Author: jkirkby8712

  • The Coachbuilder’s Column: Volume 16: Issue 2:  28th January, 2026 – THE ODYSSEY BY HOMER – a New Translation by Emily Wilson

    I have not read The Odyssey completely, and really can’t assess the accuracy of truthfulness of the following article, but I found it an interesting summation and perhaps worth some studious examination. In fact at this stage of my life, I’m not sure that I will ever get around to tackling Homer’s ‘poem’. As with Homer’s ‘The Iliad’, both books were purchased back in 2012, and while I did make a start in each case, other reading at the time proved more enticing!

    The copy I have is presumably an example of one of many translations that Emily Wilson is revising. It is a translation by George Chapman [who also translated my copy of The Iliard]. Perhaps the comments made in the Introduction to my copy by Dr Adam Roberts of the University of London, give an indication of some of Wilson’s criticisms that follow. Roberts notes that “Chapman’s Odyssey has an unfortunate reputation as a relatively inaccurate rendering of Homer’s original…[but]..The consensus of most critics is that the tone and timbre of Chapman is more ornate, more quaint and more explicitly moral than Homer. Moreover, there are reputed to be many places where, according to critics, Chapman deliberately or otherwise shifts the emphasise, adds to or subtracts from, or flat-out mistranslates his source”.

    This aspect of mistranslation, in reading the following article, appears to my mind, to be the major emphasise of Wilson’s translation   In any case, for what it is worth, the following is her interpretation of the way Odyssey should be read, presumably the first interpretation by a woman.

    For 400 years, every English translation of The Odyssey was done by a man. Then one woman translated it, and suddenly everyone realized how much had been quietly changed.

    When Emily Wilson sat down to translate Homer’s Odyssey in 2017, she knew she was entering territory that had belonged exclusively to male scholars for centuries. Chapman in 1616. Pope in 1726. Fitzgerald in 1961. Fagles in 1996. Brilliant minds, all of them. Translators whose work had shaped how English speakers understood one of Western civilization’s foundational texts.

    But Wilson, a classics professor at the University of Pennsylvania, decided to ask a question none of her predecessors had seriously considered: What if centuries of male translators had been quietly editing the story to match their own assumptions about heroes, women, and morality?

    She started with the very first word Homer uses to describe Odysseus: “polytropos.”

    Every major translator had rendered it as something flattering. “Resourceful.” “Versatile.” “The man of many ways.” Words that made Odysseus sound admirable, heroic, the kind of protagonist you’d want your children to emulate.

    Wilson translated it as “complicated.”

    One word. But it changes everything.

    Suddenly Odysseus isn’t just clever—he’s morally ambiguous. A man who lies even when honesty would serve him better. A survivor who manipulates, deceives, and rationalizes violence. Still the protagonist, still fascinating, but no longer simply heroic.

    That’s what “polytropos” actually means in Greek. But for four centuries, translators had smoothed it over because complicated heroes made readers uncomfortable.

    Wilson realized she’d stumbled onto something bigger. If they’d changed the first word, what else had been altered?

    She kept digging.

    The answer was staggering: almost everything involving women.

    Consider what happens when Odysseus finally returns home after 20 years. He discovers that enslaved women in his household were forced into sexual relationships with the suitors who had occupied his palace. He and his son Telemachus execute these women in a brutal mass hanging—strung up together, left to die slowly.

    Homer’s Greek uses the word “dmôai,” which has a precise meaning: enslaved women. People who were property, who had no legal rights, no power to refuse, no agency over their own bodies.

    But English translators wrote: “maids.” “Maidservants.” “Servant girls.” One even wrote “guilty maids who made love with suitors.”

    Do you see what happened? The language made it sound like these women had chosen to betray Odysseus. That they were complicit. That they deserved execution.

    Emily Wilson translated the word exactly as Homer wrote it: “slaves.”

    Suddenly the entire scene shifts. This isn’t justice—it’s a powerful man murdering enslaved women who were raped by invaders. Women who had no choice, no power to resist, no way to protect themselves.

    That’s what Homer wrote. But for 400 years, English readers never knew because translators couldn’t bring themselves to call slavery what it was.

    Or take Penelope, Odysseus’s wife who waits 20 years for his return. Earlier translators portrayed her as the ideal patient wife—faithful, pure, suffering nobly, the perfect Victorian woman.

    But Homer’s Greek describes her as “periphron.” The word means shrewd, strategic, prudent, circumspect—someone who thinks several moves ahead.

    Wilson’s Penelope isn’t just waiting passively. She’s manipulating over a hundred suitors, buying herself time through elaborate schemes, gathering intelligence, positioning herself politically for survival. When Odysseus finally reveals himself, she doesn’t collapse in grateful tears. She tests him. She demands proof. She makes him work for her trust.

    Because she’s smart. Homer said she was smart from the beginning. But translators kept making her passive because intelligent, strategic women made Victorian readers uncomfortable. So they emphasized her tears and her weaving, and downplayed her brilliance.

    Then there’s Calypso, the goddess who keeps Odysseus on her island for seven years. The Greek word Homer uses is “katechein”—to detain, to restrain, to hold captive against will.

    But generations of translators wrote that Calypso “loved” him. That they had a “relationship.” That she “cared for” him.

    Wilson translates it clearly: Calypso “kept” him as her captive. She “owned” him. She forced him to sleep with her.

    Suddenly it’s obvious—this wasn’t a romance. It was imprisonment and sexual coercion. A goddess using her power to trap a mortal man who wanted to go home.

    Homer said that explicitly. But translators softened it, romanticized it, because it complicated the heroic narrative they wanted to tell.

    When Wilson’s translation was published, the literary world erupted. The book became a New York Times bestseller. Critics called it revelatory. Readers discovered they could finally hear Homer’s voice clearly, without centuries of editorial interference.

    There was backlash, of course. Some scholars accused Wilson of imposing modern feminist values on an ancient text. Of “updating” Homer for contemporary audiences. Of distorting the original to make a political point.

    Her response was devastatingly simple: Read the Greek.

    Every single choice she made was defensible from the original language. She wasn’t adding feminism—she was removing centuries of anti-feminist bias that previous translators had inserted without acknowledging it.

    Wilson imposed one iron rule on herself: consistency. If a Greek word means “slave,” translate it as “slave” every single time. Not “slave” when it’s a man and “maid” when it’s a woman. If a word indicates captivity, don’t call it love. If a character is described as intelligent, don’t emphasize their beauty instead.

    Translate what Homer actually wrote, not what later cultures wished he’d written.

    The result is an Odyssey that’s sharper, stranger, more morally complex—and more honest.

    Odysseus isn’t a noble hero or a villain. He’s a complicated man who does both terrible and remarkable things, exactly as Homer presented him.

    Penelope isn’t a passive wife waiting for rescue. She’s a strategic thinker navigating impossible political circumstances with intelligence and resolve.

    The enslaved women aren’t guilty betrayers. They’re enslaved women murdered by the man who owned them, victims twice over.

    Calypso isn’t a romantic interest. She’s a captor who abuses her power.

    For 400 years, English-speaking readers thought they understood The Odyssey. But they were reading Homer filtered through Victorian morality, Edwardian gender assumptions, and translators who judged women more harshly than men while excusing male violence.

    They were reading translations that reflected what those translators believed, not what Homer said.

    Emily Wilson didn’t modernize The Odyssey. She de-Victorianized it. She stripped away four centuries of accumulated bias and let Homer’s Greek speak directly.

    And it turns out The Odyssey is a better, more interesting, more morally challenging poem than we realized.

    Not because Wilson added anything—but because she finally stopped letting centuries of male translators quietly edit the women out of their own story.

    She became the first woman in 400 years to translate The Odyssey into English. And in doing so, she became the first translator in generations to simply tell the story Homer actually wrote.

  • The Coachbuilder’s Column: Volume 16: Issue 1: 25th January 2026:  Australians of the Year

    I usually like to provide a summary of these awards each year, and decided 2026 should not be an exception.

    There were 33 nominees for the four ‘Australian of the Year’ Awards for 2026 from the various Australian States and Territories – those award categories were:

    • Australian of the Year;
    • Senior Australian of the Year;
    • Young Australian of the Year; and,
    • Local Hero/

    The Australian of the Year is a national award conferred on an Australian citizen by the National Australia Day Council, a not-for-profit Australian Government-owned social enterprise. Similar awards are also conferred at the state and territory level and the respective winners of those Awards represent the nominees at the national level.  The award offers an insight into Australian identity, reflecting the nation’s evolving relationship with world, the role of sport in Australian culture, the impact of multiculturalism, and the special status of Indigenous Australians. It has also provoked spirited debate about the fields of endeavour that are most worthy of public recognition.  The award program promotes active citizenship and seeks to elevate certain people as role models. The three companion awards recognise both Young and Senior Australians, as well as the efforts of those who work at a grass roots level through the ‘Australia’s Local Hero’ award.

    In the following article, we will:

    • Summarise each of the respective nominations in each of the four award categories; and;
    • Reveal the four winners of the National awards.

    Nominations in each category were as follows

    Australian of the year

    The eight nominations for the Australian of the Year Award this year with brief biographies [full bios can be found on the National Australia Day website] are as follows, the winner to be chosen from each of the respective state and territory nominations

    • ACT: Professor Rose McGready has spent three decades providing health services to displaced people in the border region between Thailand and Myanmar, with her commitment, compassion and clinical expertise providing life-saving aid to some of the world’s most vulnerable communities.
    • NSW: Dr Alison Thompson has deployed thousands of volunteers to the world’s worst disaster zones, and in doing so, building resilience in local communities through sustainable, locally driven disaster prevention and recovery.
    •  NT: Dr Felix Ho tirelessly serves remote communities in the Northern Territory as a medical practitioner. Through the St. John Youth Program, he brings people together across geography and generations to equip Australia’s youth to save lives through first aid in an emergency.
    • Qld:  Dr Rolf Gomes has had a far-reaching impact on rural health and medicine, through amongst other efforts, his launching of the first Heart of Australia mobile ‘Heart trucks’ to visit remote communities.
    • SA: Katherine Bennell-Pegg is creating history as the first Australian to qualify as an astronaut  under Australia’s space program, having trained as part of a class of six by the European Astronaut Centre in Germany, chosen from a field of over 22,500 applicants. She is considered a trailblazer in Australia’s emerging space industry.
    • Tas:  Dr Jorian [Jo] Kippax was part of a specialist team of rescuers involved in freeing a whitewater rafter trapped in the Franklin River rapids in 2024. That rescue was just one chapter in Jo’s long career in emergency medicine, disaster response and search and rescue.
    • Vic: Carrie Bickmore is a radio and television presenter who has changed the way that brain cancer research is funded in Australia, and in 2021, she established the Brain Cancer Centre to bring together the brightest minds in research to find a cure.
    • WA: Dr. Daniela Vecchio is the head of mental health and addiction services at the Fiona Stanley Hospital, and is a pioneer in establishing in 2022 the first publicly funded gaming disorder clinic in Australia

    Senior Australian of the Year

    • Tas: Julie Dunbabib: a pioneer in school nutrition, who is changing the way education departments and schools prepare and deliver school lunches to children. 
    • NSW: Professor Henry Brodaty: he is transforming the diagnosis, care and prevention of dementia – improving countless lives, both in Australia and around the world. 
    • SA: James Currie: his filmography reads like a list of South Australia’s most successful films over the past 50 years. His work as a sound designer, recordist and mixer includes titles such as Breaker Morant, The Lighthorsemen, Bad Boy Bubby, The Tracker, Wolf Creek, Ten Canoes, Red Dog and, most recently, the AACTA award-winning documentary My Name is Gulpilil.

    And: Malcolm Benoy: he has made a significant contribution to climate change research in his role as a volunteer citizen scientist, helping to preserve valuable records and data relating to South Australia’s meteorologicalhistory.  

    • NT: Jenny Duggan OAM: For decades, Jenny  has shown extraordinary grassroots leadership as Katherine’s ‘rubbish warrior’, quietly transforming the landscape and community spirit of her town. 

    Each morning Jenny walks the banks of the Katherine River to remove litter. In collecting hundreds of kilograms of rubbish, she’s put the spotlight on environmental safety. 

    • QLD: Cheryl Harris: Cheryl Harris has been instrumental in driving volunteer engagement and championing the important work that volunteers perform on the Sunshine Coast. 
    • ACT: Heather Reid AM: has made it possible for thousands of women to play football, both in the Australian Capital Territory and around Australia.  Heather was instrumental in establishing the Australian National University Women’s Soccer Club in 1978 and the Australian Capital Territory Women’s Soccer Association a year later. 
    •  Vic: Bryan Lippman, AM:  As a young social worker, Bryan witnessed first-hand the appalling conditions in which many elderly homeless people were forced to live. Realising that existing aged care homes were not the answer, he founded Wintringham to provide a safe space where the elderly poor and homeless could live with dignity and respect.  Today, Wintringham supports 3,000 people with accommodation and home care services. 
    • WA: Professor Kingsley Dixon, AO: from The University of Western Australia is an internationally recognised botanist whose devotion to science has transformed Australian native plant conservation. 

    As Foundation Director of Science at Perth’s Kings Park and Botanic Garden, Kingsley shaped a small research unit into one of the world’s top five botanic garden-based science centres. One of Kingsley’s most notable achievements is the 1992 discovery of smoke as a cause for Australian plants to germinate after bushfires.  

    Young Australian of the Year

    • Tas: Alyssia Kennedy: realising how important life skills can be, Alyssia founded the Life After School program, an educational package to help bridge the gap between school education and life knowledge. She now works with schools and youth groups to deliver the program and give young people the tools they need to transition to adulthood. 
    • NSWE: Ned Brockmann:  ultra marathon runner for the homeless:  a then 23-year-old electrician from Forbes, had a goal – to run across Australia and inspire people to do more for themselves and the homeless.   Nedd’s concern for homelessness was sparked by his journey into TAFE every week where he saw too many people sleeping rough on Sydney’s Eddy Avenue. He wanted to do something to highlight homelessness, its complexities and prove that it’s solvable.
    • SA: Chloe Wyatt-Jasper: Chloe Wyatt-Jasper has applied her lived experience of trauma and mental health challenges to help other people facing similar issues. Chloe experienced a domestic violence family tragedy at a very young age and has lived with profound mental health conditions as a result. In speaking out about these challenges, Chloe hopes to help other people overcome the stigma often associated with mental health.
    • NT: Jaiden Dickensen: as a proud Warumungu man Jaiden Dickenson is a beacon of hope and resilience for young people in the Tennant Creek, Ali Curung and Elliott communities.   In his role as a Tennant Creek Mob Youth Diversion Officer, Jaiden helps young people address the trauma at the root of crime and social disorder by taking responsibility for their behaviour, overcoming their personal challenges and moving towards rehabilitation. 
    • Qld: Jarib Branfield-Bradshaw: youth worker and mentor: As a proud Kooma man and youth worker, has made a huge difference to the town of Cunnamulla by opening a youth neighbourhood centre. As a local himself, Jarib knows what it’s like to live in a quiet town where there’s not a lot for young people to do outside the home.  
    • ACT: Sita Sargeant: historian and guide: Sita is forging a distinctive approach to storytelling and historical research, highlighting little-known women’s stories and their impact on towns and cities across Australia.  She is the founder of She Shapes History, a historical tourism company and social enterprise dedicated to uncovering the often-overlooked stories of women who have shaped Australia in ways that receive little or no recognition. Through walking tours, digital content, and partnerships with cultural institutions and historic sites, Sita reveals how women’s contributions have long been ignored by mainstream history
    • Vic: Abraham Kual: Abraham Kuol is a respected youth leader who uses his knowledge of the police and justice system in Victoria to help young people in his community.  Day to day, Abraham devotes his time to mentoring and guiding young people, running sports programs and building community ties – all while studying for a PhD in Criminology at Deakin University where his research is having a real-world impact.
    • WA: Dr Haseeb Riaz and Gareth Shanthikumar: positive masculinity educators: Haseeb and Gareth felt that negative stereotypes of masculinity were harming young men, so they established MAN UP to help young men strengthen their mental health, communicate openly and build pathways to healthier lives. Through workshops on male culture, respectful relationships and emotional coping, they provide boys with safe, relatable spaces to explore identity, relationships and emotional literacy.

