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Seumas Spark

Seumas Spark

Seumas Spark is an Adjunct Fellow in History, Monash University.

Seumas Spark reviews ‘Melanesia: Travels in Black Oceania’ by Hamish McDonald

June 2025, no. 476 26 May 2025
A few years ago, I spent a week in the village of Salamaua on the Huon Gulf coast of Papua New Guinea (PNG). I delighted in swimming in the warm tropical waters that lap the village. After a dip or two, I wondered if there might be crocodiles about. My hosts told me that there was a resident crocodile; sometimes it came through the village at night, but I need not worry. In generations past, Salam ... (read more)

Seumas Spark reviews ‘Black Convicts: How slavery shaped Australia’ by Santilla Chingaipe

April 2025, no. 474 24 March 2025
This is not a book for Scott Morrison, who, as prime minister, declared that Australian history was free of the stain of slavery. Santilla Chingaipe proves otherwise. As she states in her introduction, a key theme of Black Convicts is the exploration of ‘how slavery shaped modern Australia’. In the context of this book, ‘slavery’ is both a specific and an umbrella term for different forms ... (read more)

Seumas Spark reviews ‘Townsend of the Ranges’ by Peter Crowley

January–February 2025, no. 472 17 December 2024
This is a brave book, for it is the biography of a phantom. Archives hold ample evidence of the many professional achievements of the surveyor Thomas Scott Townsend, but of him personally almost nothing is known. Townsend left little trace of his passions, frustrations, or loves, the substance that animates biographies. A letter that Townsend wrote to his brother in 1839 is the only item of his pr ... (read more)

‘Drinking from coconuts: When Australians weren’t scared of Papua New Guinea’ by Seumas Spark

October 2024, no. 469 25 September 2024
Everyone gets at least one lucky break in life, or so the saying goes. For me, one of the luckiest was a childhood spent in Papua New Guinea (PNG). In 1966, my father left Melbourne for what was then the Territory of Papua and New Guinea, prompted by curiosity and the opportunity to work on kuru, a fatal neurogenerative disease affecting the Fore people of the Eastern Highlands. My mother joined ... (read more)

Seumas Spark reviews ‘The Lucky Ones’ by Melinda Ham

August 2024, no. 467 24 July 2024
On the second page of this book are startling facts about Malawi. In the 1980s and 1990s, this country of around ten million people sheltered more than a million refugees, many of them having fled civil war in Mozambique. Malawians, already suffering the crippling effects of poverty and poor health, provided safe haven to waves of displaced and desperate people coming across their border. Perhaps ... (read more)

Seumas Spark reviews ‘Black Duck: A year at Yumburra’ by Bruce Pascoe with Lyn Harwood

June 2024, no. 465 22 May 2024
I'm a whitefella who has never met Bruce Pascoe, but I’ve heard a lot about him. For the past few years, I have worked across Gippsland in the field of Aboriginal cultural heritage, and many of the people I meet mention his name. Experience has led me to try and dodge most of these conversations, knowing that our discussion will probably satisfy neither party, but I’m not having much luck. P ... (read more)

Seumas Spark reviews ‘British Internment and the Internment of Britons: Second World War camps, history and heritage’ edited by Gilly Carr and Rachel Pistol

March 2024, no. 462 23 February 2024
The title and subtitle give it away. This edited collection considers two related subjects: the British practice of internment in World War II, and Britons’ experience of internment at the hands of enemy powers in that conflict. The editors define internment as ‘the state of civilian confinement caused by citizenship of a belligerent country’. Thus, the histories this book tells are those of ... (read more)

Seumas Spark reviews ‘Paul and Paula: A history of separation, survival and belonging’ by Tim McNamara

January-February 2024, no. 461 19 December 2023
In Working: Researching, interviewing, writing, published in 2019, the great biographer Robert A. Caro tells of his writing methods and the lengths to which he goes to gain a better understanding of his subject. Reading Tim McNamara’s Paul and Paula, I was reminded of Caro’s way of research and writing and of his determination to place himself in his subject’s milieu. McNamara spent consider ... (read more)

Seumas Spark reviews 'The Cowra Breakout' by Mat McLachlan

September 2022, no. 446 27 August 2022
Why do publishers do this? The cover of this book screams that the Cowra breakout is an ‘untold’ story, and ‘the missing piece of Australia’s World War II history’. Neither claim is remotely true, as the author himself acknowledges. Once we get past the sensationalist cover and into the text, Mat McLachlan notes that the story of the Cowra breakout has been told several times before, and ... (read more)

Seumas Spark reviews 'A Life in Words: Collected writings from Gallipoli to the Melbourne Cup' by Les Carlyon

December 2021, no. 438 25 October 2021
I guess every reviewer comes to a book with expectations, especially when the author’s reputation precedes him or her. On opening this collection, I knew that Les Carlyon (who died in 2019) wrote well. I remember my parents reading him in The Age and murmuring approval of his lyrical style and, sometimes, the content. I knew he loved horses, the track, and the punt. To me these were disappointme ... (read more)
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