This week Sydney Review of Books looks at works by two Australian writers, reviewed by two of our regular contributors. In ‘A Living Landscape’ Kerryn Goldsworthy considers Saskia Beudel’s A Country in Mind, a non-fiction work that ‘defies the conservative view, the taxonomical thundering, and all attempts at generic border protection’. A hybridised blend of scholarship and memoir, A Country in Mind is a work of knowledge assemblages – the stories of the self and those that come to be inscribed upon people and landscapes. Here, the setting is the Indigenous and white histories of central Australia ‘and the various effects over time, of bodies in a landscape: the effects of walking through it, caring for it, exploiting it, changing it, farming in it, living and dying in it.’ By moving experientially through the landscape and the narrative act, Beudel – writes Goldsworthy – ‘uses a technique that approaches – and seems to be trying, humbly, to learn from – Aboriginal ways of seeing country, of the dynamic interrelatedness of people, animals, plants and the land itself, to write her own story.’
Our second essay, ‘Antarctica Starts Here’ by Lucy Sussex, examines Favel Parrett’s new book When the Night Comes. Like Parrett’s debut Past the Shallows, which was shortlisted for the Miles Franklin and won the Dobbie Award, When the Night Comes takes its geographic cues from Tasmania, but this latest work also turns its attentions to that other mythical and ‘largely uninscribed’ land, Antarctica – a landscape that, Sussex says, has proved to be ‘a curiously evasive subject for fiction’. In Parrett’s latest novel, Sussex finds beauty in the language and possibility in the literary heritages, as they relate to place, but the overall reading experience wanting and unnecessarily clipped. ‘It is what Past the Shallows was not,’ she writes, ‘slightly tentative rather than assured. Or else it is framed too much in snapshots, vignettes, with the connecting matter missing.’
From the Archives turns the focus to Australian poetry, beginning with Paul Hetherington’s review of Unbelievers, or ‘The Moor’ by John Mateer, whom Hetherington describes as a poet possessing ‘a peripatetic sense of self who is fascinated by cross-cultural historical currents and transformations’. Our second review essay is by Lisa Gorton. In ‘Precarious Images’, Gorton considers Robert Gray’s Cumulus: Collected Poems, reflecting on the poems the collection both includes and omits.
Our images this week are by Haasts Bluff artist Joseph Tjangala Zimran and come courtesy of Ikuntji Artists and Tali Gallery. A brief account of the paintings provided by the Tali Gallery notes that the paintings tell ‘the story of a father who punished his two sons for killing and eating his favourite kangaroo when he was planning to sing her up into a woman and marry her – so he’s telling the story in whatever colour comes to mind versus trying to depict a bushfire.’
Read the correspondence for 12 September 2014: Martin Harrison.