    Local Hero Award

    • NSW: Theresa Mitchell: Theresa cares for people who are homeless or in crisis, providing a compassionate lifeline for people who’ve fallen through the gaps.   Opening its doors in 2009, Agape Outreach Inc began when Theresa found she couldn’t walk past homeless people on the street anymore. So, she handed out meals she cooked in her own kitchen, and it went on from there.
    • SA: Ayesha Safdar: community leader. Ayesha has dedicated herself to helping newly-arrived migrant and refugee women find their place in Australian society.  In 2010, Ayesha founded the Adelaide Pakistani Women’s Association (APWA) to create a safe, inclusive space for Pakistani women adjusting to life in Australia. Today, the association works with women from all backgrounds, helping them to navigate their way through a new culture and acquire language skills, education and employment. Ayesha is empowering women to build their confidence and develop the skills they need to create a new life in Australia
    • NT: Ron Green, BM ESM: Emergency services and St. John Ambulance volunteer: Local legend Ron has volunteered hundreds of hours keeping his community safe in times of crisis.   Since 2005, he’s grown and strengthened the success of the Katherine Volunteer Unit of the Northern Territory Emergency Service. Ron also fights bushfires and attends vehicle crashes as a volunteer for the Northern Territory Fire and Rescue Service. On top of this, he leads the Katherine Youth Division of St John Ambulance, where he inspires and trains future generations of emergency first responders. 
    • QLD: Ian Gay: he has dedicated more than 20 years to helping people with disabilities enjoy the surf in a fun, safe way. As a volunteer with the Disabled Surfers Association Gold Coast (DSAGC), Ian has held many roles and was branch vice president until 2015 and then branch president from 2015 to present.
    • ACT: Ben Alexander: Ben is well known in Canberra for his rugby career with the Brumbies and Wallabies.   Since retiring, he has turned his focus to mental health, co-founding Running for Resilience (R4R) with Matt Breen to help make Canberra suicide-free by 2033.   R4R helps people overcome personal struggles by exercising and connecting with others. Every week, hundreds join free runs and walks across Canberra to boost their physical and mental health.
    • Vic: Linda Widupp: Linda is bringing hope to Australian farmers in their time of need, organising deliveries of invaluable feed in response to drought and natural disasters.  Linda founded Aussie Hay Runners in 2019, starting out with just four trucks delivering hay to help farmers feed their livestock. The voluntary organisation now has more than 70 trucks it can call on, clocking up millions of kilometres and delivering over 90,000 bales of fodder to farmers needing a helping hand
    • WA: Frank Mitchell: Indigenous construction leader: he is a proud Whadjuk-Yued Noongar man, co-director of Wilco Electrical and co-founder/director, of Kardan, Baldja and Bilyaa in the trades and construction industry.  Frank’s commitment to change was shaped by early lived experiences of suicide and the loss of best friends. As a young single father, being offered an electrical apprenticeship felt like a profound opportunity. When he became a business owner in 2015, he pledged to create the same opportunities for Mob.  
    • Tas: Emily Briffa: Emily’s social enterprise, Hamlet, has helped many disadvantaged and marginalised people in Hobart overcome employment barriers and transform their lives.  Hamlet is a community café that provides individualised training, work readiness and wrap-around support to Tasmanians with disability, neurodivergence, and mental health concerns who are experiencing barriers to employment

    And the four Australian of the Year Award winners as announced by the Prime Minister of Australia in Canberra tonight were:

     Australian of the Year 2026

    From South Australia, Katherine Bennell-Pegg IS THE Australian of the Year. She is creating history as the first Australian to qualify as an astronaut  under Australia’s space program, having trained as part of a class of six by the European Astronaut Centre in Germany, chosen from a field of over 22,500 applicants. She is considered a trailblazer in Australia’s emerging space industry, yet finds time to present to schoolchildren and industry leaders about the captivating wonders of space.

    “I can tell you that, having got out and about across Australia over the last year, that there are so many young people dreaming of the stars,” she said.   “Curiosity and potential have no postcode and no gender, but talent is everywhere, and aspiration can be, if we foster that confidence.”

    Senior Australian of the Year 2026

    From New South Wales:  Professor Henry Brodaty is Senior Australian of the Year: he is transforming the diagnosis, care and prevention of dementia – improving countless lives, both in Australia and around the world. When his father was diagnosed with dementia in 1972, at the age of just 52, dementia was not widely understood and there was little support.  Professor Brodaty’s experience led to a lifetime commitment to improve the lives of people living with dementia and their families.  He co-founded the Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing in 2012 and led research that increased understanding of the risk and prevention steps for dementia.

    \Young Australian of the Year 2026

    From New South Wales, the Young Australian of the Year is Nedd Brockman: Forbes electrician Nedd aged 23, set off to run across Australia inspiring people to do more for the homeless. He completed the more than 3,900 km journey from Perth to Sydney over 46 days, becoming the fastest ever Australian to do so. And his run raised more than $2.6 million. Mr Brockmann went on to start Nedd’s Uncomfortable Challenge in 2024 — where people were urged to choose a challenge that made them uncomfortable and stick with it for 10 days.  Brockmann challenged himself to run around the Sydney Olympic Park athletics track for 1,600 km — which he took 12 days to complete. The challenge raised another $8 million for homelessness support.

    “We need innovative ways to help these people who need help,” Mr Brockmann said.  “I dream of a world where there is no homelessness.”

    Local Hero of the Year 2026

    From Western Australia, the Local Hero of the Year is Frank Mitchell, an Indigeneous constriction leader. Frank has co-founded three construction companies in the past decade and has created over 70 upskilling positions in the electrical and construction industry for First Nations people. Being offered an apprenticeship as a young single father helped Mr Mitchell get his life on track and he resolved to do his best to provide opportunities for others. “The electrical apprenticeship gave me so much, I started to think things and achieve things that I never thought [possible],” he said. Today, his four companies collectively employ more than 200 full-time staff.

  • The Coachbuilder’s Column: Volume 15: Issue 18: 29th December, 2025: A further selection of recent reads!!

    The following reviews and comments about a number of books and publications may be of interest to some of my readers.  The following publications are included in this particular contribution, which will be our final one for 2025

    • Quarterly Essay 99: ‘Woodside vs the Planet’ by Marian Wilkinson [pub. 2025];
    • Australian Foreign Affairs Issue 25:  The Bomb: Will Asia go Nuclear? [by various authors];
    • Ghost Empire’ by Richard Fidler [pub 2016];
    • Elianne by Judy Nunn [pub 2013];
    • The Secret Year of Zara Holt’ by Kimberley Freeman [pub 2025];
    • The Secret of Secrets by Dan Brown [pub 2025];
    • The Courageous Life of Weary Dunlop: Surgeon, Prisoner-of-War, Life-saving Leader and Legend of the Thai-Burma Railway by Peter Fitzsimons [pub 2025];
    • A Woman’s Eye: Her Art: Reframing the Narrative Through Art and Life’ by Drusilla Modjeska[pub. 2025].

    October, 2025

    In the Quarterly Essay No. 99, titled ‘Woodside vs The Planet: How a Company Captured a Country’ by Marian Wilkinson  [ and published by Black Inc], I felt we had a very powerful exposure of the way in which these huge and powerful gas and oil companies, etc, can and do dominate and influence government, public and private opinion, over the ‘little people’ of our nation who have little means or power themselves to defend that arrogance and domination.  Apart from ‘both Indigenous and non-Indigenous’ farming communities, it seems that the most  affected groups here are our more remote and regional area Indigenous populations – the way in which much of their culture and historical archaeological sites are [despite all the contrary rhetoric] basically ignored in preference to the ‘greater good’ of the nation [or should that read ‘the greater good of the companies in question’?]. Many of the already destroyed and/or threatened such sites have been described as ancient ‘works of creative human genius’ A substantial section of the Essay is devoted to the damage caused and/or threatened to these works.

    Now, I can’t claim enough technical or scientific knowledge about the whole question of the effects of various coal, gas, etc industries  on the climate and the future of our weather patterns,  but it does seem that power and wealth will continue into the near future to ride roughshod over community needs and expectations, government policy making [disguised as climate action while favouring the all-powerful] and so much scientific evidence  – evidence which, while my lack of knowledge means  I’m personally unable to argue for or against –  does seem indisputable amongst the long-standing  research that has and is being  carried out.

    In any case, I feel Wilkinson has pulled no punches in pushing against for eg Woodside’s argument that gas is a necessary transition fuel, as the world decarbonises.

    On page 81 of her Essay, she writes “In the past decade, Australian governments have supported Woodside and other big LNG exporters pushing new gas developments with the argument that we need more gas so the world can cut emissions from coal. While this might have been the case in the past, today this claim can no longer stand without being tested. Is there evidence new LNG exports will significantly lower global emissions, or are the gas companies vastly exaggerating?  Yes, some gas will be needed to back up renewables, but how much, and for how long? “

    Woodside, for eg, in wanting to extend their North West Shelf and other developments are claiming their gas exports will be required until 2070 and beyond. Wilkinson argues this is a gross exaggeration. She also notes that ‘China was the world’s biggest LNG importer and Australia’s second-biggest LNG customer in 2023. But China’s prospects as a long-term lucrative coal-to-gas switching customer are in doubt. Instead, its massive investment in renewable energy is disrupting fossil-fuel markets around the world…………..While Trump has abandoned a leadership role in the energy transition, China Xi Jinping has embraced it”.  Will Woodside’s gas be still needed by China, and other developing nations by 2070 is her concern?

    My comments  can’t do the Essay proper justice here – the following introduces it to potential readers –

    “The world may have committed at Paris to hold back dangerous climate change, but Australia’s fossil-fuel giant Woodside is doubling down: it has bold new plans to keep producing gas out to 2070. Support from the major parties is locked in, so something has to give.

    This is a story of power and influence, pollution and protest. How does one company capture a country? How convincing is Woodside’s argument that gas is a necessary transition fuel, as the world decarbonises? And what is the new “energy realism” narrative being pushed by Trump’s White House?

    In this engrossing essay, Marian Wilkinson reveals the ways of corporate power and investigates the new face of resistance and disruption. The stakes could not be higher.

    “The gas companies and the Labor governments in WA and Canberra had refined their defence: the gas industry was helping the world decarbonise, curbing its emissions and providing energy security. It sounded like the planet could hardly have a better friend than Australia’s LNG industry and companies like Woodside.” —Marian Wilkinson, Woodside vs the Planet”

    Marian Wilkinson is a multi-award-winning investigative journalist and former reporter at ABC TV’s ‘Four Corners’, and an executive producer of that program.  She has been a foreign correspondent and deputy editor for the Sydney Morning Herald. Her books include The Fixer, Dark Victory [with David Marr], and The Carbon Club.

    A number of responses to this Essay ‘Woodside vs The Planet’ would appear in the most recent Quarterly Essay [No.100] and these generally supported Wilkinson, with Greg Bourne for eg, noting that ‘The IEA quite rightly points out the myriad of decarbonisation opportunities in multiple sectors  of the economy using numerous technologies. What is missing is the will”.  Or, ‘Australian LNG companies, Woodside in particular, want their ‘customers’ to remain hooked. Successive Australian governments are complicit in the trade…”

    Or from Peter Garrett: “Woodside vs The Planet confirms that the fossil-fuel industry is a tax-avoiding, ecocidal con job, whose activities impose great harm, a fact they have been fully aware of for decades…”

    On the other hand, Glen Gill writes: “My position is that this essay is a polemic, and its publication…is based on Wilkinson’s past reputation and not its content. First, I find the title…ridiculous: the author is simply playing to the emotions of the uninformed Masses, particularly the activists…………Activists don’t debate or make written arguments, they simply protest and broadcast a narrative of fear, ignorance and hatred…”

    In response to such criticism, Wilkinson notes Garrett’s channelling of the frustration and anger of many climate veterans and of many ordinary voters who are alarmed by the Albanese government’s continues support for large coal and gas export projects despite the urgent warnings of climate scientists.

    1 November, 2025

    In Issue 25 of the ‘Australian Foreign Affairs’ publication [AFA}, the topic is titled ‘The Bomb: Will Asia go Nuclear? – some rather disturbing essays here, certainly from the viewpoint of looking ahead to the lives of my children and their children’s future generations. For eg, Gareth Evans in his essay ‘The Challenge’ writes “The Australia-initiated Canberra Commission on the Elimination of Nuclear Weapons in its 1996 report, stated the case for outright abolition with admirable succinctness. ‘So long as any state retains nuclear weapons, others will want them. So long as any nuclear weapons remain anywhere, they are bound one day to be used – if not by design, then by human error, system error, miscalculation or misjudgement. And any such use will be catastrophic for life on this planet as we know it’”.

    From other essays, we learn that in this part of the world, with China and India for eg [and the rogue North Korea] building on their nuclear capabilities, friends and allies such as Japan, South Korea, Indonesia and others may in the future consider the protective need of their own weapon structure, which could see Asia emerging as the new epicentre of nuclear risk. A scary scenario for all of us.

    Jonathon Pearlman, the Editor of AFA sums of the topic of the edition with:

    ‘Today, Australia needs to prepare not only for an increasingly insecure Asia but also for the risk that this insecurity could cause nuclear weapons to spread across the region. Australia must consider how to respond to near-allies such as Japan going nuclear, whether China’s nuclear outlook is changing as its ambitions grow, and how it might renew its diplomatic push for arms control in an age of proliferation and as memories of the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki fade.  Australia may also find itself pondering, for the first time in more than 50 years, whether otherwise unthinkable options should be part of its own plan B.’

    Other essays in Issue 25 are: 

    • “Boiling point: Preparing for the new nuclear age”, by Brendan Taylor
    • “Beyond AUKUS: Could Australia get the bomb”, by Stephan Frühling & Andrew O’Neil
    • “Red sunrise: China’s rapid nuclear expansion”, by Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan

    Gareth Evans expands on those three essays, and he includes the following scenarios.

    The nine nuclear-­armed states possess between them over 12,200 nuclear warheads, with a combined destructive capacity of more than 145,000 Hiroshima bombs. Some 9000 of these are militarily active
    or deployed. Alarmingly, some 2000 US and Russian weapons remain on high alert, ready to be launched within a decision window for each president of four to eight minutes. The US and Russia, holding between
    them 90 per cent of the global stockpile, dramatically downsized their inventories after the end of the Cold War, but that momentum has completely stalled. Every nuclear-­armed state is now modernising or increasing its arsenal, especially China, whose inventory has doubled in a few short years to nearly 600 weapons, with new land-­ and seaborne delivery systems.

    More troubling still, the longstanding taboo against the use of nuclear weapons seems to be weakening, with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin in particular talking up this prospect in the Ukraine war in language not heard since the height of the Cold War. A number of states are considering using nuclear weapons – especially so-­called “tactical” weapons – not just for deterrence but for warfighting.

    The big arms control agreements of the past, which – at least between the US and Russia – banned certain systems outright, set constraints on deployments and built confidence through transparency, are now either dead (the Anti-­Ballistic Missile, Intermediate-­range Nuclear Forces and Open Skies treaties) or dying (the 2010 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty [New START]). If, as seems likely, the latter expires in February 2026, Russia and the US will be without any limits on their nuclear forces for the first time in over fifty years.

    Many might regard all this as scare-mongering, however, as I intimated at the beginning, as a senior Australian, I am looking ahead to the later generations of my children and grandchildren and the kind of world scenario they may be faced with under the kind of conditions described by Evans and others!

    11th November 2025

    I’ve been reading ‘Ghost Empire’ by Richard Fidler, published in 2016, and of 492 pages. This is the 4th of Fidler’s histories I have read over recent years, and I found it quite fascinating -the 1000-year history of the eastern Roman province of Constantinople before it was conquered and taken over by the Muslims in 1453 and became known as Istanbul in the modern nation of Turkey. Fidler adds in his familiar way, a personal touch to the story, by relating the history while travelling through Istanbul with his teenage son in 2014, and visiting many of the ancient sites [or what remained of them]

    As Professor Karalis of the University of Sydney wrote: “This is an invaluable addition to the growing literature on Byzantium. It doesn’t simply offer a gripping and fascinating story of crucial events in its one-thousand-year existence [though are there in their full gory] but adds the personal touch, the unearthing of its emotional significance through his visit to present-day Istanbul with his son”

    Fidler and his son Joe’s journey to Istanbul was fired by Richard’s passion for the rich history of the dazzling Byzantine Empire – centred around the legendary Constantinople – he takes the reader into some of the most extraordinary tales in history.

    I’ve previously read three of Fidler’s books – all published after Ghost Empire – Saga Land, the story of Iceland [pub 2017], The Golden Maze, Biography of Prague [2020], and The Book of Roads and Kingdoms, the story of medieval wanderers and the city of Baghdad [2022].

    I think I have found Ghost Empire the most interesting of all four – although, as with the Baghdad story in particular, the depictions of the brutal treatment of man’s fellow beings through assassinations, butchery, extermination, fratricide, and so on, I continue to find disturbing [though one has to wonder how much the world has changed, as illustrated for eg currently in Palestine, Ukraine, some African countries and so on]. Despite that, if readers interested in history have the time, this is a story worth tracking down – the clash of civilisations and religions, the fall of empires, the rise of Christianity and Islam amongst other sects, including references to and the involvement of the Crusades in this story.

    19 November 2025

    I have read a number of Judy Nunn’s novels –  but this one had been sitting on my shelves since 2018 – Elianne by Judy Nunn, published in 2013, my edition of 472 pages. Another of my favourite genres – an Australian based historical novel.  Mostly set in the 20th century from just prior to WW1, and extending to beyond the Vietnam War, a fictional approach to many of the true events of that period, in all, a very enjoyable, and to some degree a topical read reflecting the periods of my life, though basically set within the cane field areas of Queensland, and occasionally ‘floating’ between there and Sydney. As described on the cover – “Judy Nunn’s latest novel is a story of honour, family honour among hard men in a hard environment of Queensland’s sugar mills. But when honour is lost so too is love and without love, what becomes of a family? 

    A point by point summary of the story, as presented by Booktopia.

    A sweeping story of wealth, power, privilege and betrayal, set on a grand sugar cane plantation in Queensland.

    • LEGACY IN THE CANE FIELDS………………………………………………………………………
      In 1881 ‘Big Jim’ Durham ruthlessly creates for Elianne Desmarais, his young French wife, the finest of the great sugar mills of the Southern Queensland cane fields, and names it in her honour.
    • SUGAR AND SECRETS…………………………………………………………………………………
      The massive estate becomes a self-sufficient fortress and home to hundreds of workers, but ‘Elianne’ and the Durham Family, have dark and distant secrets; secrets that surface in the wildest of times, the 1960s.
    • AN ERA OF CHANGE
      For Kate Durham and her brothers Neil and Alan, freedom is the catchword of the decade. Rock ‘n’ roll, the Pill, the Vietnam War, the rise of Feminism, Asian immigration and the Freedom Ride join forces to rattle the chains of traditional values.
    • The workers leave the great sugar estates as mechanisation lessens the need for labour – and the Durham family, its secrets exposed, begins its fall from grace…
    • In the tough world of Queensland sugar mills, it’s not only cane that is crushed …

    If that scenario appeals to readers, have a look for the book.

    24 November 2025

    Now, Kimberley Freeman is an Australian author of historical fiction about and for women, having published over thirty novels.  So why was I reading ‘The Secret Year of Zara Holt’ by Kimberley Freeman, published in 2025, of 452 pages?  A book about women’s fashions, clothing and so on! 

