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Anthony Lynch

Anthony Lynch

Anthony Lynch writes fiction, poetry and reviews. His work has appeared in The Best Australian Stories, The Best Australian Poems, Meanjin, Island, Australian Book Review, The Saturday Paper, The Age and The Australian, and been read on ABC Radio. His books are a short story collection, Redfin, and a poetry collection, Night Train. He is the publisher for Whitmore Press. A new collection of stories, HomeFront, is forthcoming from Puncher & Wattmann in mid-2025.

Anthony Lynch reviews ‘The Deal’ by Alex Miller

November 2024, no. 470 24 October 2024
Evocations of artists, art history, and the art world have become a near staple of the literary novel, nationally and internationally. Local examples from the past decade include Emily Bitto’s The Strays (2014), Gail Jones’s The Death of Noah Glass (2018), and Katrina Kell’s Chloé (2024). Alex Miller’s novel The Deal, his fourteenth, is the latest to probe the alluring, sometimes shady ar ... (read more)

Anthony Lynch reviews ‘The Degenerates’ by Raeden Richardson

September 2024, no. 468 27 August 2024
Recent decades have seen no shortage of what might broadly be called diasporic Australian novels. Works by Brian Castro and Michelle de Kretser, among others, come to mind. Raeden Richardson adds fruitfully to this tradition with his complex début novel, The Degenerates, which sets out from then-Bombay and journeys to the streets of Melbourne and New York. It is not quite a ‘constellation novel ... (read more)

Anthony Lynch reviews ‘The Gorgon Flower’ by John Richards

June 2024, no. 465 22 May 2024
In Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness (1899), the sailor Charles Marlow recalls captaining a river steamer in the Belgian Congo, a venture that becomes a search for the colonial agent Kurtz, said to be a brilliant if infamous ivory trader, who is ill and possibly mad. Marlow’s journey, of course, becomes a passage into psychological as well as (to the European mind) geographical darkness, and o ... (read more)

Anthony Lynch reviews ‘We All Lived in Bondi Then’ by Georgia Blain

April 2024, no. 463 25 March 2024
When Georgia Blain died at the age of fifty-one in 2016, the reading public was robbed of a superb prose writer in her prime. Her final and, some consider, best novel, Between a Wolf and a Dog (2016), achieved wide critical acclaim. Shortly after Blain succumbed to brain cancer, that novel went on to win or be shortlisted in a slew of national prizes. As readers, we are fortunate to have two post ... (read more)

Anthony Lynch reviews ‘Mishearing’ by David Musgrave and ‘AfterLife’ by Kathryn Lomer

March 2024, no. 462 22 February 2024
Mishearing, David Musgrave’s latest, most experimental poetry collection, arose from deliberately generated ‘mishearings’ of poems he read into Microsoft Word’s 2003 in-built speech recognition software. The software was by default ‘trained’ to a North American accent. Musgrave didn’t reprogram to an Australian accent, held the microphone at changing distances from his mouth, occasio ... (read more)

Anthony Lynch reviews ‘America Or Glow: A poem’ by John Kinsella

August 2006, no. 283 01 August 2006
Peter Porter, in his introduction to John Kinsella’s new collection, notes that ‘we are all familiar with the surface details of American life. Kinsella does not have to footnote his poem: we recognise his instances immediately … We all speak American.’ Given that Kinsella now lives and works in the United States, Porter also identifies ‘the disillusion at seeing a great exemplar close u ... (read more)

Anthony Lynch reviews 'Jack' by Judy Johnson and 'Navigation' by Judy Johnson

April 2008, no. 300 01 April 2008
Narrative, historical narrative in particular, figures strongly in these recent books from Judy Johnson – one a new collection of poems, the other a welcome reissue of her verse novel. Jack was first published in 2006 by Pandanus, shortly before that imprint’s demise. It won the 2007 Victorian Premier’s Award for Poetry, and is republished now by Picador. With its lonely, embittered, one-eye ... (read more)

Anthony Lynch reviews 'Westerly Vol. 53' edited by Delys Bird and Dennis Haskell

April 2009, no. 310 01 April 2009
In their introduction, editors Delys Bird and Dennis Haskell explain that in 2009 their annual journal will become a twice-yearly publication (a move first announced in 2007, but delayed due to funding shortfalls). A new, mid-year issue will be devoted to ‘creative work’, so Westerly’s format for end-of-year reviews – surveys of fiction, non-fiction and poetry – may remain; but all three ... (read more)

Anthony Lynch reviews 'Indigo Vol. 3' edited by Sarah French, Richard Rossiter and Deborah Hunn

April 2009, no. 310 01 April 2009
As Donna Ward indicates in her editorial, the latest issue of Indigo (Vol 3., Tactile Books $27.75 pb, 200 pp) is dedicated partly to the generalist category of creative non-fiction. Ward’s editorial, structured around an anecdote concerning Helen Garner, flirts with this ‘new’ genre, employing techniques of fiction to convey factual events. But her assertion that in reading Garner we a ... (read more)

Anthony Lynch reviews 'Griffith Review 23: Essentially Creative' edited by Julianne Schultz

April 2009, no. 310 01 April 2009
One year after Kevin Rudd’s 2020 Summit, Griffith Review 23 features comment from selected summiteers in the ‘Towards a Creative Australia’ group, and others. Editor Julianne Schultz’s introduction provides a short history of support for writers and artists beginning 250 years ago when Lord Bute, the prime minister, granting Samuel Johnson a government-funded pension for life, warned again ... (read more)
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