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'If each life is a world, what is a world of billions of lives? Sweeping through evolutionary time, through the passage of ages, Rosanna Licari's Earlier looks back, applies its forensic gaze to an insistent, pervasive history of births and creations, human and other. Weaving threads and connections, Licari's poems investigate rich and diverse beginnings, awakenings, and endings too, celebrating lush, thriving, irrepressible life, both individual and collective. Thoughtful, curious, broad ranging, at times wondering, at times biographical, Earlier is an archaeology of poems to unearth and relish.' - David Adès, poet, host of Poets' Corner podcast series 'Rosanna Licari's collection Earlier ...
A circle of vermillion flares into petals of yellow and white. These coloured tesserae, a contrast to the dull sea of roof tiles below. A train rattles in the distance and then Rapallo fades from my memory. At the heart of this exciting debut collection is the impulse to explore: family history in Europe, migration to Australia, the contours of memory and desire. Exquisite lyric and deft narrative illuminate historys mosaics and brilliant shards of lost time. 'A poetry of evocation - of time, distance and intimacy - where actions are refracted through objects and emotions coalesce in the lacunae of the commonplace.' - Louis Armand. 'Licari has a magical ability to respond to - and then express - the essential strangeness, not only of objects and places but of our experience of life itself.' - Martin Duwell.
I can see how I carry Yiayia's war in the ample dunes of my belly, the moment she smelt the guns, she pinched the candle's wick, gathered the startled shadows of her children, flung my baby-mother onto her back and sprinted towards the neutral moon-- Migration and the memories of women's traditions are woven throughout these poems. Angela Costi brings the world of Cyprus to Australia. Her mother encounters animosity on Melbourne's trams as Angela learns to thread words in ways that echo her grandmother's embroidery. Here are poems that sing their way across the seas and map histories.
In this perceptive and witty book, Theodore Dalrymple unmasks the hidden sentimentality that is suffocating public life. Under themultiple guises of raising children well, caring for the underprivileged, assisting the less able and doing good generally, we are achieving quite the opposite. Dalrymple takes the reader on both an entertaining and at times shocking journey through social, political, popular and literary issues as diverse as child tantrums, aggression, educational reform, honour killings, sexual abuse, public emotions and the role of suffering, and shows the perverse results when we abandon logic in favour of the cult of feeling.
Counsels overtired women on how to take personal time without guilt, sharing improvement regimes that can be completed in forty-eight hours including The Romance Makeover, The Clutter Makeover, and The Refrigerator Detox Makeover.
Hal Colebatch's new book, AUSTRALIA'S SECRET WAR, tells the shocking, true, but until now largely suppressed and hidden story of the war waged from 1939 to 1945 by a number of key Australian trade unions against their own society and against the men and women of their own country's fighting forces at the time of its gravest peril. His conclusions are based on a broad range of sources, from letters and first-person interviews between the author and ex-servicemen to official and unofficial documents from the archives of World War II. Between 1939 and 1945 virtually every major Australian warship, including at different times its entire force of cruisers, was targeted by strikes, go-slows and sabotage. Australian soldiers operating in New Guinea and the Pacific Islands went without food, radio equipment and munitions, and Australian warships sailed to and from combat zones without ammunition, because of strikes at home. Planned rescue missions for Australian prisoners-of-war in Borneo were abandoned because wharf strikes left rescuers without heavy weapons. Officers had to restrain Australian and American troops from killing striking trade unionists.
The Nostalgia Collection is an accumulation of narrative poetry written over several years. Some of the pieces very are personal – sparked both by current world events and the author’s own experiences. Together, they mark fragments in time, acting as snapshots of the world how she - and others - see it.
Phil Brown has travelled widely but reluctantly since his Hong Kong childhood. With a veritable kitbag of phobias at his disposal, he finds any exotic destination a special challenge. With his more adventurous wife Sandra, Phil worries his way around the world, seeking the perfection of unlimited cable TV channels.