    But so much more with an interesting ‘imagined’ scenario depicted over the 12 months following the disappearance of Zara’s husband, PM Harold Holt in the waters off Portsea, Victoria.  I found this book of special interest because of the depictions of political and world events and other aspects of life during most of my own lifetime, as with the previous book, Elianne. 

    Described as a richly imagined novel of love, fashion, scandal and one captivating woman’s passionate life.

    Portsea, 1967. When Australian Prime Minister Harold Holt disappears while swimming, his wife Zara loses herself in the memories of their volatile relationship. She always believed Harry when he said no matter what happened, he’d never leave. Their bond has stretched to London, Europe, India, America. It has survived anger, loss and heartbreak, media scrutiny, secrets and lies. But now all Zara wants is for Harry to come home. With that in mind, and hinted at through the book title, the next 12 months after Holt’s disappearance represents Zara and Harry’s ‘continued existence’ within the overall story.

    One interesting point that arises from this story – the wives and partners of politicians [certainly up until the time of Zara as the PM’s wife] found their lives were dominated by the political demands of their male spouse, they were really only there as a decoration, the necessary companion at official dinners, overseas trips, etc. Zara Holt attempted to rebel against this albeit generally unsuccessfully.

    Anyway, again, anyone interested, even as a partially fictional depiction of the life of Zara Holt, and the politics of the time, well worth a read. Described in some circles as a fierce story of love, scandal, betrayal and one captivating woman’s passionate life.

    [And I wonder if people of my age, especially here in Australia, how many of them can recall what they were doing on the afternoon that Harold Holt disappeared, presumed drowned – or ‘his presumed death’ as Wikipedia describes it?   I recall precisely – I was at Melbourne’s Myer Music Bowl, at a concert by the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, on a hot Sunday afternoon, December 17th, 1967. I came away from that venue with severe sunburn, so severe that I would spend the next two days in bed in our then ‘batchelor flat in Chrystobel Crescent, Hawthorn, feeling very sorry for myself with severe sunstroke, and getting no sympathy from my two house-mates!!].

    27th November, 2025

    After reading ‘The Secret of Secrets’ by Dan Brown, published in 2025, of 676 pages  –  wow, what an enthralling story, the first of Brown’s novels I have read since 2017 [and I just noticed from the cover that this was his first novel for 8 years which probably explains my reading time lapse] and the 6th overall [and all 676 pages covered over 2 days of reading, though admittedly at the sacrifice of other tasks!!]

    Yes, a story that one didn’t want to stop reading, even if some of the many ‘scientific’ and/or fantasy laden scenarios I found hard to understand [or even believe], yet that didn’t stop the enjoyment of the storyline.  My only ‘grumble’ [if you could call it that] was the manner in which Brown continually switched from one ‘scene’ to another within a few pages – a touch annoying when one was waiting to see how a particular situation was going to proceed, but would be forced to wait a few pages until the author came back to it, while he diverged into another aspect of the storyline!!  Nevertheless, a great read.

    I’ll leave it there for now – except to say the story is mainly set in Prague [an old and dangerous city, steeped in folklore and mystery, where for over two thousand years, the tides of history have washed back and forth over it, leaving behind echoes of everything that has gone before]. As noted at the book’s beginning, all organisations, buildings etc referred to in the book exist [almost a travel book in many parts], and apparently, all artwork, artifacts, symbols, and documents mentioned are real, while all experiments, technologies and scientific results are true to life, despite some sceptic notions I might have felt during my read! 

    From part of a review appearing in the DailyGrail website, we read  –   ‘Fast forward to 2025, and Dan Brown has just released his latest thriller based in the world of symbologist Robert Langdon, The Secret of Secrets. It very much sticks to the formula of his previous novels: Robert Langdon wakes up in a European city (this time around, Prague) and over the course of around 24 hours goes on a wild adventure in which he explores the esoteric landmarks of the city in question, solving puzzles in order to eventually solve the core mystery at the heart of the story, all while evading a monster-like killer………………… the plot of the novel revolves around scientific research into altered states of consciousness, psychically retrieved information and ‘afterlife’ states, so everything from psychedelics to near-death experiences are discussed. This topic comes via the research of major character Katherine Solomon, who returns from her original appearance in The Lost Symbol some 16 years ago, now as Langdon’s partner, romantically as well as joining him over the course of this adventure in Prague’.

    Described as Brown’s most stunning novel yet—a propulsive, twisty, thought-provoking masterpiece featuring a thrilling plot that intertwines themes of consciousness, mythology, and a race against time. Have a look at it!

    14th December, 2025

    ‘The Courageous Life of Weary Dunlop: Surgeon, Prisoner-of-War, Life-saving Leader and Legend of the Thai-Burma Railway’, by Peter Fitzsimons,  published in 2025, of 540 pages – this was Fitzsimons’ annual contribution in 2025, another powerful book by Australia’s best selling non-fiction writer. Not everyone likes his style of story-telling, whose passion is the telling of Australian stories of great men, women and stirring events in our history, but presented in a form of novel rather than a straight-out text book historical depiction.

     The story of the notorious Thai-Burma railway, and the Japanese treatment of their prisoners-of-war has been related by many writers and commentators in past years, and I have reviewed some of those writings in this Column over time. This book pulls no punches, and does not hold back or try to sensitise the events of that dark period in our nation’s history, and of the world in general during the 1939/45 World War.

    In summary form as described in various sources:

    In September 1939, young Australian surgeon Edward ‘Weary’ Dunlop was working in London when the dogs of war were unleashed. Signing up, he was commissioned a captain in the Australian Army Medical Corps (AAMC) and sent to the Middle East, serving in Palestine, Greece, Crete, Egypt and Tobruk.

    As the European war dragged on, an emboldened Japanese force captured Singapore and marched closer to Australian shores. Weary and over 3000 others sailed back to Java to fight this new enemy. At the No. 1 Allied General Hospital in Bandoeng, the Japanese were ready to murder the bedridden when Weary put his body in front of the bayonets. From that moment his leadership, ingenuity and selflessness became legend as Allied prisoners-of-war were sent to Singapore, Thailand and finally faced the hell of working as slave labour on the infamous Thai-Burma Railway. In the POW camps, tropical diseases, malnutrition, and the brutal work regime imposed by their Japanese captors meant the death toll was horrific. And yet, with little to no medical supplies, under extreme physical pressure, Weary Dunlop took risks and beatings to defy the Japanese and keep his men alive in circumstances that tested the limits of human endurance.

    The following are four brief quotations from the book, followed by a more-lengthy extract, which perhaps give a minute idea of the conditions faced by POWS at that time, though even then, these are relatively mild descriptions compared with much of the content.  These selections only go a very small way and reflect on just a few minor situations in covering the contents of the book, which should be read in full by those interested in re-examining the detailed history and stories of that period.  However, a warning:  if readers don’t wish to be reminded of what happened in those years, then simply don’t read this book, because put plainly, much of the contents make for very unpleasant reading.

    • page 364: “On this particular day, Major Corlette is sitting in a leaking tent as the monsoonal rain pours down, holding the hand of a young Australian man, just 19 years old, as he dies from a cruel combination of severe dysentery and a haemorrhage. What most aggrieves Corlette is that he knows he could save him if the Japanese had given him even the most basic of medicines, but no, they have denied him, and with one last death rattle, the lad dies.  ‘My heart was filled with hatred and I was cursing our captors…those little yellow bastards who by starvation, brutality and neglect  had murdered this boy and many others of his companions”.
    • page 366:  “ When a handful of the desperate POWs decide to make a break for it, and try to get through Burma to India, they are caught and shot. All this, and of course cholera has hit them, too. And yet, without someone like Weary laying down the law on how to proceed, and working tirelessly to keep men alive, all descends into a miasma of misery and mass death”.
    • page 370: “Yes, just over there, a man simply crashes down, taking half a bunk with him. Now, it is a question of luck. Had he already drawn his breakfast [rice] before his collapse? If not, he might still be able to get up and get it.  If so, he can lie in the mud, trying to scratch together what he can and get it into him, before facing a day that will now weaken him so much further……Grasping their dixie and hats grimly, late arrivals stumble into place just in time to call their own numbers , trying not to collapse themselves, and just have time to wolf down the three-spoonfuls of rice that breakfast consists of, before sorting themselves to get another three-spoonful allocation for lunch”.  
    • page 391: The completion of the railway is not something any of the Australians can celebrate, beyond their own survival to this point – for they, more than anyone, are aware of the cost in lives to get it done. Courtesy of the slave labour that has been used – their own – a project that had been estimated by civil engineers to take five years has been bashed and thrashed through by the military engineers in just 16 months. It has cost the lives of about 100,000 men, together with many women and children among the Asian forced labourers, particularly the Tamils. Of the dead men, some 3000 are Australians – around one life for every sleeper laid along the overall 400 kilometres of track. [Though workers on the Thai-Burma Railway were just four percent of all Australians who saw service in the Second World War, they tallied just under a third of all deaths”.

    An extended quotation from pages 374-375

    “Everybody must be counted. The Romans were very strict on this idea back when the Dead Sea was only sick, but they have nothing on the Japanese. Roll call is for all, no exception, no excuses. And this afternoon, Blue, says the guard, ‘You one short’.

    Yes, but there is no need to worry about an escapee, unless you count the afterlife as a hideout for fugitives. The fellow missing is Dusty, he’s busy dying, back over yonder. ‘I don’t think he’ll last an hour,’ Sys Blue.

    Well, that is fascinating Blue, and if roll call were an honour system it might be good enough, but as long as Dusty’s body is breathing it’s a soldier, and all Australian soldiers are to be present for roll call. Blue would ask if the officer is joking, but he is familiar with the Japanese sense of humour, or lack thereof, and knows that he is deadly serious.

    Ah, well. Such is death. No, stuff it, let’s try reason even if it is never in season with this mob.  ‘Look, he’ll be dead in an hour. Why do we want to bring him over? Leave hm in peace there. He’s on his own. There’s not even anybody with him. Yiu can’t get him’.

    No, they can’t. Blue must. So he goes back, with four men, to find a bamboo stretcher, and they make their way back alng the muddy road to find Dusty. Now there is muddy, and there is waiste-deep muddy, and you and Sod’s law can guess which one is today.  Oh, did we mention we are all barefoot?  Well. They are. But they find Dusty, he is…just…rasping. Fuck. The men talk amongst themselves. Is it worth carrying him? Is it decent?

    ‘Well, he’ll be dead within half an hour.’

    Alright, stuff this. Blue walks back to tell the guard, now backed up by witnesses.

    ‘WHERE?’ yells the guard as the Dusty-free Blue is spotted. ‘WHY didn’t you bring him?’

    ‘He’s only got half an hour to live’, says Blue.

    Really? Swell Blue won’t even have that if he doesn’t get the bloody man here soon. The guard is ranting, he is raving, his fists are flying closer and closer and Blue doesn’t care.  So what if he gets hit?

    ‘Physical pain is very easy to take Physical pain won’t break you. It’s mental pain that beats you’.

    But mental pain it is, for he is ordered back. Blue goes again, to find Dusty lying and dying and still breathing. Silently they hoist him onto the bamboo stretcher – which squeaks in protest as soon as he is lifted, as light as he is – determined to bring some dignity  to this bloody thing, but failing as they slip and fall in the mud, and Dusty must be gathered and regathered, his bearers slogging through the mud as the bamboo chafes each skeletal shoulder.  They get him there, and when they lower the stretcher, Dusty…is dead.

    Ichi!  One! He is counted.

    ‘Everybody is correct’

    The guard is happy, the officer is happy, the roll is accurate. Blue and his men pick up Dusty and take him to the cremation pit.

    Dusty, present and correct, is left to his own devices, and Blue and the boys stagger back to camp. This war. These people. You would not believe it”. 

    Finally, some concluding remarks.:

    • After all, as he [Weary] would later note, while the overall percentage of deaths  among those Australians who saw active service in World War II was just 3 per cent, when it came to POWs  under Japanese control, 8000 of 22,000 overall had died, meaning for them the percentage of death was a staggering 36 per cent [page 447];
    • ‘Thousands of men, middle-aged now,  in Australia and across the world’, one of them would note, ‘when they read that Weary Dunlop had been made Australian of the Year [in 1976], would have said” Yes, I knew him in Thailand. He’s the Australian of many years. We’d never have got back home if it hadn’t been for [him]’ [page 458];
    • ‘In late April [1987], Tom Uren accompanies Weary with a delegation of ex-POWs back to Hellfire Pass. It is a deeply moving affair for both men, as all the memories, the horror, the heat, the humidity, the deaths, disease and disasters come flooding back’ [page 463];
    • One of the many extremely cruel guards was a Korean, whom the POWs referred to as The Lizard.  Not long after Tom Uren retired from Parliament. He and weary received an invitation to attend a seminar for survivors of the Thai -Burma railway together with Australian and Japanese historians. Among those attending was Yi Nak-Nae from Korea, the man the Japanese called Kakurai Hiromura – known to the Australians as The Lizard, the very man who almost drove Weary, completely out of character, to murder him because of his viciousness to the Australian POWs, only changing his mind at the last minute because of the fear of Japanese retribution against the POWs. The Korean was only 18 at the time, and wanted to explain that he himself was a slave of the Japanese as were thousands of his countrymen, and had to carry out the orders of their masters under fear of death and torture. He now sought the understanding of Uren and Weary as to why he and his fellow Korean guards had been so brutal. He is absolutely clear on why he came to Australia. He wishes to try to make amends, and even friends, all these years on. Tom Uren as I imagine many of his fellow POWs would have been, was reluctant to shake the Korean’s hand in friendship, but not Weary Dunlop who ‘proffers his hand, and engulfs the hand of Yi Hak-Nae, before shaking it’.  As Fitzsimons writes in an extensive Epilogue section of the book, ‘And yet for his part, Tom Uren does not offer his hand in reply. The former heavyweight boxer is all for forgiving their former enemies as a people.  But he struggles much more when it comes to individuals like Yi Hak-Nae. And he is not alone in his attitude……several of the other POWs will tell Yi that while they were glad he had apologised, and accepted his sincerity, they cannot bring themselves to personally forgive what had been done to their mates all those years ago. The scars from their time on the Thai-Burma Railway still run too deep.  Weary himself is unrepentant for having accepted Yi’s apology – telling his doctor later that the fact Yi had journeyed to Australia, and given such a heart-felt personal apology was proof positive that there is a ‘little bit of God in every man’ [pages 464-467];

    On a personal note, a thought that often occurs to me [in relation to Australian forces in particular, although of  course we were not the only nation that came under the cruel and statistic domination of the Japanese military, and their Korean slave labour force]  – I wonder what our  grandparents or even parents of that generation would think or feel today, about the situation where Japan is one of Australia’s major trading partners and an international friend?   My own father was part of the Australian forces who fought the Japanese in that nation’s attempts to reach the Australian mainland in the 1940s. He was a kind, gentle Christian man who demonstrated throughout his post-war life how much he cared for the welfare of other people, but certainly in the years immediately after the war, he would like most of his generation have found it very difficult to extend much in the way of forgiveness or generosity towards the enemy of that time. Sadly, I never ascertained to what degree his feelings might have changed prior to his own untimely death in late 1969, but I honestly believed that due to his persona and his attitude to life and  his fellow human beings at that time, that some considerable moderation in feelings would have developed.  Similarly with the current families of a second cousin, who was one of thousands to die as prisoners of the Japanese – have they ever forgiven the nation responsible for the death of that young man? 

    Yes, we can forgive a people for past actions, but we should never forget.

    Fitzsimons certainly doesn’t allow us to do that in this book. 

    As for Weary Dunlop, another great Australian, Tom Uren, referenced above [a former politician and deputy leader of the Australian Labor Party] and fellow POW noted “Weary’s leadership wasn’t pronounced or boasted about or loudmouthed in any way. He was a very kind, quietly spoken human being. He led by example”.

    28th December, 2025

    My final book read for 2025 –  ‘A Woman’s Eye: Her Art: Reframing the Narrative Through Art and Life’ by Drusilla Modjeska, published in 2025 [of 503 pages].

    Drusilla Modjeka is one of Australia’s most acclaimed writers. Her books include the award-winning Poppy and the bestselling The Orchard and Stravinsky’s Lunch [the latter which I read at the end of 2012 after purchasing it from a bookshop in Daylesford, Victoria a couple of months previously] which won the New South Wales Premier’s Literary Award for Non-Fiction. Her novel The Mountain was critically acclaimed and shortlisted for a number of awards; and in 2015 she published her memoir, Second Half First, which was also shortlisted for several prizes. She lives in Sydney.

    Stravinsky’s Lunch dealt with a number of Australian and European artists around the era of Russian composer and conductor, Igor Stravinsky [1882-1971], and features substantial sections on two wonderful female Australian painters, Stella Bowen [1893-1947] and Grace Cossington Smith [1892-1984].

    This new book deals with the early part of the C20th up until shortly after the end of WWII. Some of the early artists mentioned in Stavinsky’s Lunch reappear in this new publication. As Andrea Goldsmith writes for Readings Books – ‘The art of that time was defined in masculine terms and valued through a masculine gaze; indeed, creativity itself was considered to be the domain of men. We all know the names: Picasso, Man Ray, Breton, Rilke, Kandinsky. However, until recently, the women artists in A Woman’s Eye, Her Art, if they were mentioned at all, were as muses/appendages to their famous male partners. There’s Dora Maar (Picasso), Lee Miller (Man Ray), Clara Westhoff (Rilke), Gabriele Münter (Kandinsky), just to name a few of the artists in A Woman’s Eye, Her Art. Modjeska ‘reframe[s] the narrative through [the] art and life’ of these women and, in addition, by drawing on the work of contemporary artists like Julie Rrap and Chantal Joffe reveals their radicalism, significance and their enduring influence [they appear throughout the book as contemporary echoes to the women of the past]..

