On this day, the Guardian is reporting on Cyclone Idai in Africa:
Cyclone Idai has swept through Mozambique, Malawi and Zimbabwe over the past few days, destroying almost everything in its path, causing devastating floods, killing and injuring thousands of people and ruining crops. More than 2.6 million people could be affected across the three countries, and the port city of Beira, which was hit on Friday and is home to 500,000 people, is now an “island in the ocean”, almost completely cut off.
The official death tolls in Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi are 200, 98 and 56 respectively. But these totals only scratch the surface; the real toll may not be known for many months as the countries deal with a still unfolding disaster. (Cyclone Idai ‘might be southern hemisphere’s worst such disaster‘, The Guardian, 20/3/19)


At left is a screenshot of where this news item was placed, headlined underneath the article about Teresa May. The BBC has a thorough report about it: it’s a headline story for them too. France 24 is reporting it, but only in passing.
And at right is a screenshot of the ABC headlines at the same time on the same day. I scrolled right to the bottom of the screen, and there were no reports about this cyclone at all. There’s nothing about it in what purports to be the ABC’s World News coverage either. There is an article about Australian homes possibly becoming uninsurable due to climate change. Somebody at ABC News, I reckon, has property in Sydney: they are very preoccupied by property prices… but #ForgiveMyCynicism there are not enough deaths from Cyclone Idai to be newsworthy enough to merit the newsroom’s attention.
So it is left to fiction to tell the story of the fate of millions as climate change wreaks havoc around the globe. Alice Robinson’s new book The Glad Shout tells the story of a storm which destroyed Melbourne, much like Cyclone Idai wrecking cities in Africa. The streets are flooded; houses have been destroyed; some people are rescued from their rooftops and others are not. When the story opens Isobel is in a relief centre set up in the cavernous space behind the stadium bleachers, where overpriced merchandise and greasy food were once sold during games. In a setting where every location is recognisable, Isobel Wilson is with her husband Shaun and her small daughter Matilda:
Jostled and soaked, copping an elbow to her ribs, smelling wet wool and sweat and the stony creek scent of damp concrete, Isobel grips Shaun’s cold fingers and clamps Matilda to her hip, terrified of losing them in the roiling crowd. The grounds of the stadium-turned-Emergency Relief Centre are still marked with turf paint. Within hours it will no doubt turn to mud, but for now, as families surge up through the bleachers, the playing field still looks pristine. Floodwaters have not yet breached the sandbags outside, but there is water in the street and it’s rising. (p.1)
This novel is a bleak but vivid incarnation of a future that seems inevitable, given that our political leaders are still in denial about it. But The Glad Shout is not just a dystopia: the novel also explores the complex issues of motherhood in extremis. Isobel’s status-conscious mother Luna is in real estate, doomed to see her ambitions fail as Melbourne succumbs to drought, food shortages and mass unemployment. Isobel doesn’t share her mother’s values, but their relationship is much more complicated than that. An older brother, Josh, lacks the stoicism that Isobel often fails to recognise in herself, and he has left the family home after a row with Luna.
Even at her most despairing and angry, when her yearning for her brother becomes unbearable and she retreats to her room to avoid saying something cruel to Luna that she might later regret, Isobel recognises the concern her mother feels for her – that immense maternal love, so difficult to shoulder for them both. Since he left, Isobel has grown aware of the lost potential of Josh’s life threading out ahead of her, a promise made by him at birth about the kind of adult he would become that Luna that can never cash in on, so long as he keeps his distance. In his absence, Isobel can never make good on that promise, either. She could bust a gut for the rest of her life trying to make up for the fact that her brother has cut ties, but it won’t change the fact that he’s done it. (p.207)
Isobel feels an immense burden as if her whole character has reduced down to being critical evidence of Luna’s motherhood.
