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Owen Richardson

Owen Richardson

Owen Richardson studied philosophy at the University of Melbourne and has been writing about books, film, and theatre since the early 1990s. Besides Australian Book Review, he has been published in The Age, The Sunday Age, The Australian, The Australian Literary Review, Sydney Morning Herald, The Monthly, Scripsi, and Meanjin.

Owen Richardson reviews 'Eugene's Falls' by Amanda Johnson and 'Nights in the Asylum' by Carol Lefevre

May 2007, no. 291 12 September 2022
Owen Richardson reviews 'Eugene's Falls' by Amanda Johnson and 'Nights in the Asylum' by Carol Lefevre
Here are two novels of exile, one contemporary, the other about coming to Australia in the nineteenth century. In Carol Lefevre’s Nights in the Asylum, Miri, a middle-aged actress, escapes from Sydney and her tottering marriage, and drives back to the mining town of her childhood. On the way, she picks up an escaped Afghan refugee, Aziz, and drops him off in town, where he immediately falls foul ... (read more)

Owen Richardson reviews 'The Bride Stripped Bare' by Anonymous

September 2003, no. 254 01 September 2003
Owen Richardson reviews 'The Bride Stripped Bare' by Anonymous
You have to sympathise with Nikki Gemmell. When she described her sense of liberation on deciding to publish The Bride Stripped Bare anonymously, she seemed to have in mind only a desire not to offend people close to her. She would also have liberated herself from the literary celebrity machine. But, once the game was up, she got even more of it than she would otherwise have done. It doesn’t see ... (read more)

Owen Richardson reviews 'Lives' by Peter Robb

June 2012, no. 342 29 May 2012
Owen Richardson reviews 'Lives' by Peter Robb
Peter Robb, in this collection of some of his journalism, quotes E.M. Forster’s remark about Constantine Cavafy: that he lived ‘absolutely motionless at a slight angle to the universe’. That line is half true of Robb’s subjects in this book. They have a way of existing at an angle to the universe, but they are not at all motionless. The lives in this book have trajectories and velocities t ... (read more)

Owen Richardson reviews 'The Pale King' by David Foster Wallace

July–August 2011, no. 333 29 June 2011
In David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest, set half at a tennis academy and half at a rehab centre, one of the characters says that junior athletics is about sacrificing the ‘hot narrow imperatives of the Self’ to ‘the larger imperatives of the team (OK, the State) and a set of delimiting rules (OK, the Law)’. Meanwhile, the rehab inmates are learning, with the help of the twelve-step prog ... (read more)