    There’s a novelistic feel to A Woman’s Eye, Her Art, which I found made it easier to read, as Modjeska takes us into the places where the women worked, to erotically charged summer holidays in the south of France, as she portrays the problems of being an artist/mother/wife. We see the horrors of Buchenwald and Dachau through the eyes and camera of Lee Miller [some quotations follow in my extended summary], and marvel at the queerness of Claude Cahun. The book was a pleasure to read’. Although admittedly some aspects of the women’s stories I found a little disquieting, and over-emphasised, such as intimate details of their affairs, partner swapping and so on. But then again, so much of what these women artists were ‘forced’ to do were often a means of ‘trying’ to have their specific artistic talents recognised and acknowledged to the same degree that men were recognised.

    From page 323: “The question that hovers unanswered is, how was the summer [1937] for the women? How did they deal with the muse-swapping and homage among themselves – though once again we don’t know how much of it actually happened, or how exaggerated it has become”.

    Picasso in particular gets much mention in the book – ‘The absence of paintings of Eileen Agar by Picasso suggests not much fascination came her way, and her account of that summer has her wary of Picasso, whom she describes as dominant and competitive, but not flirtatious – that was the province of the other men’.

    A couple of definitions of terms used throughout the book: –

    A muse is a person who provides creative inspiration to a person of the arts (such as a writer, artist, composer, and so on). In the course of history, these have usually (but not necessarily) been women. The term is derived from the Muses, ancient Greek goddesses of inspiration. Human muses are woven throughout history. In modern times, specific people are called muses; as a rule, these are close friends and sometimes lovers or spouses, who inspire or affect the works of an artist due to their disposition, charisma, wisdom, sophistication, eroticism, intimate friendship, or other traits. Sometimes muses directly provide models for specific paintings and sculptures and for characters in literary works, but sometimes not, rather providing inspiration for the artist’s work as a whole. In this book, a prime example [though not the only one] is the combination of female French photographer and painter Dora Maar [1907-1997] with Spain’s Pablo Picasso [1881-1973]. Interestingly as comes out in the book, while Maar was both a pioneering Surrealist artist and an antifascist activist, and was depicted in a number of Picasso’s paintings, including his ‘Portrait of Dora Maar’ and ‘Dora Maar au Chat’, Maar said of the works: “All his portraits of me are lies. They’re all Picassos. Not one is Dora Maar.”

    From page 327: “From the perspective of Roland Penrose’s generation, to say that ‘they were our muses’ was not a disparagement, more a statement of how it was, how it was thought to be.”, and,

    From page 328: “The Surrealist muses. Whichever way you write it, the women are defined: Surrealist, and muse. And by one – but only one – reckoning that’s what they were”.

    The art form of Surrealism is referenced throughout the book – Surrealism is an art and cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists aimed to allow the unconscious mind to express itself, often resulting in the depiction of illogical or dreamlike scenes and ideas. It produced works of painting, writing, photography, theatre, filmmaking, music, comedy and other media as well. Many of the so-called women ‘muses’ in this story were involved with or experimented with surrealism in their respective art genres.

    A Woman’s Eye, Her Art tells how six extraordinary women artists of the twentieth century – including Paula Modersohn-Becker, Clara Westhoff, Claude Cahun and her step-sister lover, Lee Miller and Dora Maar – reframed the narrative through their art and lives. It looks back to the lives and art of these European modernist women who recast the ways in which women’s bodies could be seen – from the self-portraits of Paula Modersohn-Becker, to the Surrealist Claude Cahun who exposed the masquerades of femininity, to the radical nudes of photo-artists Lee Miller and Dora Maar. Alongside them in Paris during the first decades of the twentieth century were many artist-women, their friends and colleagues, including Clara Westhoff-Rilke and Gabriele Münter, Leonora Carrington and Meret Oppenheim. In this book, Drusilla Modjeska examines why these women still matter and, and as she did in her seminal and bestselling work Stravinsky’s Lunch, connects their past to our present.

    This is a beautiful book, richly illustrated and elegantly written about the spirit it took for these artist-women to step out on that path, and the courage it took to stay there. It is the story of what they saw, and how they were seen as they crashed against the hypocrisies that are embedded deep in the structures of society, certainly in that era. And it is about hard-fought freedoms as in their different ways they changed the landscape of the art world and reframed the narrative.

    For a more detailed description of this book, we can turn to ‘Biographers in Conversation’ by Gabriella Kelly-Davis [Dec 4, 2025]

    In A Woman’s Eye, Her Art, Drusilla Modjeska illuminates the radical vision of women artists from early in the twentieth century who challenged and recast how women’s bodies and lives could be seen and represented. From self-portraits to Surrealist art and radical nudes of photo-artists, these European Modernists reframed the narrative through their art and lives.

    Beginning with Paula Modersohn-Becker’s groundbreaking 1906 nude self-portrait, in which she painted herself seemingly pregnant when she was not, Modjeska traces a lineage of creative courage that extends from the dawn of the twentieth century through two world wars and into our contemporary moment.

    At the heart of Modjeska’s narrative lies what she refers to as ‘the grammars of gender’ – the deeply embedded social expectations that shape how women are perceived and permitted to exist. Without the language provided by later feminist thinkers such as Simone de Beauvoir and Virginia Woolf, artists like Modersohn-Becker struggled to articulate their predicament, describing their artistic compulsion as ‘fate’, or viewing themselves as ‘a puzzle’. Yet through their art, these women found a visual language to paint themselves as they were, rather than as they were seen through the male gaze.

    Modjeska’s choice to write a collective biography rather than focus on a single artist reflects her conviction that context and community matter profoundly. The friendships, rivalries and support networks among these artists—Paula Modersohn-Becker, Clara Westhoff, Claude Cahun and her step-sister lover, Lee Miller and Dora Maar—enabled their work in ways that an individual life story can obscure.

    This approach also allows Modjeska to explore how the camera revolutionised artistic practice in the 1920s and 1930s, offering female photographers like Lee Miller opportunities to earn a living through fashion and advertising while pursuing their own radical photo art in their studios.

    Perhaps most compelling is how Modjeska connects the past to present through what she calls ‘contemporary echoes’—living artists whose work continues these earlier conversations. British painter Chantal Joffe encountered Modersohn-Becker’s pregnant self-portrait around 2000 while grappling with the same question: can a woman be both artist and mother? A century later, this question remains urgent. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Julie Rrap, whose artworks focus on representations of the body, knew the male Surrealists but not Claude Cahun or Lee Miller, their female contemporaries, as their archives had been boxed up in attics after World War II and only rediscovered decades later.

    The disappearance of so many artist-women after the war haunts Modjeska’s narrative. This was a generation that had pushed back against those deep grammars of gender, and then, with the outbreak of war had to find new forms for their art, new forms of courage. Claude Cahun’s resistance work landed her in a Nazi jail. Lee Miller, who became a war correspondent for Vogue, travelled with the Allied forces, photographing, among much else, the horrors of Buchenwald and Dachau, though many of her most important photographs from the concentration camps were considered as too confronting for a world eager to celebrate peace.

    In the decades following the war, these women who had risked everything, their safety, their sanity and their artistic vision, were erased from view, their contributions forgotten until feminist art historians began recovering them.

    A Woman’s Eye, Her Art stands as a powerful testament to the creative courage of extraordinary women artists. Modjeska brings these women into focus as visionaries in their own right, reframing how women’s art is seen and valued. By illuminating their once-overlooked contributions, she highlights the spirit it took for these women to create against the odds and claim their place in art history.

    Not everyone’s ‘cup of tea’ but if the history of art from different eras is of interest, it’s a great read!  

    To conclude. here are a few selected extracts from the book, in particular relating to Lee Miller’s experiences as a photo-journalist war correspondent for Vogue magazine [London], near and around the front-lines towards the closing months of WWII. Admittedly, most of these extracts come from the final chapter of Modjeska’s book [titled ‘Believe it’ Lee Miller, War Correspondent], and the emphasise is concentrated on the results of her photography and reporting undertakings, usually, living and working in the ‘field’. The principal theme of the book is covered through chapters 1-8, referred to above previously. While an American herself. Lee is of not-so-distant German ancestry.

    Many of her reports back to Vogue in London, were highlighted by the words ‘I IMPLORE YOU TO BELIEVE THIS IS TRUE’.

    • Page 391:  “Written in 1996, there’s a note of bemusement – and little sign of the recognition  which had already begun, that the observing eye of women journalists from that war – and the next generation reporting  from the war in Vietnam – had ‘changed the optics’  with their focus less on the smoke  and bombs and marching troops than on the terrible reality for those who were left to live amid the devastation : the women, the children, the orphans, the wounded, the refugees, the homeless and displaced.”
    • Page 394-395:  “From the point of view of art in Paris, Lee Miller writes, the most valuable contribution has been the fact that Picasso stayed here under the occupation as an inspiration to others. He was celebrated with a large exhibition of his wartime work…though praise was matched by ridicule – and worse – by those objecting to any return of the modern. More spats, more arguments, even rioters attacking the paintings on the wall.”
    • Page 396-396:   “ At the Hotel Scribe, news was shared among the press, all that they’d seen and heard, all that they knew – [Lee Miller] was among the journalists taken to the city’s Gestapo prisons. It took four days to see them all, there were so many – and after that they were taken to the fortress at Romanville ‘equipped with large metal-lined ovens where prisoners could be prepared for interrogation  by a process of slow, excruciating toasting’. And if there was any doubting it…had interviewed survivors, with swathes of their skin like raw beef.”
    • Page 398: “This was the Paris Lee Miller was to report from – and on – not in a diary, not in a memoir written a decade later, but then, immediately, for Vogue. How to give words to the joys, the hatreds, the betrayals, the shames, the deaths? As a correspondent for Vogue, her tomorrow was assigned: to report on how the women of Paris had survived, how they had dressed for war, as well as to profile celebrities [including Colette, Marlene Dietrich and Maurice Chevalier] to help get the  to help get the Frogue office working again – and prepare for the opening of the designer collections in October.”
    • Page 400-401: “Once they were over [the collections] she was briefly in Luxembourg, witness to its liberation as the Allies pushed through to the border with Germany. In a service message to London, she defends herself for not being ‘joyful’. She couldn’t commit herself – or Vogue – ‘to being rosy-minded’. Liberation was not a ‘happy-ever-after-event’. As she knew from Paris, after the ‘orgy of kisses’ and ‘fiesta of goodwill’, there is hangover and shortage, retribution and anger.  ‘In the reckoning that comes with survival, nervous mistrust can seep like little drops of poison. Back in Paris, nothing was easy. It wasn’t for Lee Miller, and it wasn’t for her friends who’d suffered through the occupation, with its compromises, its poisons and betrayals.”
    • Page 404:  “In towns along the border, civilians didn’t know who was friend, who foe. Strasbourg had been raised by the Allies, and as Lee Miller looked at the ruins of their city and met the bombed-out citizens, it was with unexpected shame Had it been necessary to destroy so much so close to the end of the war? At least in England, when the bombers appeared, everyone knew it was the enemy and to run for shelter. But when the townspeople of Strasbourg had watched allied bombers fly over them to strike the enemy who had invaded them, they had rejoiced – until that is, the bombs fell on their upturned faces. The ruins, Lee Miller writes, were ‘appalling’ even to someone who’d ‘seen nothing but ruins for weeks.”
    • Page 406: “She was in Cologne when the Gestapo jail was opened…..This was a jail in the heart of a city, in the heart of Germany. And there too, the women with their bouquets [of welcome to the liberators] claimed to know nothing of any of it as they asked for lifts in the jeeps. ‘How dare they!’ Didn’t they know what the men around them in uniform were doing?  While in Aachen the first city to fall. Lee Miller describes the inhabitants as ‘scared and sullen’, not yet believing the war was lost. But as the press moved on to other cities, she describes women running through the ruins towards them – arrogant and spoiled in their silk stockings waving and cheering, offering blossoms, as if they were liberated, not conquered. When she spoke to them, not one woman knew anything about anything that had been going on around them, not the deportation of the Jews, not the slave labourers, nor the concentration camps. Not one of them was a Nazi. Victims, all of them, duped by propaganda, kept ignorant by their press, and now suffering the bombs. Lee Miller’s fury becomes palpable in every word she writes.”
    • Page 410-411: “She came in close on the piles of dead bodies, the bones of starvation, which even when seen were hard to believe. She photographed the ovens that the crematorium that had run out of fuel, rows of them with their doors open………She photographed the lines of Weimar civilians walking past the whipping stalls……Had they not seen the smoke billowing from the chimneys of the crematorium?”
    • Page 412-413:  Lee Miller photographed two ‘beaten-up’ former torturers, who’d shown no mercy, kneeling in a cell begging for mercy every-time the door opens. In one of the most disturbing images of that day she comes in close on the bloodied face of a guard as the shock and terror of his eyes look into the camera…..He may have deserved that broken nose a hundred times over, but there is a glimpse also of a human man, and the question hovers: what turns a man so cruel?  Does it take a broken nose for him to understand that he too is a man who bleeds.”
    • Page 413-414: In the year following the war’s end, Primo Levi [Jewish Italian chemist, partisan, Holocaust survivor, and writer]  in his publication ‘If This Is A Man’ which became the most disturbing and immediate account of Auschwitz,  wrote as witness to the demolition of humanity in that place to “the small actions that could move the dial even there, small moments that gave a man the strength to hold ‘somehow; to something of himself and resist that demolition – he also looks to the Germans and their henchmen, an asks: ‘were these not also men?’ As for the guards with their whips, they were not men, but beasts; guards, who when the Russians arrived ‘raged with the fury of the secure man who wakes up from a long dream of domination and sees his own ruin and is unable to understand it”.
    • Page 420; Lee Miller did not vomit that day [as many of the liberating soldiers had done entering Dachau]  but the trauma cut deep as she walked through the camp with its SS training barracks, its blocks where medical experiments were carried out – men held in freezing water to see how long they could survive, others injected with poisons – and the gas chamber that had been set up with the sign ‘shower-bath’ above its door. ………..It was not the worst of the camps, but it was the first, a place of vengeance against those who dared to oppose the will of the Fuhrer – and a model for the demolition of those who were considered lesser, barely human at all. And lowest of all , blamed for all the ills of Europe, were those who were Jewish.”   
    • Page 415:  In April, 1945, as the press went into the German camps, the enormity was raw, immediate and hard to comprehend. Although the correspondents [including Lee Mller] knew their task was to report on what they saw and have it believed, they faced the question that Primo Levi was yet to give words to.  If this was the work of men, how was it to be understood? The scale of it, the deliberate cruelty, the piles of corpses? The absence of remorse in the guards? Sand the knowing, unknowing civilians who lived within sight and sound of the camps.  The beautiful beechwoods, the cities of Goethe and Beethoven. A dissonance that had hate and adrenalin swirling in Lee Miller’s blood. For her there was thre complicating factor that her father’s family had originated in Hesse, the named Muller changing to Miller over several generations….She wrote of the Germans as ‘Krauts’, a distancing word, consigning them to a category that did not include her. ………[yet] Cold she avoid the question that was every-where around her?  Lee Mller was too good a photographer, too attuned to the human element, to let hate be all thar spoke”.
  • Coachbuilder’s Column: Volume 15: Issue 17: A modern view of a classic novel

    I studied the Russian novel ‘Crime and Punishment’ back in 1964 as part of an English Literature course that year, so was interested to find the following article published as the Friday Essay in the on-line edition of ‘The Conversation’ earlier this month. Written by Kevin John Brophy, the Emeritus Professor of Creative writing at the University of Melbourne, on December 5th, he also was returning to the novel after 60 years, and claimed to be still ‘awed’ by it.

    I share his reflections of ‘Crime and Punishment’ by Fyodor Dostoevsky below. Whether I ever make the time to reread the novel remains to be seen, perhaps Brophy’s return to it may suffice!

    The old woman who once sliced our front garden hose with a knife has just walked past our home without pausing. Not long after the hose incident I confronted her with what she had done and she denied ever walking along our street, let alone cutting anyone’s hose, or even carrying a knife.

    In fact she emptied her bag for me and there was no knife in it. I had been searching on the web about strange behaviour among the elderly and one source noted that it is not uncommon for aged women to carry a knife in their bag. I am not sure what this means, but each time I see the old woman (and I see her often on our street), I feel reassured when she manages to pass by our front garden without a glance in the direction of the hose – though the lingering question of the motive for her crime remains.

    I am rereading Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment 60 years after first being enthralled by it, with the idea of testing myself against an experience I’ve long been convinced upended me as a teenage reader, then shaped me as a university student of the 1970s who channelled his version of Dostoevsky’s protagonist, Raskolnikov – a name that means something like “heretic”, or one who cuts themselves away from their community.

    Rereading is a risk, of course, for the book might fail to stand up to my memory of it as powerful, original, frightening, scandalous and utterly compelling. It might no longer surprise me and I might have to shrink it back to a diminished place among books that are not, after all, lastingly great in my reading life.

    Early on, a first surprise for me is that Raskolnikov was handsome. In my memory his figure is physically as repulsive as his psyche. But no, on the first page of the novel Dostoevsky is at pains to tell the reader that his student was attractive. Later, Raskolnikov’s sister, Dunya, who looks just like him, is repeatedly the subject of men’s desires on account of her beauty.

    My second surprise in these early pages is the drunkard, Marmeladov, saying he’s drinking up his eldest daughter’s income from “the yellow card”, that is, from her work as a prostitute. Did I even know what the man was talking about when I was 14?

    I was a Catholic boy from a family of nine children and being the first son, I was the one who would go into a monastery at 18 and last there for two years of study, silence and prayer. How was it that I had even come across such a novel on the faintly rural fringe of early-1960s Melbourne in the outer suburb of Watsonia, where soldiers of the second world war had been given blocks of land at bargain prices?

