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Journals

The Dogs of Literature

by Maria Takolander
October 2004, no. 265

Heat 7: Bedtime Stories by Ivor Indyk

$24.95 pb, 256 pp

Overland: UnAustralian behaviour, no. 175 by Nathan Hollier and Kath Wilson

$12.50 pb, 112 pp

Winter Conversations: Volume 5, number 1 by Brij Lal and Duncan Beard

$18 pb, 79 pp

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

In ‘Ouah, Ouah’, a poem in the current issue of Island, Chris Wallace-Crabbe writes: ‘Dogs go shadowing our lives like history, / furbags of the quotidian.’ Literary journals are like that in some ways. Island, Heat, Conversations and Overland undoubtedly aspire to being more than alley mutts or underarm accessories. Indeed, they attest to the increased seriousness and politicisation of Australian literature. Like dogs, these journals shadow history. Like dogs, they also live in the shadows, lingering at the sliding door, waiting to be asked in; and they’ve evolved in different ways to achieve that aim.

 


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Heat 7: Bedtime Stories by Ivor Indyk

$24.95 pb, 256 pp

Overland: UnAustralian behaviour, no. 175 by Nathan Hollier and Kath Wilson

$12.50 pb, 112 pp

Winter Conversations: Volume 5, number 1 by Brij Lal and Duncan Beard

$18 pb, 79 pp

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


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by Joseph Steinberg

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