Accessibility Tools
Released every Thursday, the ABR podcast features our finest reviews, poetry, fiction, interviews, and commentary.
Subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Google, or Spotify, or search for ‘The ABR Podcast’ on your favourite podcast app.
This week on The ABR Podcast, Marilyn Lake reviews The Art of Power: My story as America’s first woman Speaker of the House by Nancy Pelosi. The Art of Power, explains Lake, tells how Pelosi, ‘a mother of five and a housewife from California’, became the first woman Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. Marilyn Lake is a Professorial Fellow at the University of Melbourne. Listen to Marilyn Lake’s ‘Where is Nancy?’ Paradoxes in the pursuit of freedom’, published in the November issue of ABR.
Jan Owen lives at Aldinga Beach, fifty kilometres south of Adelaide. Her translations from Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal were published in 2015 by Arc Publications. A New and Selected, The ...
how strange and Viennese you are today Adelaide
like the skating rink in front of the Rathausplatz
here I am finding it hard to stay upright too
every step I take is cautious
ambulant
still moving
I wonder if it’s a frozen river
that I’m skating on the   ...
Eating a burrito in the Festival Theatre foyer hair in a half-up half-down
Watching umbrellas & people blow through the door looking for E and her mother
Are they wearing furs? Where are they? E loves the theatre doesn’t come late
Two girls walk past in Year 12 jumpers & I never went to my five-year reunion
Hung up these port ...
I sit with you and watch you smoke cigarettes in front of me
you take photographs but not here not of me
I didn’t ask for sugar in my coffee but I didn’t return it either
when the bus leaves you will be on it when the sky opens you will be beneath it
one day in the future we will agree on something
...
after ‘Dug and Digging With’ – AEAF, July/August 2016
Looking forward to seeing you all day
& arriving at the crowded gallery steps
I say ‘this gallery is full of the same people
desperate to see something different’
but I don’t really believe this I mean I am
only here to see you & ...
Listening to my own listless heart beating & you
beside me I discover we are minor seconds apart
tragic-chromatic but if subtle harmony does exist
it’s a three-year-old playing fists palms & elbows
we manage to stay out of each other’s way mostly
save for collateral clashes/catastrophes: collisions
& rhythms? look at this ven ...
Dominic Symes has had poetry published in Voiceworks, Award Winning Australian Writing (2016), Coldnoon (India), and Broadsheet (New Zealand). His reviews and criticism have appeared i ...
I walk through an industrial landscape
in the painful adolescent hours
before sunrise
above the sky has sobered up
but the high tensions wires
are still dripping
with conversations
long after rain has fallen
traffic lights turn
green
orange
red
city streets are wind blown
with electric light
underfoot
leaves hav ...
the early morning sky
has bled out all over
the snug tiled roofs
and tranquillised gardens
of a Buddhist monastery
the air is a medley
with yellow and orange
shavings of sunlight
in the dormitory’s courtyard
well-bred leaves
are falling like penances
stone buildings stand mute
with only a monologue of prayer bells
so ...
1.
the barbed-wire sounds
of crows
has fetched out the sun
from behind
the ridge
daybreak
has saddles up
the sky
2.
along the river
the mist is chain
smoking
otherwise the only
bright moments
are the small hoof prints
of sunlight
treading
over paddocks
3.
a river
untethered ...