    I had been a comics reader as much as a book consumer through my childhood and early teens, and Classic Comics had introduced me to a world of “classic” stories, including Dostoevsky’s. Classic comics made the stories look dramatic and serious. I wanted intensely to go further into that realm.

    Like any young reader discovering the world’s rich history of storytelling I wanted to read what was beyond my understanding and capacity. The thick weightiness of Crime and Punishment (first published in 1866), a handsome paperback, its ultra-thin pages, the adult gravity of such small print and the dully serious, high-art cover, all of this made me feel I had arrived at something worth curling up with for days on end. The novel took a grip on me even through the fog of a devout Catholicism and the security of a tightly-guarded family circle.

    Soon after we meet him, Raskolnikov receives a long letter from his mother promising money in a few days’ time, while going on to narrate a brief and apparently fortuitous courting of his sister by a vain and forceful businessman more than twice her age. And yet, his mother writes, this suitor appears to be kind and, as he says himself, without prejudice. She ends her letter remembering Raskolnikov as a child babbling prayers on her lap. “I fear in my heart”, she writes, “that you may have been affected by this latest fashion of unbelief.”

    Not softened by his mother’s love, her generosity, or even by her fears, Raskolnikov goes out into the streets of St Petersburg with a face “distorted” by a “nasty, lugubrious, jaundiced smile snaking across his lips” as he vows never to allow his sister’s marriage to take place.

    Throughout the first vodka-soaked chapters, not only does a man confess to living off his daughter’s prostitution, but a drunken teenage girl on the street, only partly dressed and most likely already abused, is openly followed by a man who wants her for his pleasures, and Raskolnikov recalls, or dreams (it is unclear) the beating of a horse to death, after remembering that he used to play in a certain cemetery where his brother, who died at six months, was buried.

    In each episode, Raskolnikov seems to be both an element of Petersburg’s abject street life and a lone figure of sobriety, decency and compassion. He protects the young girl on the street until she is safe. He suffers for the horse. But we are also witness to the fact that he has already condemned his own soul for indulging in the desire to kill an old woman.

    Reading anew the passage describing the beating of a horse outside a drinking house, (in my Penguin edition, translated by David McDuff), I remember that as a child I had seen a man do just this to a horse. Is it a true memory though? When I was a child I used to accept rides on a milkman’s cart in the mornings on my way to the local church to serve as an altar-boy at early mass, so it was not unusual to see horses in mid-1950s Melbourne.

    Or perhaps while reading this passage I was reliving my first encounter with it as if it was a scene I had witnessed myself. I can’t be certain. The scene in the novel, horrific and gothic, is barely realist though utterly real. In my memory I have an image of my father driving me past a patch of grass outside flats along Murray Road in Coburg where we passed a man flogging a horse. My memory is that this was the first time I fully realised humans had absolute and merciless power over animals.

    The beating to death of the horse works as the first murder in the novel, a climax to the phantasmagoria of cruelty, immorality, decadence and drunkenness we have been witness to in the early pages. The beating of the horse, so unsettling to Raskolnikov, is an uncanny rehearsal of the wanton brutality he’s contemplating committing himself. The novel swings between chaos encountered on the streets and an inner world of tormented thoughts with such pressing vertigo that one becomes a mirror of the other.

    That the murder of the old woman happens so early in the book startled me then and still does. I remember wanting to know from the inside the mind of a character capable of such a crime. There was something of the voyeur to my desire, but something too of a hint that through this reading experience I was in connection with a real and dangerous part of myself.

    And now, so much later, from this end of life, I perceive Raskolnikov not so much as a possible me, but as a victim of his thinking, reading, youthful extravagance, boundless ambition and of course his fashionable unbelief. The novel was possibly a dangerous one for me to be reading as a naïve 14-year-old.

    It was nearly another ten years beyond my first reading Crime and Punishment when a late 20th century version of fashionable unbelief took me from the Catholic Church towards what I experienced as freedom from belief in God.

    Through my twenties I lived at least partly as a version of Raskolnikov: a student, chronically poor, renting rooms in share houses, intense to a fault, absorbed in a feverish imagination, dressed in worn-out clothes. And like Raskolnikov, I chose to live this way. In the 1970s there were whole suburbs of students living like this around inner-city universities. But the murderer in Raskolnikov was seemingly forgotten by me at this time, perhaps in denial, but just as it is ignored through long passages of the novel.

    Re-reading now the scene of the murder of the old woman, I am shocked that I had forgotten it was a double murder, and that the second murder was so cold-bloodedly executed on the old woman’s younger sister, the one whose life might have been, in Raskolnikov’s earlier thoughts, saved and transformed by the death of her miserly, oppressive, older sister.

    At the moment of the double murder all sympathy for Raskolnikov should disappear. In fact, perhaps at this point of the novel some readers would simply abandon the book unwilling to go the journey with such a character for another 500 pages. In 1866, when it appeared in monthly instalments in The Russian Messenger, then an influential, progressive literary journal, the book caused a sensation. Some readers were so affected they felt ill. Many put the novel aside, though most, like me a century later, were unable to put it down.

    The attraction of the book might have something to do with it being almost a crime, one feels, to keep reading after the murder scene. Other later works of fiction such as Nabakov’s Lolita, Robert Block’s Psycho, Louis-Ferdinand Celine’s Journey to the End of the Night, or Anais Nin’s diaries also powerfully attract as much as they repel and distress.

    In hindsight, this was my introduction to intimations of a dark side to literature, leading me to writers such as Franz Kafka, Thomas Hardy, Joseph Conrad, Sigmund Freud, T.S. Eliot, Thomas Mann, Virginia Woolf and the agonied loneliness of so many characters in modernist novel after novel, on to the suicidal ruminations of Thomas Bernhard’s fiction, and even the tortured and hilariously desperate isolation of Gerald Murnane’s young men in his early works. Raskolnikov showed the way ahead to a century and more of misfits and misanthropes.

    In a new biography of composer and writer Erik Satie, Ian Penman makes a plea for re-balancing the story of modernity:

    Why this general tendency to fetishise ‘darkness’? Why is so much reflection about modernity tangled up with melancholy? Why do we overstress the abject, the obscene, the transgressive? […] I mean, don’t we all want to be happy? Why fight against it?

    His plea for relief makes good sense, especially perhaps for music, but the crises in the hearts of characters from Mary Shelley’s monster onwards, through Charles Dickens’ villains, to the grotesque creations of Wilkie Collins and later Camus’ murderous Meursault, are too urgently conjured for this reader to turn entirely from them.

    So I do keep reading this time and not out of any sense of duty to literature or my former self, but because the novel does, once again, grip. It compels me forward by the force of scene after scene that screws Raskolnikov closer and closer to whatever might be the punishment promised in the title.

    And if his conscience does bring him to punishment, how are we to know what is just? And how might his heart or his thinking bring him to embrace his punishment? What would it mean for my feelings about him if he gets away with it or does not feel something like remorse and revulsion over what he has done?

    And was it, after all, a motiveless crime? Was it an act of unfeeling pride so misguided and mangled that one has to feel equal horror and sympathy for a killer who can sometimes act so selflessly? Is Raskolnikov finally as capable of love as he is of murder?

    Current events snag on the novel as I read it this time. Its questions swirl around the criminal trial and sentencing of Erin Patterson, found guilty of murdering three members of her extended family with a carefully prepared meal of death cap mushrooms (a conviction she is now appealing). An almost unimaginable crime. Everyone with an interest in the case must imagine for themselves what might have been going on inside her as the murder was planned. A growing number of videos and podcasts explore what might have been Patterson’s motivations. At her public sentencing, Justice Beale at last addressed her directly on the reasons for her crimes with: “Only you know why you committed them.”

    And as with Raskolnikov, Patterson is smart, but she was clumsy too. When Raskolnikov defends himself against accusations of being a lecher, accusations manufactured by his sister’s suitor, Luzhin, he remarks about him (but equally about himself), “He’s a clever man, but in order to act cleverly, cleverness alone is not enough.”

    I don’t sympathise with Raskolnikov, but I don’t turn from him as a monster either. He can be compassionate without being saintly, generous to his last kopeck, honest to his own detriment, and instinctively respectful of those who suffer – and yet there he was with the axe in that room.

    At almost breakneck speed Dostoevsky lets the murderer loose on the streets, where he encounters more prostitutes, gives away money, mock-confesses to committing the axe-murder at a night club, watches a suicidal woman jump into the city’s main canal only to be rescued against her will, possibly saving him from the same experience.

    Then, as he is on his way to the police station to make an actual confession, he rescues the drunken Marmeladov from under the panicked horses of a barouche and delivers him, dying, to his destitute family, summoning a doctor and leaving the new widow with all the money (his mother’s gift) he has in his possession.

    In almost every respect he seems an innocent in a world of depravity. Of course Dostoevsky is playing with his readers, daring us to sympathise with this young man, to witness his compassion, and to put aside for pages at a time the knowledge of the double murder he has committed. This is such a risky skating across thin ice that one does not want to stop following until the far bank is reached. I have no idea what my young self was making of all this beyond deciding to read on through it trusting the storyteller and trusting that the story would be a large and lasting one because it is, well, Russian, a masterpiece, and a “classic”.

    I am shocked all over again by the fact that Raskolnikov himself does not seem to remember that he killed not just “one old woman”, but two women. He is repeatedly far too ready to minimise his crime.

    When the young, accommodating docotor Zosimov begins talking at length out of vanity and pride, as most characters in the novel do when they launch into speeches, he tells Raskolnikov’s mother and sister, that Raskolnikov might be displaying a certain idée fixe, suggesting a case of “monomania” – a condition so interesting that he, Zosimov, is conducting a special study of it.

    Monomania? I don’t remember this word quite popping out at me that first time the way it does now. It is strangely medical, strangely decisive. After some reading on it I discover that this was a relatively recently invented psychiatric diagnosis introduced to medicine in the first two decades of the 19th century partly through a Dr Etienne-Jean Georget who first defined Monomania as an idée fixe – a single pathological preoccupation in an otherwise sound mind.

    After Georget’s published speculations on whether criminals could be defended on the basis that a monomania might diminish their culpability, French lawyers took up this line of defence so enthusiastically that the diagnosis had become discredited by the 1850s. You might say that monomania became a legal idée fixe.

    For Dostoevsky’s readers it might have been a medical-sounding word, but one that also rang of sham psychiatry. In this scene the diagnosis washes through mother and daughter and Zosimov leaves in a hurry. But reference to the diagnosis keeps recurring, and oddly it will finally be tangled with Raskolnikov’s fate.

    In a remarkably tense scene in the central police station, Detective Porfiry Petrovich exposes Raskolnikov’s authorship of a philosophical article that argued for the superiority of certain rare individuals above the norms of common humanity. These individuals can and apparently, must, commit crimes in order to do the work that will benefit humanity.

    Raskolnikov tries to say his article is no more than a mild acceptance of what history has demonstrated, until, from the corner of the room, Amyotov, to whom Raskolnikov had made his mock confession, says, “Perhaps it was some budding Napoleon who did in old Alyona Ivanovna with an axe last week.”

    Reading this now, it is difficult not to think of the sovereign citizens movement, far right conspiracy theorists, white supremacists, cults of the Christian kind and others who consider themselves to be outside norms and law – an often smart and always disturbing minority presciently described in Dostoevsky’s novel. Raskolnikov is an outrageous outsider, and like many of the far right conspiracists now, initially his complaints and suspicions about the hypocrisies of the powerful are acute and accurate until the line of argument takes him to its farthest reaches, to murder.

    Sometimes an image seems to have been thrown into a novel just to see what will happen. Like a stone into a pond, a fishing line into surf, a boot into a crowd, a hat into the air. The troubling and provocative figure of Svidrigailov appears, a wealthy widower infatuated with Raskolnikov’s sister, possibly guilty of murdering his wife, and almost certainly guilty of raping a disabled girl – a twisted mirror image of Raskolnikov if Raskolnikov ever fully embraced the nihilism and exceptionalism he wrote of in his journal article. It is Svidrigailov who suggests eternity might be a small room no larger than a country bathhouse with soot on the walls and spiders in every corner. In fact, he says, this is the way he would have it if he had been given the job of designing things.

    Do I remember first encountering this image of eternity? I think I do, and it connects for me with room 101 in George Orwell’s 1984, only here it is not the ultimate in torture, it is all there is that can be hoped for. The lasting effect of this image of eternity might have had something to do with the standard Catholic versions feeling, to me, either bland or illogical or too medieval.

    Svidrigailov’s empty, cobwebbed room said more about the frightening nature of the idea of eternity than anything I had come across.

    Sonya, Marmeladov’s prostitute-daughter, takes an increasingly central role as the book nears its end. She might herself be a lost soul, or a figure of Christ himself, perhaps a type of Mary Magdalene, a figure of blind faith, or of stubbornness beyond sense, and loyalty beyond reason.

    Progressive critics at the time of publication condemned the novel for attaching Sonya to conservative (that is, peasant) Christian beliefs. But, as with much literature, the story is open to many ways in, so that reading it in 2025, Sonya for me is a figure simply of love, and of the simplest most willing love offered to one person from another. She doesn’t ever ask Raskolnikov to pray to her God, but only to accept love. If monotheism could be a form of monomania, she is not disfigured by it, despite her faith.

    When Raskolnikov comes to confess his crimes, it is to her, and it is the killing of her friend, Alyona’s younger sister, Lizaveta, that he must most shamefully explain: that she was killed for simply being there. “How, how could you, a man like you […] do a thing like this?” Sonya has to ask.

    Raskolnikov takes himself through the reasons: he killed because the money to be stolen would see him through a university degree in style. But no, he did not even rob the woman properly and the little he did take he buried away. He says he killed her to know if he could kill “without a thought”; or he killed the old woman because she was after all “a louse – a loathsome, useless, harmful louse”.

    Sonya makes the only reply possible: “But that louse was a human being!”

    Her statement echoes all the way to Kafka’s Red Peter, the killers Dick Hickock and Perry Smith from Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood, Patrick White’s Mr Voss and Lionel Shriver’s Kevin. Even if there was no conscious connection with Crime and Punishment for Kafka as he wrote The Metamorphosis, I cannot but think that Kafka’s story is a long meditation in response to Sonya’s cry.

    To Sonya the only way out for Raskolnikov is to confess and accept the suffering that comes with shame. But the novel spins on possibilities to the very end as a scapegoat emerges who might stand in for the murderer, thus creating a last opportunity to avoid both punishment and even conscience.

    On the final pages of the novel this time, I had tears in my eyes. I was exhausted, wrung out, needing Raskolnikov to be punished, but still hopeful for the young man he sometimes was, and I had for a time thought I was.

    Perhaps the novel, in the end, inspires the reader to match Sonya’s love for a man who in all reasonableness does not deserve love or for that matter faith or respect. Having uncovered that flip side of pride, which is shame, in justice we should leave him in that state. But I felt tender towards him.

    I suspect that as a 14-year-old I felt this tenderness too, and perhaps in response to Sonya’s love for him. This feeling though has never diminished my horror at his act, a horror mingled with a strange sense of relief that the act took place in a book of fiction so that I could bear it.

    Some others have asked me how I could have ever wanted to emulate a murderer or side with a man who thought he was a superior exception to all moral values. I ask myself this question too and the only answer I can reach for is that reading the novel is something of a chaotic experience and that to be open to this figure of Raskolnikov is to find something dark within oneself that’s not easy to shrug off or deny.

    In literature a subterranean world of wild emotions and thoughts normally repressed, controlled and civilised can be given explicit and shocking presence – and this might be one aspect of the book that helped make me, for life, a reader.

    The novel this time has done a different kind of work on a different me, but again it has been a powerfully affecting work. I remain grateful to it and in awe of it.

    Sometimes these days I stop to talk with the hose-cutting old woman as she passes along our street. I have learned her name and some of her history, including her grief for a son suddenly lost. I’m not sure that she always remembers who I am, but in speaking to her she comes alive for me in new ways. She is not dangerous, she is not insane or useless, and definitely not harmful. No need for us to talk any more about the knife. She is someone I am coming to know a little and I hope our encounters on the street help her to feel the safety of recognition.

  • The Coachbuilder’s Column: Volume 15: Issue 16: 27th November, 2025: Two selections from ‘The Conversation’

    These two following contributions are taken from an online weekly paper titled ‘The Conversation: Books & Ideas’ – written about two very different personalities – a former Bosnian Serb political leader, as noted below, the first female high-ranked politician to be prosecuted for mass atrocities; and popular Australian author, Jane Harper. I copy them to this blog in the wish to share the subject matter for the interest of readers,

    [1 From ‘The Conversation’ , 14th November 2025: Friday essay: my time with ‘Madam War Criminal’, unrepentant at 95.   Published: November 14, 2025 6.07am AEDT.   Written by Olivera Simic  Professor in Law, Griffith University

    How could a university professor and internationally established scientist become a war criminal? This question prompted me to spend hundreds of hours interviewing Biljana Plavšić, now 95, at her home in Belgrade, the Serbian capital.

    Plavšić, a former biologist, senior Bosnian Serb political leader and president of the Bosnian Serb Republic, is the only woman of 161 people to have been indicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY). She is the first female high-ranked politician to be prosecuted for mass atrocities.

    More than 100,000 people died in the Bosnian war from 1992–95. At least 8,000 Bosniak (Bosnian Muslim) men and boys were killed by the Bosnian Serb Army in the genocide in Srebrenica in July 1995.

    During the war, Plavšić defended the purge of Bosnian non-Serbs (chiefly Croats and Bosniaks) as “a natural phenomenon”, justifying her policies of ethnic cleansing, mostly carried out by Serb paramilitaries, with theories of ethnic and racial superiority.

