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Lost Edens

by
December 2003–January 2004, no. 257

A Tasmanian Paradise Lost by Graeme Hetherington

Walleah Press, $15 pb, 92 pp

Other Gravities by Kevin Gillam

Sunline Press, $25 hb, 108 pp

Lost Edens

by
December 2003–January 2004, no. 257

In the first part of his new collection, Graeme Hetherington returns to the cultural territory he presented, differently registered, in In the Shadow of Van Diemen’s Land (1999). This is the west coast of Tasmania, reconstructed this time, in ‘West Coast Garden of Eden’, as the provocative place of his childhood, an Eden after the Fall in which innocence has long before succumbed to temptation. The twenty-seven parts of ‘For Boyd’ present Boyd as the narrator’s schoolmate, a son of working-class parents who has Paul Newman looks, a careless disregard for all forms of authority, an impressive and precocious sexual appetite, and a rebel’s capacity for mischief. 

A Tasmanian Paradise Lost

A Tasmanian Paradise Lost

by Graeme Hetherington

Walleah Press, $15 pb, 92 pp

Other Gravities

by Kevin Gillam

Sunline Press, $25 hb, 108 pp

From the New Issue

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