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Ben Brooker

Ben Brooker is a writer, editor, critic, playwright, essayist, and former bookseller. He has a Bachelor of Arts (Hons) from Flinders University and an Advanced Diploma of Professional Writing from Adelaide College of the Arts. His work has been featured by Overland, New Matilda, New Internationalist, Australian Book Review, RealTime, The Lifted Brow, Witness, and Daily Review.

Ben Brooker reviews ‘Three Wild Dogs and the Truth’ by Markus Zusak

November 2024, no. 470 29 October 2024
Dogs have long been a feature of Markus Zusak’s fiction. His pre-fame trilogy of Young Adult novels, centring on brothers Cameron and Ruben Wolfe and their family, deployed the animal as a metaphor for tenaciousness. In the trilogy’s final book, When Dogs Cry (2001), Cameron and Ruben all but adopt Miffy, a Pomeranian whose scrappiness matches that of the brothers and whose death provides the ... (read more)

'Bad Boy: A further collaboration between Patricia Cornelius and Susie Dee' by Ben Brooker

ABR Arts 30 September 2024
Bad Boy is the second work in a series of what playwright Patricia Cornelius and director Susie Dee have called ‘visceral dramatic monologues’. The first, RUNT (2021), centred on the unnamed homunculus of the play’s title, portrayed with memorable physical intensity and dexterity by Nicci Wilks. Bad Boy reunites all three of RUNT’s lead creatives, as well as Romanie Harper (set and co ... (read more)

'Milk and Blood: Lyrical and gritty theatre from Benjamin Nichol' by Ben Brooker

ABR Arts 19 August 2024
Milk and Blood are the third and fourth instalments in Benjamin Nichol’s anthology series of works for solo performers. The preceding plays, kerosene and SIRENS, similarly played as a double bill at fortyfivedownstairs a year ago and were roundly lauded (this critic, sadly, did not see them). There are threads which run through these works – in Nichol’s own words, ‘love, loneliness, violen ... (read more)

Ben Brooker review ‘Big Time’ by Jordan Prosser

August 2024, no. 467 23 July 2024
Given the global resurgence of interest in compounds such as psilocybin, LSD, and ayahuasca, it is a wonder more contemporary novelists have not turned to psychedelic experience for inspiration. It is, after all, hard to think of the golden age of psychedelics – roughly the mid-1960s to mid-1970s – without recalling the trippy, Zeitgeist-capturing literature it produced, including Hunter S. Th ... (read more)

'Macbeth (an undoing): A retelling in need of sound and fury' by Ben Brooker

ABR Arts 11 July 2024
Feminist reimaginings of canonical male-authored texts are nothing new. In fact, following innumerable retellings of the Greek myths, the trend may have peaked last year with the publication of novels spotlighting the marginalised female characters of, among others, Nineteen Eighty-Four (both Katherine Bradley’s The Sisterhood and Sandra Newman’s Julia), Arthurian legend (Sophie Keetch’s Mor ... (read more)

Ben Brooker reviews ‘Expanding Mindscapes: A global history of psychedelics’ edited by Erika Dyck and Chris Elcock

April 2024, no. 463 25 March 2024
An anthology dedicated to the transnational history of psychedelic drugs and culture seems a timely enterprise. We are twenty or so years into what has become known as the ‘psychedelic renaissance’, the global revival of interest in compounds such as LSD, mescaline, and psilocybin centring on their use alongside psychotherapy as treatments for a growing number of mental health disorders. Prev ... (read more)

Ben Brooker reviews ‘Life As We Knew It: The extraordinary story of Australia’s pandemic’ by Aisha Dow and Melissa Cunningham

January-February 2024, no. 461 18 December 2023
In October 2014, an article by health reporter Aisha Dow appeared in Melbourne’s Age newspaper titled ‘Deadly flu pandemic could shut down Melbourne’. It began with a dystopian vision of Australia’s second most populous city plunged into a Spanish flu-like crisis: A deadly pandemic could shut down Melbourne as we know it. Public transport could be terminated, AFL games cancelled and the ... (read more)

'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?: A traditional version of Edward Albee’s classic' by Ben Brooker

ABR Arts 20 November 2023
Since its sensational début on Broadway more than sixty years ago, Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? has become an enduring classic of the modern American canon. Its depiction of warring middle-aged couple Martha and George, and their drawing of young couple Honey and Nick into the gravitational field of the savage, alcohol-fuelled contretemps their marriage has become, remains a ... (read more)

'Flake: Dan Lee's dark and comic Hanoi play' by Ben Brooker

ABR Arts 25 October 2023
Dan Lee’s first play, Bottomless, premièred at fortyfivedownstairs in 2018 after receiving the last R.E. Ross Trust award four years previously. Critics drew attention to the unusually star-studded cast for a début – Mark Coles Smith, Julie Forsyth, Jim Daly, Alex Menglet, Uncle Jack Charles – but its depiction of the residents of a dry-out facility in Broome garnered a mixed reception. Th ... (read more)

Ben Brooker reviews 'Psychonauts: Drugs and the making of the modern mind' by Mike Jay

September 2023, no. 457 25 July 2023
In his 1927 essay ‘On Being One’s Own Rabbit’, the British-Indian scientist and writer J.B.S. Haldane surveyed the history of an enduring but contentious approach to scientific discovery: self-experimentation. At the age of eight, Haldane tested poison gases on himself in his scientist father’s home laboratory. As an adult, among other self-experiments occasioning losses of consciousness f ... (read more)