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Andrew Riemer

Andrew Riemer

Andrew Riemer was a former academic, critic, writer and translator. His works include Inside Outside (1992), Sandstone Gothic (1998), Hughes (2001) and A Family History of Smoking (2008).

Adam Riemer reviews 'The Tempest Clemenza' by Glenda Adams

April 1996, no. 179 01 April 1996
It is always a pleasure to read Glenda Adams, a most accomplished and stylish writer. At its best her work displays a natural and unassuming flow, masking artistry of a high order. Admirers of her earlier books will find many familiar concerns in The Tempest of Clemenza; they will also discover her striking out in new directions in a bold and adventurous undertaking. ... (read more)

Andrew Riemer reviews 'The Penguin Book of the City' edited by Robert Drewe

September 1997, no. 194 01 September 1997
This attractive collection of short pieces – mostly fiction – reminded me of the old music-hall adage: start with a bang and leave the best acts till the end. Robert Drewe’s selection certainly begins with a bang. John Updike’s ‘The City’ is the story of a man who arrives in a unnamed city, and sees no more of it than an anonymous hotel room and the hospital where he has his appendix r ... (read more)

Andrew Riemer reviews 'The Oxford Literary History of Australia' edited by Bruce Bennett and Jennifer Strauss

October 1998, no. 205 01 October 1998
The index to this literary history lists four references – one neutral, three critical – to Leonie Kramer as the editor of the 1981 The Oxford History of Australian Literature and one each to the publication itself, to Adrian Mitchell, who was responsible for the survey of fiction, and to Vivian Smith as the author of the section on poetry – there is no reference to Terry Sturm, who wrote on ... (read more)

Andrew Riemer reviews 'South of My Days: A Biography of Judith Wright' by Veronica Brady

June 1998, no. 201 01 June 1998
Veronica Brady is a highly respected critic with long and distinguished experience in the academic and literary worlds. She understands as well as anyone, I am sure, the mysterious workings of the imagination – how a feeling, an image or an impression may strike a spark capable of igniting a flame that fuses often contradictory thoughts and experiences into the ‘little room’ of a memorable p ... (read more)

'Written off as second-rate' by Andrew Riemer

December 1992, no. 147 01 December 1992
What is the relationship between our literary culture and the academy? Moreover, should there be any relationship between the two, or is it healthier if each remains separate, largely isolated from the other? These-questions were brought into focus for me by ‘Word Games’, a provocative essay in the Spring issue of Island, that lively Tasmanian literary magazine. ... (read more)

Andrew Riemer reviews 'East Wind West Wind' by Fang Xiangshu and Trevor Hay

September 1992, no. 144 01 September 1992
It may seem flippant and insensitive to call this account of political threat and persecution a highly enjoyable book, but it is precisely that. Fang Xiangshu and Trevor Hay have fashioned a beguiling tale out of Fang's experiences during the Cultural Revolution and China’s political and social turmoil in later years. The product of their collaboration strikes exactly the right note. They have m ... (read more)

Diary | May 2001 – Andrew Riemer

May 2001, no. 230 01 May 2001
You tend to notice things when away from home. For instance, I have always been struck by how many people on trains and buses in Paris have their noses buries in books. So when I spent a couple of weeks there in March, I tried as often as decently possible to sneak a look at what Parisians were reading. The results were interesting. I saw two twenty-something women engrossed in Harry Potter. A fe ... (read more)

Andrew Riemer reviews 'The Deep Field' by James Bradley

May 1999, no. 210 01 May 1999
Anyone can write a book, a cynic once remarked, but bringing off the second is a devil of a task. Most novelists at the outset of their careers would agree, I think – especially these days when a market-driven publishing industry often demands that authors of successful first novels should come up with more of the same ASAP. I was a trifle apprehensive, therefore, when James Bradley’s second ... (read more)

Andrew Riemer reviews 'Firing' by Ninette Dutton

May 1995, no. 170 01 May 1995
A friend of mine remembers a reception during an Adelaide Festival of the Arts. It was a large gathering: visiting musicians, singers, actors and writers, members of the Adelaide establishment, people from the university. The hosts were Ninette and Geoffrey Dutton. My friend, a visitor from Sydney, was struck by the Duttons’ confidence and sophistication. They were a handsome couple, she recalls ... (read more)
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