‘The Upside-down Hut’ that would puzzle contemporary readers. The basis of its argument was that Australia felt shame about its convict origins, and that we needed to move on. And we have: since 1961 the representation of the convict era in fiction and on screen has undergone a shift. Having convict ancestry used to be regarded as a cause for shame; now amateur genealogists hunt down convicts among their ancestors and celebrate when they find them.'  (Introduction)

1 Loops and Folds Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2019 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , March no. 409 2019; (p. 27)

'In his 2017 essay ‘Notes for a Novel’, illuminatingly added as a kind of afterword at the end of this book, Steven Carroll recalls a dream that he had twenty years ago. It was this dream, he says, that grew into a series of novels centred on the Melbourne suburb of Glenroy, a series of which this novel is the sixth and last. ' (Introduction)

1 Neen and Nadia : A Moving Family Memoir Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 404 2018; (p. 18-19)

'When John Norman Wheatley met Nina Watkin in Germany in 1946, he would have regarded her as a lesser being on all fronts: woman to his man, forty to his forty-eight, Australian to his English, nurse to his doctor. They met as fellow employees of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA), working with wartime refugees from an assortment of European countries.'   (Introduction)

1 'The Long Now of Grieving' : Gail Jones's New Novel Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , April no. 400 2018; (p. 53-54)

'Noah Glass is dead, his fully clothed body discovered floating face down in the swimming pool of his Sydney apartment block, early one morning. Born in Perth in 1946, father of two adult children, widower, Christian, art historian, and specialist in the painting of fifteenth-century artist Piero della Francesca, Noah has just returned from a trip to Palermo. There he celebrated his sixty-seventh birthday, experienced intimations of mortality, fell precipitately in love, and agreed, for the sake of the beloved, to commit a crime. Even before the funeral, the police are in touch with Noah’s son: a valuable work of art has been stolen and Noah is implicated in its disappearance.' (Introduction)

1 Edge of Nightmare Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2017 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December no. 397 2017; (p. 29)

— Review of Atlantic Black A. S. Patrić , 2017 single work novel

'Writing this review in the first week in November, I look at the calendar and note that we are a few days away from the seventy-ninth anniversary of Kristallnacht, when, over the two days of 9–10 November 1938, at the instigation of Joseph Goebbels, there was a nationwide pogrom against German Jews that saw synagogues, business premises, and private homes ransacked. At least ninety people were killed, perhaps many more. It was a sign of things to come.' (Introduction)

1 Australia in Three Books : Kerryn Goldsworthy Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2017 single work essay
— Appears in: Meanjin , Spring vol. 76 no. 3 2017; (p. 16-20)

'Charlotte Brontë was 12 and Charles Dickens 18 in October 1830 when Captain Patrick Logan, third commandant of the Moreton Bay penal settlement, was murdered by a person or persons unknown, his decomposing body discovered in hilly country behind Brisbane Town more than a week after his disappearance. All the signs were of ambush and desperate flight, and Logan’s body showed the marks of Aboriginal weapons.' (Introduction)

1 Such a Small Thing Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2017 single work autobiography
— Appears in: Unbreakable : Women Share Stories of Resilience and Hope 2017; (p. 205-214)
1 The Dancer From the Dance Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2017 single work essay
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , May 2017;

'Early in November 2015, Sydney novelist Georgia Blain had a seizure and was taken to hospital for tests. The results were as bad as they could be: glioblastoma, an aggressive and incurable brain tumour. Six days later she had surgery to remove the tumour – ‘the unwelcome guest’, her surgeon called it – but was warned that it would grow back. The prognosis with glioblastoma is always poor: without treatment, the average survival period from the time of diagnosis is three months. With treatment, a year or a little more. Blain died on 9 December 2016, thirteen months after diagnosis and a few days short of her 52nd birthday. (Introduction)

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1 Behind Every Story : Recovering the Past Kerryn Goldsworthy , 2017 single work essay
— Appears in: Griffith Review , no. 55 2017; (p. 124-134)

'It may not be the best painting in the Art Gallery of South Australia, and it may not be the most valuable. But one of the gallery's most historically significant paintings is an enormous canvas by the nineteenth-century Adelaide artist Charles Hill, entitled The Proclamation of South Australia 1836. Painted decades after the fact, it shows the gathering of South Australia's earliest white settlers near the beach at Glenelg, all still living in tents and all come to hear the Proclamation. This is a real historical document, one that officially announced to the settlers that, with the arrival of His Excellency the Governor on this hot Adelaide day aboard the Buffalo, the colonial government of His Majesty's new province had been formally established. Subsequently published in the second issue of the South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register, on 3 June 1837, the Proclamation exhorted them:

...to conduct themselves on all occasions with order and quietness, duly to respect the laws, and by a course of industry and sobriety, by the practice of sound morality and a strict observance of the Ordinances of Religion, to prove themselves worthy to be the Founders of a great and free Colony.' (Publication abstract)

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