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Sherryl Clark

Sherryl Clark reviews ‘H2O: Stories of Water’ edited by Margaret Hamilton, ‘And the Roo Jumped Over the Moon: Australian Stories and Poems for Children’ edited by Robin Morrow & illustrated by Stephen Michael King and Poems By Young Australians Vol.2

April 2005, no. 270 01 April 2005
Putting together a collection or anthology is not as easy as it looks. There are decisions to be made about theme, order and intent, which are often based on the intended audience. Three recent anthologies for children show that, in children’s literature at least, originality and diversity are achievable. Poems by Young Australians Vol.2 could be read by anyone who enjoys poetry. Here we have t ... (read more)

Sherryl Clark reviews Six Children's Picture Books

December 2003–January 2004, no. 257 01 December 2003
Tackling a ‘worthy’ theme and making a poem or story readable and entertaining is a challenge. There is a fine line between subtlety and didacticism. My Gran’s Different manages, just barely, to stay on the right side. The narrator’s grandmother is different: she has Alzheimer’s, though this is never spelt out. Instead, there is a dual story: one part is the journey of a boy on his way t ... (read more)

Extract from an interview with Garry Disher by Sherryl Clark

April 1996, no. 179 01 April 1996
Garry Disher: The Sunken Road is a so-called literary novel. I find that I’m a bit typecast, Garry Disher the crime writer or Garry Disher the children’s writer. A lot of the fiction I’ve written is so-called more literary in nature. This is my big book, up to date, if you like. It’s a novel set in the wheat and wool country in the mid-north of South Australia where I grew up. It’s ... (read more)