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Donata Carrazza

Donata Carrazza

Donata Carrazza is a graduate of Italian language and literature from the University of Melbourne. She has worked for over twenty years in hospitality, notably at the Mildura Grand Hotel. She is Chair of the Mildura Writers’ Festival Committee and, with New York poet and academic Paul Kane, has edited two books: Vintage: A Celebration of Ten Years of the Mildura Writers’ Festival (2004) and Letters to Les (2005).

Donata Carrazza reviews 'No More Boats' by Felicity Castagna

June-July 2017, no. 392 29 May 2017
No More Boats is Felicity Castagna’s newest work since Small Indiscretions (2011), a collection of short stories, and her award-winning Young Adult novel, The Incredible Here and Now (2013). This versatile writer depicts a plausible community set in Sydney’s inner west in 2001 and an ageing Italian migrant, Antonio Martone, whose life is falling apart and whose crises coincide with the Austral ... (read more)

Donata Carrazza reviews 'Nine Days' by Toni Jordan

September 2012, no. 344 28 August 2012
Toni Jordan’s third novel, after the successful Addition (2009), takes its story from a photograph that graces the cover and that the author tells us she pondered for a long time. It is a romantic wartime scene, a crush of bodies at a Melbourne train station, mostly with soldiers bound for their unknown futures. A woman has been lifted by a stranger on the platform so she can farewell her sweeth ... (read more)

Donata Carrazza reviews 'Bite Your Tongue' by Francesca Rendle-Short

February 2012, no. 338 20 January 2012
In writing Bite Your Tongue, Francesca Rendle-Short, who is director of Creative Writing at RMIT University, has chosen a thorny tale. She dedicates the book to her mother, Angel, who is clearly a formidable personality: Northern Irish; medical doctor; mother of six daughters; Christian activist; ‘book burner’. Early on, we are told that ‘some stories are hard to tell, they bite back. To wri ... (read more)

Donata Carrazza reviews 'Two Greeks' by John Charalambous

October 2011, no. 335 27 September 2011
What does a young boy make of a father who carries in his pocket a knife that is used to peel fruit, behead chickens, fashion toy flutes, and potentially serves as a weapon to kill his spouse? Two Greeks,the work of third-time novelist John Charalambous, is an engaging study of the power of family and the need for identity. In similar company to Raimond Gaita’s Romulus, My Father and Christos Ts ... (read more)