Well, she doesn’t want to be a placeholder for any aspect of Luna’s identity. She wants to break away, grow up, have a life of her own – normal things. But in getting those things for himself, Josh has made it difficult for her to get anywhere close. (p.207)
As Isobel comes to terms with her own motherhood, her resentments morph into a sense of solidarity with her mother. Women are all strong, or strong enough, in this novel, and the men are not much use: the take-home message is that women cope because they have to whereas men can walk away. I am not so sure about this: I think that weakness and strength are not gendered qualities. But that just makes the book more interesting. I think book groups will have a great time with The Glad Shout… but I sincerely hope that it has a much greater impact than that.
Author: Alice Robinson
Title: The Glad Shout
Publisher: Affirm Press, 2019, 312 pages
ISBN: 9781925712650 (hbk)
Source: Bayside Library Service
Available from Fishpond: The Glad Shout or direct from Affirm Press.
This book fits into of my favourite categories, ‘Art in Fiction’ but Home is Nearby is much more than that. Shortlisted for the
Much to my astonishment, I was singing the praises of this book the other day, when it transpired that my friend did not know what a democracy sausage was. So for the edification of those unfortunate citizens who do not enjoy the same privilege as we do here in Australia, an explanation is in order.
Well, I was in need of something less sombre to read — and the Journal of Mrs Pepys waved at me indignantly from the TBR (G) shelf:
It’s fascinating to read about the first time Elisabeth tries unfamiliar foods, which come her way more often as her husband’s fortunes rise. She was fascinated by a melon, not knowing that any fruit could grow so big, and that she is delighted to try gherkins. Chez mois, we have a most interesting book called The Gourmet Atlas, Discover the origins and uses of the world’s favourite foods by Susie Ward, Claire Clifton and Jenny Stacey (1997, ISBN: 9781861551795) and it tells me that melons came to Italy in the 14th century via Venetian trade with the Middle East, and by the 16th century English gardeners were growing them in greenhouses. But of course there was a world of difference between Elisabeth’s diet at the close of the Puritan era when she and Sam were living in poky rooms, and life in the Restoration era when they had their own house and enough money to be complaining about mess from the renovations. By then Elisabeth is in a position to look down her nose at a host who provides only beef and no venison!
I have really, really liked Carrie Tiffany’s previous fiction, and was eagerly anticipating reading her new one … so I can’t begin to tell you how disappointed I am by her latest book, Exploded View. If it had been written by anybody else I wouldn’t have read it at all. I would have abandoned it as soon as I realised, and now I wish I had: it’s yet another one about a child damaged by sustained abuse, a topic so done to death I can’t believe that contemporary authors and publishers think there is anything new or insightful to say about it.
I swear it, hand on heart—it is just coincidence that I am writing this review as we in Australia wake up to the news that the latest Brexit deal has been voted down in the House of Commons. While the ominous date of Mar 29th is etched on hearts across England, it’s not on mine because I’ve been ignoring Brexit, hoping it will go away. Truth be told, I bought this post-Brexit novel by Jonathan Coe because I was attracted by the cover. This is the blurb:
I thought it was going to be a bit like Phillip Hensher’s
I don’t know what possessed Tracy Chevalier to write this unsubtle little novel, and I can’t adequately explain why I didn’t abandon it except to admit that I read it to discover just how she resolved it. The book is part of the Hogarth Press’s misconceived project to retell Shakespeare’s plays, and it’s based on Othello…
The War Artist is
The ANZAC legacy dominates the national consciousness and our literature, but contemporary veterans seem invisible. As far as I know Cleary and Hall are our only authors writing fiction about the legacy of Australia’s contemporary military missions. (Hall’s most recent novel A Stolen Season is about a soldier returned from Iraq. 
It really is just a coincidence that I re-read Rebecca West’s The Return of the Soldier (1918) contemporaneously with Simon Cleary’s The War Artist (2019). (My review coming soon). West’s slim novella was a ‘handbag-book’ that I’d begun reading on the train last week before beginning The War Artist as bedtime reading a couple of days ago. Yet here they are, two books a century apart, exploring the cruel impact of post-traumatic stress on soldiers, and their loved ones.
As regular readers know, I’m outside my comfort zone when reviewing poetry. But Gerald Murnane’s poetry is the exact opposite of what I expected: unlike a lot of modern Australian poetry which I find obscure and irrelevant to my interests, Murnane’s poems are not only accessible but also very interesting indeed.
