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Cabinet of curiosities

by
November 2013, no. 356

Telling Stories: Australian Life and Literature 1935–2012 edited by Tanya Dalziell and Paul Genoni

Monash University Publishing, $49.95 pb, 656 pp, 9781921867460

Cabinet of curiosities

by
November 2013, no. 356

Telling Stories is a great brick of a book full of diverting bits and pieces about Australian culture over the past seventy-seven years. It is hugely entertaining – a sort of QIin book form, with seventy-nine authors offering their brief observations on aspects of Australian cultural life. No one will read it cover to cover: it’s the sort of book you can leave about the house for anyone to pick up and amuse herself with for fifteen minutes or so. They can jump from titbits about rock music, or children’s novels, films or poetry, or serious pieces on the slow movement towards understanding Australia’s Aboriginal heritage. The editors suggest it is ‘a twenty-first century cabinet of curiosities’. By and large, it creates an optimistic, even celebratory, account of the experience of Australian life in the twentieth century.

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