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Jane Sullivan

Jane Sullivan is a Melbourne author and literary columnist. Her latest novel is Murder in Punch Lane. www.janesullivan.au

Jane Sullivan reviews ‘Mural’ by Stephen Downes

December 2024, no. 471 26 November 2024
When you are languishing in a prison cell, you can become intensely creative. John Bunyan, Jean Genet, and Miguel de Cervantes used their time to write classic works of literature. On the eve of his hanging, Louis D’Ascoyne Mazzini wrote a memoir to explain why he set out to murder eight people. Louis is fictional, the anti-hero of the film Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949). The narrator named D ... (read more)

Jane Sullivan reviews ‘Artful Lives: From Melbourne to the Islands: The artful lives of the Cohen sisters’ by Penny Olsen

September 2024, no. 468 27 August 2024
Valerie and Yvonne Cohen were ‘artful’ in more ways than one. Both sisters were artists, and most of their friends and lovers were artists. They were ‘artistic’, seeking an unconventional life. For years they spent their winters on a tiny tropical island. And they – particularly Val – were artful dodgers. Their cousin Penny Olsen knew them best in their old age in Melbourne: Von died ... (read more)

Jane Sullivan reviews 'The Bookbinder of Jericho' by Pip Williams

May 2023, no. 453 24 April 2023
First, a confession. I am one of a tiny minority of readers who were underwhelmed by Pip Williams’s first novel, The Dictionary of Lost Words (2020). I thought it a splendid idea, one undermined by facile messages about how women’s words were ignored by the men who recorded our language and its meanings. Clearly, I was in a minority: Dictionary became an international bestseller, one of the mo ... (read more)

Jane Sullivan reviews 'Bad Art Mother' by Edwina Preston

August 2022, no. 445 28 July 2022
In 1961, Gwen Harwood submitted a sonnet to the Bulletin under the name of Walter Lehmann. Her poem, ‘Abelard to Eloisa’, held a shocking acrostic secret that many people considered very bad art. Nobody discovered the secret until after it was published. But despite her transgression, as Wikipedia puts it, ‘she found much greater acceptance’ – to the point that she is today considered on ... (read more)

Jane Sullivan reviews 'Bila Yarrudhanggalangdhuray' by Anita Heiss

June 2021, no. 432 24 May 2021
There are two famous statues in the Gundagai area. One is the Dog on the Tuckerbox. The other is of two heroes, Yarri and Jacky Jacky, who, with other Wiradjuri men, went out in their bark canoes on many exhausting and dangerous forays to rescue an estimated sixty-nine people from the Great Flood of 1852. That statue wasn’t erected until 2017, but the white settlers did show their gratitude soo ... (read more)

Jane Sullivan reviews 'With My Little Eye: The incredible true story of a family of spies in the suburbs' by Sandra Hogan

April 2021, no. 430 23 March 2021
Here’s a story about a spy with a wooden leg, another spy who liked to sit around with his penis exposed, and a spy’s daughter who spent decades refusing to believe her father was dead. If this tale of an everyday family of secret agents were a novel or a Netflix drama, we’d laugh, frown, and admire it as a surreal fantasy. But it is real, the children are still alive, and their recollection ... (read more)

Jane Sullivan reviews 'Song of the Crocodile' by Nardi Simpson

January–February 2021, no. 428 16 December 2020
When you begin to read a book about a remote town heralded by the sign ‘Darnmoor, The Gateway to Happiness’, you know it’s not going to be a happy place. The opening chapter of Nardi Simpson’s first novel describes a neat, drab town of streets with names like Grace and Hope. Under a vast cerulean sky, a whitewashed war memorial lies at its ‘bleeding and dead centre’. Outside town, a b ... (read more)

Jane Sullivan reviews 'Max' by Alex Miller

October 2020, no. 425 24 September 2020
When Alex Miller first thought of writing about Max Blatt, he imagined a celebration of his life. But would Max have wanted that? He was a melancholy, chainsmoking European migrant, quiet and self-effacing, who claimed nothing for himself except defeat and futility. Max died in 1981, but for many years he was Miller’s mentor, inspiration, and best friend. As a fledgling writer, Miller looked up ... (read more)

Jane Sullivan reviews 'Kokomo' by Victoria Hannan

August 2020, no. 423 13 July 2020
Kokomo has a startling beginning. ‘Mina knew in that moment what love is,’ goes the first sentence. She is looking at Jack’s penis, which is compared to a soldier, a ballerina, a lighthouse, and a cooee. It is also the nicest penis she has ever seen. This is writing that trembles on the edge of silliness but is saved by irony. The astute reader knows pretty well straightaway that this is no ... (read more)

Jane Sullivan reviews 'Intrépide: Australian women artists in early twentieth-century France' by Clem Gorman and Therese Gorman

June–July 2020, no. 422 27 May 2020
Art and Paris meant everything to Agnes Goodsir. ‘You must forgive my enthusiasm,’ she wrote. ‘Nothing else is of the smallest or faintest importance besides that.’ Goodsir was the Australian artist who painted the iconic portrait Girl with Cigarette, now in the Bendigo Art Gallery. It depicts a cool, sophisticated, free-spirited woman of the Parisian boulevards. When Goodsir created it, i ... (read more)
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