Wayne Macauley

Wayne Macauley is the author of four novels, Blueprints for a Barbed-Wire Canoe (2004), Caravan Story (2007), The Cook (2011) and Demons (2014), and the short fiction collection Other Stories (2010). He has been shortlisted for the Victorian and Queensland Premier’s Literary Awards, the Western Australian Premier’s Book Award and the Melbourne Prize Best Writing Award.
All essays by Wayne Macauley
Little people, big times: Little Man, What Now? by Hans Fallada
When Fallada handed the final draft of Little Man, What Now? to Rowohlt in early 1932 there were eight and half million people unemployed in Germany. By 1933, a staggering 40 per cent of the population was registered as out of work.
All essays featuring Wayne Macauley
Not The End: Some Tests by Wayne Macauley
Macauley’s novels are often fantastical or absurd in their logic, but the colours and settings seem deliberately banal – focusing as they do on the type of place under-studied in Australian literature. Macauley frames these exurban fringes from vantage points and under circumstances that expose how cold and labyrinthine our modern civilization can be; he sheds light on how unhomely the city is when you’re on the wrong side of a picket fence.’
Enter the swine: Demons by Wayne Macauley
In appropriating Demons for the title of his fourth novel, Wayne Macauley alludes not only to Dostoevsky’s Demons (which he also quotes in the Pevear and Volokhonsky translation), but to the title’s biblical provenance. Near the end of Macauley’s Demons, in the holiday house off the Great Ocean Road where he traps his characters for the weekend, a secret is exposed and the cabin fever gives way to a physical confrontation.