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Still Lives

by
February–March 1984, no. 58

The Woman Who Lives Here and Other Stories by Gary Catalano

Champion Books, $5.00 pb, 80 pp

Point of View by Joan Woodberry

The Tasmanian Fellowship of Australian Writers, 125 pp

Under Mount Egmont and Other Poems by Max Richards

Neptune Press, $5.95 ph. 70 pp

Still Lives

by
February–March 1984, no. 58

Gary Catalano is perhaps better known for his poetry and art-criticism rather than as a writer of short fiction. The Woman Who Lives Here, a book which contains five short stories and sixteen ‘Sketches’, will do little to alter this. For though the writing is stylistically unexceptionable, Catalano's material is perilously thin, lacking in dramatic situation, intellectual vigour and point. Of the five stories which comprise the opening section of the book, four deal with those ubiquitous themes of ‘modernism’: alienation and absence. Given the by now long and rich literary heritage which concerns itself with these concepts it is hardly surprising to find that Catalano's various formal devices rely heavily on earlier models. Techniques of discontinuity, fragmentary notes and deliberate concealments are variously used in these stories giving them an air of unresolved mystery and sometimes menace. But unlike the pioneers in such forms Catalano seems to be experimenting for experimentation's sake; no pressure of feeling informs the writing, leaving the reader with a sense of the writer's ennui, as well as that of his characters.

The Woman Who Lives Here and Other Stories

The Woman Who Lives Here and Other Stories

by Gary Catalano

Champion Books, $5.00 pb, 80 pp

Point of View

by Joan Woodberry

The Tasmanian Fellowship of Australian Writers, 125 pp

Under Mount Egmont and Other Poems

Max Richards

Neptune Press, $5.95 ph. 70 pp

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