    Described by Western media as the “Serbian Iron Lady” and by Serb soldiers as a “Serb Empress”, Plavšić pleaded guilty in 2002 to a crime against humanity, persecuting non-Serbs for religious, political and racial motives. In exchange, the court dropped further charges of murder and genocide.

    After serving six years of an 11-year sentence, she was released in October 2009, returning to Belgrade in a fur coat to meet her supporters.

    At the time of her conviction, Plavšić had expressed remorse. This, and her acknowledgement of guilt, were celebrated as milestones for both the tribunal and the Balkans, and hailed as a step towards reconciliation.

    However, two years into her prison sentence, Plavšić told a Swedish magazine she had “done nothing wrong”. In our conversations, she told me she had pleaded guilty to avoid other charges and a long trial:

    I sacrificed myself. I have done nothing wrong. I pleaded guilty to crimes against humanity so they would drop the other charges. If I hadn’t, the trial would have lasted three, three and-a-half years. Considering my age, that wasn’t an option.

    Plavšić, regarded as a hero by many Serbs (she receives regular fan letters), seems unconcerned about her role in the ethnic cleansing of Bosnian Muslims. “They [the tribunal] think that it is something terrible,” she told me. “I can freely say I did not pay attention to that at all. Simply, I did not care much about it […]”

    Given her subsequent lack of remorse, Plavšić’s plea bargain risks making a mockery of justice. Under such a bargain, the defendant can avoid trial and bypass the rigorous examination of evidence and witness testimony. In this way, victims are denied the opportunity for their voices to be heard and acknowledged.

    First meeting

    I was born in the former Yugoslavia and grew up in Bosnia and Herzegovina, where I remained until mid-1992. I watched my close, non-Serb friends leave our hometown, Banjaluka, from April 1992 due to persecution by Bosnian Serbs. My friends left some of their belongings with me, thinking, as I did, they would return in three months or so.

    They never returned. At that time, I did not know what I was witnessing was, in fact, the ethnic cleansing of my city. I didn’t have the language then to describe it in those terms.

    I was aware of Plavšić. She was constantly in the media calling on Serbs to join the army and fight. I would find out many years later that my late aunt and uncle had befriended her after she fled Sarajevo, her hometown, and came to Banjaluka with her elderly mother in 1994. (My uncle, a doctor, had treated Plavšić’s mother.) They remained close to Plavšić for the rest of their lives.

    I would much prefer the Bosnian war had not happened, that I had met Plavšić merely as an iron-willed, single-minded person, perhaps ruminating on the margins at a family meal. However, her views became central to the shaping of appalling historical events. Hence it is our responsibility to try and understand how these views developed, and how they fell on so many receptive ears.

    The first time I went to see Plavšić was particularly stressful. I was apprehensive and felt totally unprepared. After ten hours of speaking with her over the phone from Australia, there I was standing in front of her door in Belgrade, which had a fake surname on the buzzer.

    My anxiety built until I felt it could burst out through the ceiling above me. I took a few deep breaths and knocked. As the door opened wide, I was bracing myself, my heart thumping, my palms sweating. Plavšić stood tall before me. Our eyes met. She was clearly pleased to see me.

    Feeling overwhelmed, I stared at her and apprehensively muttered, “Dobro jutro (Good morning)”.

    She stretched open her arms as if we had known each other for a long time, took a step back and studied me from top to bottom. A light, blue cardigan hung loosely from her shoulders. She was beaming.

    We went inside. I found myself sitting, almost in a state of shock, talking to someone who was convicted for masterminding so much of the Bosnian war.

    I ultimately spent hundreds of hours, across eight years, talking to Plavšić, both face-to-face and on the phone. I had to separate this process, as a legal academic, from her friendship with my late aunt and uncle.

    I also gained access to Plavšić’s massive private archive, which contained hundreds of letters, newspaper clippings, original wartime documents and even a handwritten set of three notebooks – diaries she wrote in prison. I had to persuade her to speak with me, and gradually build trust. She would not share anything unless she felt her words were being treated with respect.

    Biljana Plavšić with a UN guard at the start of her sentencing hearings at the international war crimes tribunal in the Hague, December 2002. Fred Ernst/AFP via Getty images


    A Fulbright scholar

    Plavšić, who is divorced and has no children, comes from a well-educated, urban and affluent family; her father Svetislav was a prominent biologist, a director of the natural science department at the Sarajevo Museum and custodian of its botanic collection. Her mother was a housewife.

    As a child living in Yugoslavia, Plavšić was only 11 when the Nazis invaded in 1941. Her teenage years were marked by harrowing events such as her relatives being killed or deported to concentration camps by Ustaša (a Croatian fascist movement) or expelled to neighbouring Serbia.

    This marked her identity and, as she would tell me many times, she entered politics to prevent the “extinction of Serb people”. Serbs were killed en masse in the World War II concentration camps together with Jews, Romany people and others. She feared, she says, this would happen again to Serbs when the Bosnian war started in the 1990s.

    Before the war, she was a dean of the University of Sarajevo’s science faculty, a Fulbright Scholar who spent two years in New York conducting botany research, and an author of more than 100 scientific papers.

    She entered politics in 1990, as a member of the Serb Democratic Party. When Bosnia declared independence from Yugoslavia in April 1992 – a move opposed by the party – Plavšić joined other party members in proclaiming the Serbian Republic of Bosnia. During the Bosnian war, she served as vice president under president and leader Radovan Karadzić (a convicted war criminal now serving a life sentence for crimes including genocide). From 1996 to 1998, she was president of the Bosnian Serb Republic (Republika Srpska).

    Over many hours of conversation, she told me her version of the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina: what led her to take part in it, why some events happened, according to her, and how.

    I was hoping she would express some regret and remorse. But there was none. Indeed, Plavšić told me she had not wanted to sit through a trial to “listen to all fake witnesses and their lies”.

    She has never changed her convictions.

    It is human nature to want to see war criminals as “monsters”, different to us. But Plavšić is not a pathological individual. Rather, she is a highly educated and clinical ultra-nationalist who believes in the supremacy of Serbs over non-Serbs.

    Ultra-nationalist Serbs consider Bosnian Muslims ethnic Serbs who converted to the Islam faith as a means of survival during the Ottoman Empire’s rule. Such claims that Muslims are not a genuine nationality are deeply offensive to Bosnian Muslims who have practised Islam for centuries.

    Plavšić rejects, as do many other nationalist Serbs, the legal term genocide in relation to Srebrenica massacre. She described the killings to me as a “crime” but “not genocide”.

    At times when I confronted her with some legal facts and evidence, she would snap into a scolding-professor mode, frowning at me. One time, without skipping a beat, she snapped, “I’ve already told you what I think of it”. I quickly realised that no matter what I said, she will never change her convictions, and that my job was not necessarily to try to do so.

    I found it hard to stomach much of what she ardently still believed, but I buried my emotions so I could wind my way through it all. It was hard to strike the balance and know how far I could go interrogating Plavšić. I regret not questioning her more, but I was nervous she would have stopped talking if I probed and poked too much.

    Plavšić not only feels no guilt about her actions, but remains utterly convinced of their righteousness. “No, there is nothing to regret,” she told me in one of our last in-person meetings. “I had to protect my people.”

    Her lack of remorse makes Plavšić’s early release from prison all the more painful for the families of her victims. “They [the tribunal] don’t think about the blood of so many of our children, whom we are still digging Interviewing Plavšić and writing a book about her was the hardest project I have done in my career. I am glad it is over but the politics of extreme nationalism in the region are not. Today, there is a revisionism of history and the government and political elites in the Republic of Srpska hold dearly Plavšić’s views.

    Plavšić’s case may serve as a warning to both our present and future. She is a highly intelligent and articulate woman. She was not someone who merely followed orders, but rather someone who gave them: a high-ranking perpetrator who preached extremist views.

    This makes her story especially pertinent, as we are witnessing a rise in female participation in extremist ideologies around the world, most of which reinforce and perpetuate patriarchal systems. A female populist such as Giorgia Meloni, the Italian prime minister and leader of the far-right Brothers of Italy party, speaks out against “global elites”, evokes fascist rhetoric, and clings to Mussolini-era slogans such as “God, homeland, family”.

    It is important to understand Plavšić’s motivations also because today in the Balkans, war criminals such as General Ratko Mladic, the Bosnian Serb military leader serving a life sentence for his role in the Srebrenica massacre, are treated as heroes.

    Serbian political elites do not recognise the legitimacy of the ICTY and believe, as Plavšić does, that the court was set up “just to prosecute Serbs”. Many high-ranked war criminals returned to Serbia and were welcomed as heroes, as Plavšić was.

    Towards the end of our project, Plavšić became increasingly eager to know when the book I was writing would be published and why it had taken me so long. She was disappointed and worried she would die before she could see it. “You could have written an encyclopedia by now!” she scolded me in one of our last conversations.

    Madam War Criminal: Biljana Plavšić, Serbia’s Iron Lady by Olivera Simić is published by Hurst.

    out of mass graves,” said Kada Hotić, a mother who spent two decades searching for a son who went missing in the 1995 Srebrenica genocide. Hotić lost her son, husband and two brothers in the genocide.

    A warning

    Plavšić’s historical revisionism and staged remorse in the face of established facts is of course deeply offensive to her victims. Some may find it wrong even to give her space to express her views. Still, Plavšić’s “storytelling” provides an insight into why leaders choose to commit war crimes and invite armed conflict rather than peaceful negotiation.

    Over all these years of writing a book about Plavšić, based on our interviews, I have come to accept that, no matter how I wrote it, I would always be at risk of being accused of sympathising with her. There seems to be one common experience among researchers studying perpetrators: they find themselves endlessly defending their work. In some circles, including academic ones, there remains a stubborn lack of understanding as to why researchers talk to and listen to perpetrators.

    Put simply, we do it to comprehend the motivations of war criminals so we can prevent mass atrocities in the future. There is no doubt genocide and crimes against humanity are morally repugnant. However, when we approach the study of those who commit such acts primarily through moral condemnation rather than analytical enquiry, we risk hindering our understanding of perpetrators and their motivations.

    Perhaps Plavšić’s scholarly profession is what makes many academics both uncomfortable and fascinated with her. Plavšić is a reminder that higher education does not necessarily mean one is immune to committing crimes.

    [2] From ‘From The Conversation, 14th November 2025:  Why Jane Harper’s ‘outback noir’ novels make for comfortable – and uncomfortable – reading:  Published: November 13, 2025 11.53am AEDT by Jessica Gildersleeve, Professor of English Literature, University of Southern Queensland, and Tara East, Associate Lecturer, Creative Writing and Editing and Publishing, University of Southern Queensland

    Jane Harper’s novels do not include any significant First Nations characters or perspectives. Nor do they acknowledge the deeper meaning and consequence of their Gothic conventions.

    Jane Harper sits in a rare category of contemporary Australian writers whose novels have achieved phenomenal international success. She has sold 1.5 million books in Australia and 3.5 million overseas.

    While all popular fiction adheres to certain formulas – that is, after all, why we read these books – Harper has skilfully combined a set of conventional tropes to develop her own narrative brand. Her crime novels build on a familiar ideas about the Australian landscape we have been taught how to interpret and accept – images that have become a type of shorthand.

    Harper’s version of what has come to be called “outback noir” invariably features a small-town setting where the natural world is perceived as threatening, and an outsider or outcast who must solve a crime with a link to the past.

    Importantly, her depictions of the Australian landscape also draw on the traditions of the Australian Gothic.

    When early settlers encountered Australia’s unfamiliar landscapes, they found the place strange and unsettling. Swans were black, not white; the seasons were reversed. As novelist Marcus Clarke famously observed, the trees shed their bark, not their leaves.

    Australia’s earliest writers, including Henry Lawson and Barbara Baynton, used the strange animals and plants, the harsh weather and the seemingly endless deserts as ominous backdrops for their fictional works.

    As one character in Harper’s first novel The Dry (2017) reflects on the emptiness that surrounds the fictional town of Kiewarra: “This place is like a nightmare.”

    Despite their rural settings, however, Harper’s novels have not to date included any significant First Nations characters or perspectives. Nor do they appear to acknowledge the deeper meaning and consequence of their Gothic conventions.

    Harper’s landscapes

    A Gothic sensibility is evident in all of Harper’s novels. It is there in the outback settings of The Dry, The Lost Man (2019), and her newest novel, Last One Out (2025). It is there in the forest hinterland of Force of Nature (2018), the rocky coastline of The Survivors (2021), and the rural farmlands of Exiles (2023).

    Each novel is set in a new location, but in all cases the central crime takes place in a small town, playing into the Gothic’s concern with isolation. Characters’ limited access to resources, their strained relationships with others, and their remoteness combine to render them vulnerable and create a sense of claustrophobia.

    In The Dry, the residents of Kiewarra are suffering from an extended drought. The paddocks of local farms have dried up; so has the town’s river. In Force of Nature, the constant rain and unfamiliar tracks in a mountain forest cause a group of city folk on a corporate “retreat” to get lost during a hike.

    The depictions of Tasmania in The Survivors and Australia’s wine regions in Exiles are less extreme. In these works, the natural world is not described with the same eerie, threatening tone of Harper’s earlier novels. But the most violent and climactic events take place not within homes, city streets, or even each town’s single pub. They occur in the dangerously liminal spaces of an isolated cliff and a coastal cave.

    The reader is led to understand that these locations are significant in their uncertainty, which creates a sense of unease, a quiet foreboding. Although the natural sites themselves do not harm the characters, they are used for malevolent purposes by criminals, marking them out as haunting and haunted spaces.

    In The Dry, the residents of Kiewarra are suffering from an extended drought. The paddocks of local farms have dried up; so has the town’s river. In Force of Nature, the constant rain and unfamiliar tracks in a mountain forest cause a group of city folk on a corporate “retreat” to get lost during a hike.

    The depictions of Tasmania in The Survivors and Australia’s wine regions in Exiles are less extreme. In these works, the natural world is not described with the same eerie, threatening tone of Harper’s earlier novels. But the most violent and climactic events take place not within homes, city streets, or even each town’s single pub. They occur in the dangerously liminal spaces of an isolated cliff and a coastal cave.

    The reader is led to understand that these locations are significant in their uncertainty, which creates a sense of unease, a quiet foreboding. Although the natural sites themselves do not harm the characters, they are used for malevolent purposes by criminals, marking them out as haunting and haunted spaces.

    Harper’s detectives

    Crime fiction is the world’s most popular literary genre. It speaks to our desire for justice and resolution.

    Its origins can be traced to the 19th century, but it was during and after the first world war that crime or detective fiction was most in demand. This period – dominated by the work of Agatha ChristieNgaio Marsh and Dorothy L. Sayers – has become known as the “golden age of detective fiction”.

    Precisely because of the horrors of wartime, and the shock of the terrible injuries and deaths experienced there, crime fiction of this period was decidedly “unbloody”. As literary scholar Alison Light observed, “fleshiness, either figuratively or literally, was […] in gross bad taste after the butchery many had witnessed”.

    In these early iterations, the crime genre was conservative. The crime has disrupted the social order in some way; the resolution of the story depends on the straightforward discovery of the criminal, with the implication that justice will be served.

    In contemporary detective fiction, both the crimes and the detectives have become more complicated, more morally corrupt, less transparent in their view of justice.

    This is the genre known as “noir”. Even in the recent BBC adaptations of Agatha Christie’s work by Sarah Phelps, the relatively simple character of the famous detective Hercule Poirot has been made more complex and his responses to crimes more nuanced, through the addition of a traumatic backstory.

    Noir detectives are marked by their personal struggles: addiction, traumatic pasts, and – often as a result of the two former traits – difficulty in forming relationships, whether platonic or romantic. These traits compound the detective’s isolation and “otherness”.

    This is also true of Harper’s recurring detective, Aaron Falk, who was forced out of Kiewarra as a teenager under suspicion of harming a local girl.

    These experiences have caused him to become guarded and emotionally closed off to others, especially his romantic partners. In The Dry, we witness the disintegration of his formerly close relations, and the gradual and careful ways in which he slowly builds a fragile new friendship.

    It is critical that Harper’s detectives are outsiders to the communities in which they work, albeit as non-professional detectives. In this way, they stand in for the reader, who is also – Harper’s urban and international readership suggests – an outsider, largely unfamiliar with such places and communities. This too increases the sense of mystery and threat.

    A legacy version of Australia

    Harper’s adherence to these generic conventions is doubtless one reason for her popularity. But her novels are not simply crime fiction.

    Outback noir transfers the gritty urban settings of traditional noir to small regional towns, where the claustrophobia and secrets of a small community, as well as the threat of an encroaching natural environment, add tension and stakes to the crime at the centre of the narrative. This is where outback noir overlaps with the Gothic – specifically, Gothic narratives that take place in extreme environments, such as the Southern Gothic of the United States, and of course Australian Gothic.

    This use of landscape is a common strategy in noir set in specific locales, such as Nordic noir or tropical noir. But there are negative consequences to this construction of the detective as outsider when the outback setting is presented as something unfamiliar, something to be feared. These arise from the origins of Australian Gothic, which scholars have long recognised as an expression of settler-colonial anxiety about the violent dispossession of the country’s Indigenous people.

    Noir is not the only popular fiction genre that makes use of rural settings. Rural romance (or “ru-ro”) also has a wide readership and, like outback noir, uses small-town settings and the natural environment to add stakes to the plot. The small town offers a host of quirky but lovable characters, while the harsh landscape allows for displays of physical prowess and the romance of being saved from physical threat.

    Both outback noir and ru-ro present a landscape that is recognisably, and cinematically, Australian. They draw upon longstanding ideas and images of our landscapes and lifestyle: a scalding sun, empty rain tanks, wide and dry plains, and a small town with a single pub where a drunken brawl is not uncommon.

