keywords: Richard Flanagan
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ARTS AND CULTURE
- Barry Gittins and Jen Vuk
- 21 November 2014
4 Comments
Winning the prestigious Man Booker prize has given Richard Flanagan's 2013 novel The Narrow Road to the Deep North precious new shelf life. I've long considered Flanagan an alchemist - giving everyday words an unmistakable verve and turning a phrase until it takes flight. But he's also a proud Tasmanian storyteller who now has the world's ear.
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ARTS AND CULTURE
- Libby Hart
- 11 November 2019
1 Comment
It's difficult to move in this landscape. Haunted and fragile and tragic, there's no place that is benign. A cursed house, the Greeks might say.
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MEDIA
- Osmond Chiu
- 13 August 2018
5 Comments
Whether Carr or Greer participates at Brisbane Writers Festival has no real impact on their ability to speak out and be heard. The real threat to freedom of expression for most people comes not from programming decisions at literary festivals but rather to the public through their employers.
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RELIGION
- Frank Brennan
- 06 August 2018
How are we to honour the commitment to peace of these Japanese and Maralinga survivors of nuclear conflagrations unleashed maliciously or negligently last century? We need to renew our commitment to painstaking negotiation of international treaties and agreements designed to ensure peace and security for all, insisting on the dignity and human rights of all.
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AUSTRALIA
- Brian Matthews
- 19 September 2016
7 Comments
When the skip arrived and a young bloke named Troy backed it into our driveway with insolent ease, I knew the game was up. Months of sporadic, amiable discussions had now reached a suddenly irrevocable conclusion. Our agenda - what to do with 'hoarded' papers and notes, drawers of never-to-be-worn-again clothes, children's picture books and abandoned Lego, decades old back copies of magazines - was called to order by a higher power and my filibustering and equivocations abruptly ended.
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AUSTRALIA
- Kerry Murphy
- 24 April 2015
3 Comments
I never met my uncle Kevin, who was killed on 9 February 1942 in Singapore. However we were fortunate to have a collection of his letters home from Malaya and reading his letters gives a brief glimpse into his life at war. His final signoff to my grandmother was: 'We’ve still to get our first shock yet but after the first few enemy "bangs" I guess there will be nothing to it.'
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EUREKA STREET TV
- Peter Kirkwood
- 31 July 2009
2 Comments
For those who value serious content over sensationalism and glitz, who
want media meat rather than fairy floss and cake, the 'slow TV' movement is a welcome part
of the new media explosion on the internet.
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ARTS AND CULTURE
- Brian Doyle
- 26 March 2008
You find all kinds of books in people's cars — from novels and comics to atlases and bibles. The books people carry reveal something of their life and experiences.
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ARTS AND CULTURE
- Michael Ashby
- 30 October 2006
1 Comment
The author of The Sound of One Hand Clapping and Gould’s Book of Fish has come up with a veritable novel "for our times". Here is a gripping tale of Australia (well, Sydney at least) in the midst of a terror campaign.
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AUSTRALIA
- Martin Flanagan
- 12 June 2006
Martin Flanagan on Tasmanian Aborigines, Henry Melville and the ABC.
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