Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%

James Bradley

I remember trying a few years ago to communicate to a younger friend something of the way I remember my childhood in Adelaide in the 1970s. It was a world in which an older Australia still lingered, a quiet, suburban world where men caught the tram to work at 8.15a.m. and came home at five, where the banks closed at four p.m., and where World War II veterans and their wives lived around us. In 2004 that world – somnolent, conservative, oddly outside time – seems almost unimaginable; even then, it was almost gone. Instead, it inhabits that hinterland between memory and nostalgia, lingering for me in the textures of the things and places which gave it shape, textures that are hopelessly entangled in the possibilities, pleasures and disappointments of childhood.

... (read more)
Published in August 2004, no. 263

James Bradley reviews 'The White Earth' by Andrew McGahan

James Bradley
Saturday, 01 May 2004

‘White’ and ‘earth’ are not words that sit easily together in an Australian context, so much so that placing them thus seems almost deliberately unsettling. Juxtaposed, they only serve to remind us of things that are mostly too hard for us to look at directly, a claim to a possession all know to be ill-founded ...

... (read more)
Published in May 2004, no. 261

Comedy, Angela Carter once quipped, is tragedy that happens to other people. Laughter is both an expression of our hard-bitten knowledge of the random cruelty of a universe that stubbornly resists our attempts to control it and an act of defiance in the face of that cruelty. Or, to put it in simpler terms, if you didn’t laugh, you’d cry.

... (read more)

James Bradley reviews 'Miles McGinty' by Tom Gilling

James Bradley
Thursday, 01 November 2001

Tom Gilling’s first novel, The Sooterkin, was an engaging and self-conscious oddity. Set in early nineteenth-century Tasmania, it had at its centre the striking conceit of the Sooterkin itself, a child born to a former convict and who is, to all intents and purposes, a seal. The Sooterkin was a critical success, inviting comparison to Peter Carey for its Dickensian energy and its playful engagement with the slippery rudiments of the Australian imagination.

... (read more)
Published in November 2001, no. 236

Symposium | The State of Australian Fiction

McKenzie Wark, Katharine England, James Bradley
Saturday, 01 July 2000
A Symposium on the state of Australian Fiction with McKenzie Wark, Katharine England, and James Bradley ... (read more)
Published in July 2000, no. 222

Andrew Riemer reviews 'The Deep Field' by James Bradley

Andrew Riemer
Saturday, 01 May 1999

Anyone can write a book, a cynic once remarked, but bringing off the second is a devil of a task. Most novelists at the outset of their careers would agree, I think – especially these days when a market-driven publishing industry often demands that authors of successful first novels should come up with more of the same ASAP.

... (read more)
Published in May 1999, no. 210
Page 4 of 4