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At home and on the road

by
February 2006, no. 278

Subterranean Radio Songs by Joel Deane

Interactive Press, $23 pb, 80 pp

Book 2 Cover Small (400 x 600)

Suburban Anatomy by Penelope Layland

Pandanus, $19.80 pb, 50 pp

At home and on the road

by
February 2006, no. 278

Good writing can take many forms, and I have often wished for a greater mutual appreciation, between poets and journalists, of the fine things with words that both are able to do. Joel Deane and Penelope Layland, former journalists, bring well-honed skills to their first volumes. (Deane is currently the speechwriter for the premier of Victoria, Steve Bracks.) In their work we find much clarity and a strong facility for description. Take, for example, Layland’s ‘Muttonbird Island’: ‘In the dark soil chicks incubate / camouflaged by a silence / they instinctively keep.’ Deane, meanwhile, is flexing his descriptive muscles in ‘Freckle’, a poem about childhood and memories of a long-drowned man: ‘… how, last summer, / when the river bed fell, / they found tissue paper, / once the muscle of a man, / stretched over sunken branches.’

John Jenkins reviews ‘Subterranean Radio Songs’ by Joel Deane and ‘Suburban Anatomy’ by Penelope Layland

Subterranean Radio Songs

by Joel Deane

Interactive Press, $23 pb, 80 pp

Book 2 Cover Small (400 x 600)

Suburban Anatomy

by Penelope Layland

Pandanus, $19.80 pb, 50 pp

From the New Issue

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