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Poetry

1953 by Geoff Page

by Mike Ladd
March 2013, no. 349

1953 by Geoff Page

University of Queensland Press, $24.95 pb, 120 pp, 9780702249525

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

Geoff Page’s 1953 is set in the town of Eurandangee, which, we learn, is about 650 kilometres north-west of Sydney. There are other locators:

the river, with its governor’s name,
reduced now to a string of pools,

uncertain where to go;
a double shine of railway line
tracking in and stopping.

The river proves to be the Darling and, by my calculation, Eurandangee (if it existed) would be somewhere near Bourke. It is a town of ‘just a dozen blocks’ in wool and wheat country. The season is high summer; it’s 2.30 p.m. on 17 February 1953. The book never moves past that time and date. It is made up of a series of vignettes of the town’s people, observed at precisely this moment. The vignettes alternate between third-person descriptions by an omniscient narrator and named characters providing first-person self-portraits. All are written in finely crafted lines of iambic verse; usually tetrameter or trimeter.

 


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1953 by Geoff Page

University of Queensland Press, $24.95 pb, 120 pp, 9780702249525

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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