    This clichéd understanding of Australia has been presented and reinforced through media and marketing, often aimed at audiences beyond our shores – in Paul Hogan’s Crocodile Dundee films, for example, or in Ted Kotcheff’s film adaptation of Kenneth Cook’s novel Wake in Fright (1961).

    Harper’s contribution to contemporary Australian literature hearkens back to the “golden age” of detective fiction. She uses a formula that embeds familiar features of the crime genre in an alternative setting. And just as the novels of detective fiction’s golden age erased the mutilated bodies of the war dead, her novels gloss over the difficult, traumatic and violent elements of Australia’s past and present.

    They are engaging with a legacy version of Australia that is more literary than realistic. In their reinforcement of settler-colonialist depictions of Australia, they are both comfortable and uncomfortable reading.

  • The Coachbuilder’s Column: Volume 15: Issue 15: 10th October, 2025: A further selection of recent reads!!

    A shorter, but varied selection of recently read books on this occasion,

    • East Of Eden by John Steinbeck [1952];
    • The Turing Protocol’ by Nick Croydon [2015];
    • Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov  [1955];
    • A Beautiful Family’ by Jennifer Trevelyan [2025];
    • The Shortest History of Music by Andrew Ford [2024]

    7th September

    A book just read, was actually published when I was 6 years old, it’s taken me a while to get to it  –   ‘East of Eden’ written by John Steinbeck, and first published in the USA in 1952, this  a Penguin edition of 602 pages. I’d actually had this story on my bookshelves in another format for some 20 years or so, just never read it!

    This was a wonderful story, which was at one time described by The New York Times Book Review as ‘A fantasia of history and myth, a strange and original work of art’. My edition is preceded by an interesting 23 page  introduction and further references by David Wyatt. Many of you may have one of his other great novels – ‘The Grapes of Wrath’ published in 1939.

    Essentially, ‘East of Eden’ is a ‘family saga’, the book which has been described as Steinbeck’s most ambitious novel, this sprawling and often brutal novel brings to life the intricate details of two families, the Trasks and the Hamiltons, and their interwoven stories. The Hamilton family in the novel is said to be based on the real-life family of Samuel Hamilton, Steinbeck’s maternal grandfather.

    In short, ‘Goodreads’ describes the story as revolving around Adam Trask who came to California from the East to farm and raise his family on the new rich land. But the birth of his twins, Cal and Aaron, brings his wife to the brink of madness, and Adam is left alone to raise his boys to manhood. One boy thrives nurtured by the love of all those around him; the other grows up in loneliness enveloped by a mysterious darkness.
    First published in 1952, East of Eden is the work in which Steinbeck created his most mesmerizing characters and explored his most enduring themes: the mystery of identity, the inexplicability of love, and the murderous consequences of love’s absence. A masterpiece of Steinbeck’s later years, East of Eden is a powerful and vastly ambitious novel that is at once a family saga and a modern retelling of the Book of Genesis.

    More broadly, the book explores themes of depravity, beneficence, love, the struggle for acceptance and greatness, the capacity for self-destruction, and of guilt and freedom. It ties these themes together with references to and many parallels with the biblical Book of Genesis with much of the storyline revolving around a fractious relationship between the two Trask brothers.  Steinbeck’s inspiration for the novel comes from the fourth chapter of Genesis, verses 1 – 16, which recounts the story of Cain and Abel. Steinbeck took the title, East of Eden, from Genesis, Chapter 4, verse 16: “And Cain went out from the presence of the Lord, and dwelt in the Land of Nod, on the east of Eden” (King James Version). 

    Mind you, as indicated by the above comments, there are many unpleasant lifestyles depicted in the story, which can be a bit off-putting at times, but I was able to never allow that to tarnish my overall enjoyment of the book, which was difficult to put down much of the time.

    In the beginning of East of Eden, before introducing his characters, Steinbeck carefully establishes the setting with a description of the Salinas Valley in Central California. The story is primarily set in the Salinas Valley, California, between the beginning of the twentieth century and the end of World War I. The first fourteen chapters, set in Connecticut and Massachusetts, go as far back as the American Civil War and serve as backstory for Adam Trask, his brother Charles, their father Cyrus, and Cathy Ames.

    Steinbeck wrote to a friend after completing his manuscript, “I finished my book a week ago…Much the longest and surely the most difficult work I have ever done… I have put all the things I have wanted to write all my life. This is ‘the book.’ If it is not good I have fooled myself all the time. I don’t mean I will stop but this is a definite milestone and I feel released. Having done this I can do anything I want. Always I had this book waiting to be written.”

    John Steinbeck was born in Salinas, California, in 1902. He grew up in a fertile agricultural valley about twenty-five miles from the Pacific Coast – and both valley and coast would serve as settings for some of his best fiction. He died in 1968, having won a Nobel Prize for Literature in 1962.

    A synopsis of the novel  – taken from a Wikipedia article which I felt provides a fair summary of the novel. If you haven’t read the book, but intend to yet but don’t want to have too much revealed about the storyline, perhaps overlook this part…………………

    Adam Trask – newly wed with newly inherited wealth from his late father – arrives in California and settles with his pregnant wife Cathy Ames in the Salinas Valley. Without Adam’s knowledge, Cathy had tried to abort the pregnancy with a knitting needle. In their new home, she warns Adam that she had not wanted to move to California and plans to leave as soon as she can. Adam dismisses her, saying “Nonsense!”

    Cathy gives birth to twin boys, shoots Adam in the shoulder after convincing him to unlock the bedroom door, and flees. Adam survives and falls into a deep depression. His Chinese-American servant, Lee, and his neighbor, the inventive Irish immigrant Samuel Hamilton, rouse Adam out of it enough for him to name his sons Aaron and Caleb, after biblical characters.

    Lee becomes a good friend and adopted family member and has long philosophical talks with Adam and Samuel, particularly about the story of Cain and Abel. Maintaining that it has been imperfectly translated in English-language bibles, Lee tells how his relatives in San Francisco, a group of Chinese scholars, spent two years studying Hebrew so that they might discover the moral of the Cain and Abel story. Their discovery that the Hebrew word timshel means “thou mayest”, which becomes an important symbol in the novel of a person’s power to choose their paths, meaning that human beings are neither compelled to pursue sainthood nor doomed to sin.

    Meanwhile, Cathy becomes a prostitute at the most respectable brothel in the city of Salinas. She renames herself “Kate Albey”, ingratiates herself with the madam, murders her, and inherits the business. She makes her new brothel infamous as a den of sexual sadism and a source of blackmail on the rich and powerful of Salinas Valley.

    Adam’s sons, Caleb (“Cal”) and Aaron (“Aron”) – echoing Cain and Abel – grow up oblivious of their mother’s situation. They are opposites: Aron is virtuous and dutiful, Cal wild and rebellious. At an early age, Aron meets a girl, Abra Bacon, from a well-to-do family, and the two fall in love. Although there are rumors around town that Cal and Aron’s mother is not dead but is actually still in Salinas, the boys do not yet know that she is Kate.

    Inspired by Samuel’s inventiveness, Adam starts an ill-fated business venture and loses almost all of the family fortune. The boys, particularly Aron, are horrified that their father is now the town’s laughingstock and are mocked by their peers for his failure.

    As the boys reach the end of their school days, Cal decides to pursue a career in farming, and Aron goes to college to become an Episcopal priest. Cal, restless and tortured by guilt about his very human failings, shuns everyone around him and takes to wandering around town late at night. During one of these ramblings, he discovers that his mother is alive and the madam of a brothel. He goes to see her, and she spitefully tells him they are just alike. Cal replies that she is simply afraid and leaves.

    Cal goes into business with Samuel’s son Will, who is now a successful automobile dealer. Cal’s plan is to earn his father’s approval and his money back by capitalizing on World War I and selling beans grown in the Salinas Valley to nations in Europe for a considerable profit. He succeeds beyond his wildest expectations and wraps up a gift of $15,000 in cash which he plans to give to Adam at Thanksgiving.

    Aron returns from Stanford University for the holiday. There is tension in the air because Aron has not yet told their father that he intends to drop out of college. Rather than let Aron steal the moment, Cal gives Adam the money at dinner, expecting his father to be proud of him. Adam refuses to accept it, however, and tells Cal to give it back to the poor farmers he exploited.

    In a fit of rage and jealousy, Cal takes Aron to see their mother, knowing it will be a shock to him. Sure enough, Aron immediately sees Kate for who she is and recoils from her in disgust. Wracked with self-hatred, Kate signs her estate over to Aron and commits suicide.

    Aron, his idealistic worldview shattered, enlists in the Army to fight in World War I. He is killed in action in the last year of the war, and Adam suffers a stroke upon hearing the news from Lee. Cal, who began a relationship with Aron’s girlfriend Abra after Aron went to war, tries to convince her to run away with him. She instead persuades him to return home.

    Lee pleads with the bedridden and dying Adam to forgive his only remaining son. Adam responds by non-verbally indicating that he forgives Cal and then says “timshel,” giving Cal the choice to break the cycle and conquer sin.

    9th September

    Something rather different  –  ‘The Turing Protocol’ by Nick Croydon, published in 2025, of 314 pages –  probably not a book I would have chosen, were it not a gift  – however, interesting enough from the point of view of the coverage of major world events from prior to World War Two up until the current Ukraine crisis. Where the book lost me a bit – well, I guess it was built into the theme of the story – that of an individual having the power to change history, simply a bit too fanciful for my taste – a good and apt description to describe my reaction was ‘its gripping narrative and intriguing premise, with readers and authors alike highlighting its blend of historical fiction and speculative elements’.  I think it was the ‘speculative elements’ that got this reader offside a little.  This is Croydon’s debut novel.

    In short, in the midst of World War II, Enigma codebreaker Alan Turing has created a machine named Nautilus that can send a message back into the recent past. After Turing uses it to help the Allied forces succeed on D-Day, he sees the power (and potential danger) of what he has created. He knows he can only entrust it to one person: Joan, the mother of his secret child.  Over the next seventy years, the Nautilus is passed down through the Turing family, who all must decide for themselves when to use this powerful invention. Will it save the world – or destroy it?

    Three words to describe the book –  a ‘romp’ [yes, short, fast-reading chapters, sometimes just a couple of pages]. ‘thought-provoking’ [though too unrealistic to my mind, but then with modern technology who knows what’s ahead of us?], and ‘entertaining’ [well, I couldn’t put it down until I reached the end, which would suggest one wanted to see where it was going to lead us to?].  Other authors have described it as a “smart, gripping thriller with an amazing big idea behind it,” and a “fascinating alternative history with an intriguing ‘what if’ at its core”.  All very good, I just wasn’t keen on the ‘what-ifs’ in the alternative scenarios raised!

    A useful summary – “The Turing Protocol” is recognized for its engaging storytelling and thought-provoking themes, making it a compelling read for fans of historical fiction and speculative narratives. The combination of Turing’s legacy and the ethical questions surrounding time travel adds depth to the narrative, appealing to a wide range of readers. A scenario where the past can be changed to save the future!

    The man upon which much of the storyline was based was Alan Turing [1912-1954], who was a British mathematician and logician who made major contributions to mathematics, cryptanalysis, logic, philosophy, and mathematical biology and also to the new areas later named computer science, cognitive science, artificial intelligence, and artificial life.

    28th September

    I’ve just read ‘Lolita’ by Vladimir Nabokov, published in 1955, this book a Penguin edition of 361 pages. I bought this edition on the spur of the moment whilst visiting Dymock’s book store recently. Interesting book – I’m not sure what I was expecting in view of all the publicity on it’s initial publication, and subsequently!

    But as noted in the ‘Forward’ by John Ray Jnr – “True, not a single obscene term is to be found in the whole work; indeed the robust philistine who is conditioned by modern conventions into accepting without qualms a lavish array of four-letter words in a banal novel, will be quite shocked by their absence here.” I was actually quite pleased by that missing element, but at the same time, disturbed by much of what I read.

    My personal feeling, as I read through the book, that despite those ‘modern conventions’ a novel of this kind would be hard-pressed today to get published [by a reputable publisher anyway] – mainly because of the modern attitude to ‘sexual crimes’ against the under-aged, and the manner in which such crimes are pursued by both the law, and the public in general, as they quite rightly should be. Yet in 1959, Nabolov got away with it – as Ray goes on to say, looking to the time beyond 1959 and today, that ‘Lolita should make all of us – parents, social workers, educators – apply ourselves with still greater vigilance and vision in the task of bringing up a better generation in a safer world’.

    On a broader scale, for those interested, I found a very succinct [but also a plot giveaway] from an organisation called ‘sparknotes.com’. But if you don’t want to spoil the storyline before reading, that summary appears at the end of this ‘review’.

    Meanwhile, a less revealing synopsis, and comments, follow.

    As noted in Wikipedia – ‘Lolita is a novel by Vladimir Nabokov. The book was written in English. It was published in Paris in 1955. It was translated into Russian by Nabokov. The story is about the sexual relationship that develops in the United States between a middle-aged British professor and a 12-year-old girl after he becomes her stepfather. It was a very controversial book. The novel was made into a movie by Stanley Kubrick in 1962, and remade in 1997’. I may have seen the movie, but honestly can’t recall doing so.

    In any case, it’s being described as the most famous and controversial novel from one of the [so-called, by some] greatest writers of the twentieth century. It tells the story of Humbert Humbert’s obsessive, devouring, and doomed passion for the nymphet Dolores Haze [“The conjunction of a sense of humour with a sense of horror [results in] satire of a very special kind.” [claimed The New Yorker].

    Britannica writes: “Lolita, is a novel by Vladimir Nabokov, published in 1955 in France. Upon its American publication in 1958, Lolita created a cultural and literary sensation. The novel is presented as the posthumously published memoirs of its antihero, Humbert Humbert. A European intellectual and pedophile, Humbert lusts obsessively after 12-year-old nymphet Lolita (real name, Dolores Haze), who becomes his willing inamorata. The work examines love in the light of lechery

    Awe and exhilaration—along with heartbreak and mordant wit—abound in Lolita, which tells the story of the aging Humbert Humbert’s obsession for the nymphet Dolores Haze. Lolita is also the story of a hypercivilized European colliding with the cheerful barbarism of postwar America. Most of all, it is a meditation on love—love as outrage and hallucination, madness and transformation.

    Now, from sparknotes.com.

    In the novel’s foreword, the fictional John Ray, Jr., Ph.D., explains the strange story that will follow. According to Ray, he received the manuscript, entitled Lolita, or the Confession of a White Widowed Male, from the author’s lawyer. The author himself, known by the pseudonym of Humbert Humbert (or H. H.), died in jail of coronary thrombosis while awaiting a trial. Ray asserts that while the author’s actions are despicable, his writing remains beautiful and persuasive. He also indicates that the novel will become a favorite in psychiatric circles as well as encourage parents to raise better children in a better world.

    In the manuscript, Humbert relates his peaceful upbringing on the Riviera, where he encounters his first love, the twelve-year-old Annabel Leigh. Annabel and the thirteen-year-old Humbert never consummate their love, and Annabel’s death from typhus four months later haunts Humbert. Although Humbert goes on to a career as a teacher of English literature, he spends time in a mental institution and works a succession of odd jobs. Despite his marriage to an adult woman, which eventually fails, Humbert remains obsessed with sexually desirable and sexually aware young girls. These nymphets, as he calls them, remind him of Annabel, though he fails to find another like her. Eventually, Humbert comes to the United States and takes a room in the house of widow Charlotte Haze in a sleepy, suburban New England town. He becomes instantly infatuated with her twelve-year-old daughter Dolores, also known as Lolita. Humbert follows Lolita’s moves constantly, occasionally flirts with her, and confides his pedophiliac longings to a journal. Meanwhile, Charlotte Haze, whom Humbert loathes, has fallen in love with him. When Charlotte sends Lolita off to summer camp, Humbert marries Charlotte in order to stay near his true love. Humbert wants to be alone with Lolita and even toys with the idea of killing Charlotte, but he can’t go through with it. However, Charlotte finds his diary and, after learning that he hates her but loves her daughter, confronts him. Humbert denies everything, but Charlotte tells him she is leaving him and storms out of the house. At that moment, a car hits her and she dies instantly.

    Humbert goes to the summer camp and picks up Lolita. Only when they arrive at a motel does he tell her that Charlotte has died. In his account of events, Humbert claims that Lolita seduces him, rather than the other way around. The two drive across the country for nearly a year, during which time Humbert becomes increasingly obsessed with Lolita and she learns to manipulate him. When she engages in tantrums or refuses his advances, Humbert threatens to put her in an orphanage. At the same time, a strange man seems to take an interest in Humbert and Lolita and appears to be following them in their travels.

    Humbert eventually gets a job at Beardsley College somewhere in the Northeast, and Lolita enrolls in school. Her wish to socialize with boys her own age causes a strain in their relationship, and Humbert becomes more restrictive in his rules. Nonetheless, he allows her to appear in a school play. Lolita begins to behave secretively around Humbert, and he accuses her of being unfaithful and takes her away on another road trip. On the road, Humbert suspects that they are being followed. Lolita doesn’t notice anything, and Humbert accuses her of conspiring with their stalker.

    Lolita becomes ill, and Humbert must take her to the hospital. However, when Humbert returns to get her, the nurses tell him that her uncle has already picked her up. Humbert flies into a rage, but then he calms himself and leaves the hospital, heartbroken and angry.