Boy Swallows Universe (Trent Dalton, Fourth Estate), see
General nonfiction book of the year
Biography book of the year
Small publishers’ adult book of the year





Almost a decade ago, I read Sonia Orchard’s debut novel The Virtuoso (2008) which won the Indie Award for Best Debut Fiction. I was impressed, but it’s been a long time between novels, so I refreshed my memory of the theme from
Hare’s Fur is such a lovely book! The Australian literary scene is awash with grim books at the moment, but as the blurb says Hare’s Fur offers an exquisite story of grief, kindness, art, and the transformation that can grow from the seeds of trust.
If you love to travel, and your itinerary always includes 
Sprawling across the veld, this confusing, suppurating place sits apart from the bright, big city, separated, not just by geography but by dilapidation and the sharp end of history. Here in the township, rotten roads crawl through ordered ugliness, row upon row of unlovely houses. Tin shacks lean on each other like drunks; drunks sway between old cars and half-crazed chickens; junk piles up down dirty alleys where tramps forage and stray dogs cock a leg. The air smells of urine, offal, liquor, despair. This is the land across the divide; the black backyard. A dumping ground. A crucible for social change.
I’ve never been all that keen on joining things, but I always belonged to my union. And I was quite pleased when my loyalty was rewarded with an official AEU certificate when I retired; I hadn’t imagined that anyone would notice. But these days, with union membership in decline, perhaps 35 years’ loyalty is special. All I know is, that without the union fighting tooth and nail on our behalf, governments of either stripe would never have given teachers a decent pay rise and our conditions would only ever have got worse. It’s not that they’re necessarily malevolent, (though one of them certainly was), it’s that there’s so many of us. Even the smallest pay rise is a big hit to a state education budget; any reduction in teaching conditions (which are really learning conditions, of course) saves a lot of money. The same is true of any workers serving the public: nurses, police, paramedics, firefighters, anyone working in public transport — and of course the public service itself, because they all have the same pay scales across all multiple departments. Any time governments have blown the budget, these workers bear the brunt of the budget cuts and have to fight for a pay rise.
Not long after I read The Arsonist there were fires blazing out of control all over Tassie, and the catastrophic Black Tuesday Bushfires in Tasmania in 1967 were on everyone’s mind. That our firefighters were able to prevent a similar loss of life when the fires were so much more extreme shows what we have learned from our tragic experiences with bushfire. And that thought, re-emphasised the day before yesterday by our anxiety about a friend near a fast, out-of-control fire in Mornington, put me in mind yet again of
From there I could also repeat last month’s #6Degrees with
For obvious reasons, there are not many Australian books set in snowy landscapes. For that we look to Europe and Canada, and the one that comes most immediately to mind is the Soviet era One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Alexandr Solzhenitsyn. I’ve chosen a Romanian edition of this famous book because the cover art best expresses my memory of reading it. I was young at the time, and I struggled to understand the inhumanity behind the gulags. I thought it was a Soviet aberration but I know better now, of course. Man’s inhumanity to man is only too common.
Solzhenitsyn is a character in a book I’ve just read: Dinner with the Dissidents by John Tesarsch. It has an interesting plot: an ambitious young writer agrees to spy on Solzhenitsyn in order to have his own work published; and the book, in two time frames, shows how he faces the same risk-ridden dilemma under the present surveillance regime in Canberra. If you don’t know just exactly how your data is being monitored,
Of course, if you have nothing to hide, you may well feel that surveillance doesn’t matter. But another book featuring a dinner explores the impact of children’s behaviour on parental ambitions, and how they have very good motivations to conceal what’s happened. The Dinner, (2012) by Herman Koch was a bestseller and if you read
Probably not a bestseller, but an award-winning and much more thoughtful book is 



















The Imaginary Lives of James Pōneke is another of the titles longlisted for the 2019 Ockham New Zealand Literary Awards. But it was on my TBR months before the longlist was announced, thanks to an enticing review at







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