    For the next two years, Humbert searches for Lolita, unearthing clues about her kidnapper in order to exact his revenge. He halfheartedly takes up with a woman named Rita, but then he receives a note from Lolita, now married and pregnant, asking for money. Assuming that Lolita has married the man who had followed them on their travels, Humbert becomes determined to kill him. He finds Lolita, poor and pregnant at seventeen. Humbert realizes that Lolita’s husband is not the man who kidnapped her from the hospital. When pressed, Lolita admits that Clare Quilty, a playwright whose presence has been felt from the beginning of the book, had taken her from the hospital. Lolita loved Quilty, but he kicked her out when she refused to participate in a child pornography orgy. Still devoted to Lolita, Humbert begs her to return to him. Lolita gently refuses. Humbert gives her 4,000 dollars and then departs. He tracks down Quilty at his house and shoots him multiple times, killing him. Humbert is arrested and put in jail, where he continues to write his memoir, stipulating that it can only be published upon Lolita’s death. After Lolita dies in childbirth, Humbert dies of heart failure, and the manuscript is sent to John Ray, Jr., Ph.D.

    1 October, 2025

    Back to 2025 we find   ‘A Beautiful Family’ by Jennifer Trevelyan, published in 2025, of 328 pages  –  one of those light novels I like to turn to now and then as some quick relief from more serious reading.

    Easily read, an entertaining enough story, although I was a little disappointed at the way the author finished the story – as though it was assumed the reader would be fully aware of the likely outcome of the various scenarios which arise during the course of the novel. I guess that writing style of a novel appeals to some readers, but I probably would have preferred a ‘tidier’ ending, which I felt a little cheated out of!!

    Nevertheless, an entertaining little storyline, and related from the point of view of a 10-year-old girl, and while throughout novel one has a fair indication of how situations are or are going to eventuate, these are generally only hinted out in the absence of any clear actual revelation.

    As noted by The Newtown Review of Books   “With sun, swimming, picnics, friends and adventures, A Beautiful Family could be a simple story of a happy family holiday, but Jennifer Trevelyan exploits the adult reader’s awareness of the dangers that Alix, as a naïve ten year old, unknowingly faces; and she allows the underlying tension to build throughout the book until the dramatic and frightening end. We listen to Alix and follow her actions, fearing at times for her safety, but, as in every good mystery, Trevelyan manages to surprise us” in what is apparently her debut novel.

    Amazon’s brief summary tells us  –

    In the past we had always spent our summer holidays in remote places. That had always been my mother’s preference. This year was different…………………………………………………………………………………… …
    As the summer holiday stretches ahead, with her older sister more interested in boys, her mother disappearing on long walks and her father, beer in hand, watching the cricket, the youngest in the family often finds herself alone. At the beach, she meets Kahu, a boy who tells her a tragic story about a little girl who disappeared a couple of years ago, presumed drowned. Suddenly, the summer has purpose-they will find the missing girl and become local heroes.  Between dips in the ocean, afternoon barbecues and lazy sunbaking, their detective work brings to the surface shocking discoveries and dark secrets, even about her own beautiful family …
    Jennifer Trevelyan magnificently captures the confusion and frustration of childhood, the fraught but unshakeable bond between sisters, and the dangers that lurk in the white lies we tell-especially about the people we love most.

    Liane Moriarty [author of ‘Here One Moment’ ] said ‘I absolutely loved this page-turning family mystery and didn’t want it to end’. Probably that’s why I got through it in a few short hours over a couple of days, but as already admitted, didn’t find it ended in the way I would have preferred!!

    10th October 2025

    This afternoon, I finished reading ‘The Shortest History of Music by Andrew Ford, published in 2024, of 233 pages. A very entertaining little book –   apart from most of the second chapter which dealt principally with the technical side of music, notes, structure etc – as a non-musician, most of that I was lost to!!!

    As Ford explains, this is not so much a chronological history [although such an approach comes through] but a focus on a  series, five in all of specific themes in the history of music, and these are approached in terms  of how those themes have played out through the ages. ,

    Those themes are as follows:

    • The tradition of music, from pre-history to the present; BCE to present;
    • Music and notation: blueprints for Building in Sound from 1400 BCE to the present [this section I had the most difficulty with];
    • Music for sale: Paying the Piper from 1000 BCE to the present;
    • Music and Modernism: Reinventing the Art from 1150 to the present; and,
    • Recording music, from 1500 to the present.

    Throughout the book, many well known musicians [and singers] are brought into the story, from the great classical composers, to the music of Blues, Jazz. Folk, Rock and so on, and it was interesting to read about the origins of much of the music of various that I had played for many years on my community radio station –  had this reader thinking he’d like to return to that medium!!

    The book has been described in one way as a ‘thematic’ exploration of music’s evolution, by examining its cultural significance and the human impulse  to create music in various ways and for a multitude of reasons over thousands of years.

    In promoting the book, Amazon and others, describe it as a lively, authoritative tour through several thousand years of music. Packed with colourful characters and surprising details, it sets out to understand what exactly music is – and why humans are irresistibly drawn to making it.   How has music interacted with other social forces, such as religion and the economy? How have technological changes shaped the kinds of music humans make? From lullabies to concert halls, songlines to streaming services, what has music meant to humans at different times and in different places?

    My lack of comprehension of some aspects, as already noted, could perhaps be explained by the following explanatory comment at the beginning of a review of the book by Ash Brom, as appeared in the Arts Hub on the 31 July 2024 where in one observation he wrote that “Giving this book either one star or five stars is kind of meaningless.  The reason for this is because the book is so thick with musical references, knowledge and vocabulary that, in order to keep up with it, the reader needs to know so many musical references, knowledge and vocabulary that they probably don’t need to be reading the book in the first place. There’s so much assumed knowledge that it feels like Ford is a lecturer in a university, and the audience is a room of seasoned academics “Giving this book either one star or five stars is kind of meaningless.  Your brain needs time to sit and work out what that means, but the narrative bolts ahead, assuming that all is understood”. 

    So having said that, I feel I did pretty to have the majority of the contents!!

    Brom went on to say that “David Attenborough’s introduction to natural history, Life on Earth, assumed the reader knew little of the topic matter; Stephen Hawking’s introduction to theoretical cosmology, A Brief History of Time, assumed the reader knew next to nothing; Ford’s book assumes the reader has a degree in classical music history with a major in ethnomusicology, an encyclopaedic knowledge of jazz and fluency in music scales. This is why it is hard to give the book a star rating. It just is what it is – that being an academic text written for people who are already in the club”    He also noted that ‘The works of young, living composers are all too often neglected.’ From the probable hundreds of names in Ford’s book, I’d say that less than 5% are still alive.” 

    That is true, but this after-all was promoted as a ‘short history’ and I guess there was a limit to covering ‘everything and everyone’ – yes, I did note the absence of contemporary  and currently ‘alive’ performers,  but to be honest, I wasn’t really anticipating or seeking an advancement into the 21st century, much of which I don’t actually see as ‘history’!! Others may disagree.

    On the question of shortness of subject matter  –  in the August 2024 edition of the Australian Book Review, Malcolm Gillies notes that ‘This highly readable ‘shortest’ history contrasts with the ‘longest’ currently available, single-authored history of music Richard Tasruskin’s 4,272-page ‘The Oxford History of Western Music’, [2005], which restricts itself  mostly to the notated tradition  of ‘classical’ music. By contrast, Ford celebrates the music  ‘happening all around us all the time’, whether notated, instrumental, or oral, spontaneous or rehearsed, in infancy or old age, and recorded or just ;vibrating in the memory’”

    Returning to Ash Brom, his review was not all negative, as he began  the main body of his review with the following paragraph.

    “Despite the points above, which I think are vital to mention, Ford’s book is an extremely well-written introduction to, basically, humans’ relationship with organised noise from the earliest hominids to circa the 1970s. It covers at length the impacts of first, notation, and second, recording, on our relationship with music. Some of this is genuinely fascinating, especially in a society like ours where microphones and music as tradable, portable commodities are commonplace and ubiquitous – Ford shows us the world before them and after them, and it’s a very different place.”

    So, in summary, if you like music [and I would guess that most people like ‘some form of music’, give this book a go – Ford introduces us, if only briefly at times, to characters who have featured in a broad genre of music styles at least up until around the 1970’s.  One little point of interest with respect to ‘Blues’ music and it’s relationship in development with Jazz  –  apparently there remains much conjecture as to where and how ‘Blues’ music originated;  that I think would be a fascinating topic on its own!!

    As for the author, Andrew Ford has been described as a ‘musical polymath’. On his website he identifies as a ‘composer, writer and broadcaster’., but I think much of the Australian public [well, those that are aware for eg, of the ABC’s Radio National network, would know him best as a broadcaster, given his three decades at the helm of the ABC’s Music Show.

  • The Coachbuilder’s Column: Volume 15: Issue 14: 29th September, 2025: The Legend of Troy

    The following article appeared on the 13th September, just past, in the on-line Newsletter ‘The Conversation: Books and Ideas”

    Titled ‘The legend of Troy’, and written &  explained  by Marguerite Johnson, Honorary Professor of Classics and Ancient History, School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry, The University of Queensland

    The Trojan War is a legend that sprang from a distant memory of a real Greek incursion into the Bronze Age city of Troy (in modern day Türkiye). This may have taken the form  of annual piracy raids and/or encounters based on control of the Aegean Sea.

    These real-life encounters between Greeks and Trojans, led to the destruction of Troy circa 1150 BCE (likely though warfare and fire). Over hundreds of years, they were transformed into oral tales.

    Collectively known as the Trojan War Cycle, these tales were later committed to writing. They were retold and readapted over centuries in Greek and Roman antiquity, with writers and artists changing and adding to the basic plotline to suit their own purposes. Adaptations of the hundreds of stories that make up this cycle continue today, particularly in theatre.

    The immediate cause of the legendary war, as storytellers have told it, was the abduction of King Menelaus’s wife Helen, Queen of Sparta, by the Trojan prince, Paris. (In the shame-based culture of Bronze Age Greek society, this act was deeply humiliating for a man, especially a king).

    In response to the kidnapping, Menelaus’s brother, Agamemnon, King of Mycenae (a city in the Peloponnese), led a military campaign against Troy. The city of around 10,000 people was surrounded and held under siege for ten years.

    The war ended with the ingenious deception of the Trojan Horse. This huge wooden beast was offered to the Trojans as a so-called gift from the Greeks, but secretly contained Greek soldiers. Once inside the city, they crept out, threw open the gates to their fellow Greeks and so began the city’s final days.

    Is any of it true?

    Most of us may find it strangely romantic to believe in a heroic quest for a stolen queen rather than accept that the city of Troy ultimately fell as a result of strategic and economic assaults at the hands of the Mycenaean Greeks.

    Indeed, the actual city of Troy has been located, complete with two archaeological sublayers. Experts have found evidence that attests to the city’s destruction by siege. Similarly, the site of Bronze Age Mycenae, a palatial structure, as old as the particular sublayers of Troy, has been identified at the place of origin for the Greek expeditions.

    But such physical sites cannot prove the historical existence of Helen, Achilles and the other superstars of the storytellers.

    Such heroes and heroines most likely came into being as the stories developed, although some characters may have been partially based on historic leaders, their wives and families.

    The Iliad’s account

    The Iliad (c. eighth century BCE) is the earliest example of how the shadowy, inglorious invasion of a prosperous city was transformed into a monumental national epic. Other stories tell aspects of the myth, for example Euripides’ tragedy, The Trojan Women (415 BCE).

    Attributed to the poet Homer, the Iliad chronicles some weeks in the last year of the war. Composed in dactylic hexameter and divided into 24 “books” (chapters, if you will) that culminate in 15,693 lines of poetry, it is the definitive masterpiece of war literature.

    Moving from the Greek encampment along the shores of northwest Asia Minor (modern-day Türkiye) to the fortified citadel of Troy (the modern-day city of Hisarlik) at the mouth of the Dardarnelles, the Iliad evokes the lives of both Greek and Trojan warriors as well as those of civilians.

    As a war narrative, its battle scenes are visceral and drenched in blood, evoking both courage and cowardice, and certainly not for the squeamish. Yet it also captures the devastation war brings to children, wives, mothers, men too old to fight and hostages, along with soldiers.

    The poem opens with an internal feud among the Greeks themselves, centring on the animosity between Agamemnon, and Achilles, leader of the Myrmidons (from modern-day Thessaly), who is also fighting for the Greeks.

    At the heart of this bitter dispute are two hostages. Chryseis, daughter of the Trojan priest of Apollo, Chryses, has been taken by Agamemnon as a sex slave following a raid. Briseis was awarded to Achilles during a similar incursion.

    The god Apollo sends a plague upon the Greeks as a result of Agamemnon’s refusal to return Chryseis to her father. Achilles – enraged and acting above his station – publicly confronts Agamemnon, demanding he return the young woman. Humiliated, Agamemnon eventually agrees but, in order to regain his preeminent status, takes Briseis from Achilles.

    This scene evokes what modern people might recognise as combat fatigue. There is tension around decision-making, confused thinking, mistrust and anger. This personal feud depicts both men, not only as larger than life warriors, but also as complex human beings enduring almost unendurable conditions.

    While such a situation may seem irrelevant in an epic that tells such a monumental tale, explicating the horrors of war on such a grand and devastating scale, the reality is quite the opposite.

    Firstly, it is a reminder that war can be banal. Indeed, the “mini war” over two sex slaves seized during raiding parties reenacts the overarching “super war” at Troy, reinforcing the vanity of the human condition as well as the recklessness and even malignancy propelling some conflicts.

    Interestingly, the story of the Trojan Horse, the death of Achilles, and the many other instalments that constitute the Trojan War Cycle, do not interest the poet who compiled the Iliad. These are tales told elsewhere, in the fragments that remain of other epics, in the songs of lyric poets and in some of the extant tragedies of playwrights, right up to the literature and art of Late Antiquity.

    Rather, Homer is interested in the stories of the humans trapped in the crossfire. For example, in Book Six of the Iliad, Hector, a Trojan prince and Troy’s greatest warrior, farewells his wife, Andromache, and his infant son, Astyanax, as he prepares to return to the battlefield. Andromache, who senses her husband is soon to die, says:

    […] for me it would be far better to sink into the earth when I have lost you, for there is no other consolation for me after you have gone to your destiny – only grief […]

    The Trojan Women

    Andromache’s story and those of other women after the fall of Troy are of particular interest to Greek tragic playwrights of the fifth century BCE. The most powerful of the extant plays on this theme is Euripides’ The Trojan Women. The play consists of the voices of the four women who mourn the death of Hector at the hands of Achilles in the last book of the Iliad: Cassandra, the Trojan princess; Hecuba, the Queen of Troy; Andromache; and, finally, Helen herself.

    To emphasise the suffering in war, the Chorus (the traditional collective narrators in Greek plays) is comprised of captive Trojan women, representing the nameless and forgotten human collateral.

    This tragedy has been retold and re-imagined since its original production, including a heralded Australian adaptation by Barrie Kosky and Tom Wright in 2008.

    Euripides details the fate of Cassandra, the princess also taken as a sex slave by Agamemnon; Hecuba, the wife of Priam, the last king of Troy, who is enslaved to Odysseus, King of Ithaca, and Andromache, indentured to Neoptolomus, son of Achilles. As for Helen, she is vilified as having caused the Trojan War, although in this play she, too, is a victim of war as she must beg her husband for her life.

    The horror and inhumanity expressed in The Trojan Women culminates in the Greek execution of Astyanax, the baby son of Andromache and Hector. The tiny body is prepared for burial by his grandmother, Hecuba, while Andromache wails and Troy burns.

    The endless interpretations of the siege of Troy in both literature and art can show courage and the triumph of the human spirit in the face of the worst of adversities. Yet others show that heroism is debatable and mutable, victory comes with loss of humanity, and women and children are always the victims.

  • The Coachbuilder’s Column: Volume 15: Issue 13: 18th August, 2025:  Testimonies of Gaza and October 7th.

    The following essay was taken from a weekly digital newsletter titled ‘The Conversation: Books & Ideas’, and I share it in this Column, simply for the information of readers, as it appeared in that Newsletter at the beginning of July this year. A specific  ‘Friday Essay’ on a broad range of topics is included in ‘The Conversation’ each week, and I felt this was relevant to the times we currently live in.

    From The Conversation, 4th July 2025

    Friday essay: ‘whose agony is greater than mine?’ Testimonies of Gaza and October 7 ask us to recognise shared humanity, by Juliet Rogers, Associate Professor Criminology, The University of Melbourne.

    In 1962, poet and Auschwitz survivor Yehiel Dinur took the stand in Jerusalem in the trial of Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann. Dinur was a much-anticipated witness, bearing the audience’s hope this man, a poet, would be able to explain – to capture and to transmit – the experience of Auschwitz, and of the Holocaust; that he could speak the unspeakable. Prosecutor Gideon Hausner hoped such a witness might “do justice to the six million personal tragedies”.

    Dinur used the name Katzetnik 135633 in his writings, also translated as “Prisoner 135663”. On the stand, he said: “I believe wholeheartedly that I have to continue to bear this name until the world awakens.”

    Awakening, understanding, empathy and change are the sentiments many survivors hope for, or ask for, during and after periods of trauma. The 20th century saw many of those pleas. The 21st century has done no better at honouring the promise, captured in the title of the 1984 Argentinian commission report on forced disappearances, Nunca Mas: never again. No matter how many such pleas appear before the courts, before the aggressors, before those in solidarity, the horrors of war, torture, starvation and genocide seem to happen again – and again.

    Three recent books from the region where war was been raging since the Hamas attacks on Israel on October 7 2023, and the ensuing war on Gaza, are part of these pleas.


    Review: Eyes on Gaza – Plestia Alaqad (Macmillan), Letters from Gaza – edited by Mohammed Al-Zaqzooq & Mahmoud Alshaer (Penguin), Gates of Gaza – Amir Tibon (Scribe)


    Eyes on Gaza is an on-the-ground account of the death and destruction of the first 45 days of the war by now 23-year-old Palestinian journalist Plestia Alaqad, who moved to Melbourne with her family in November 2023Letters from Gaza is a collection of 50 stories, poems and fragments from Palestinian writers enduring the past 20 months. And Gates of Gaza is the story of Israeli journalist Amir Tibon, a resident of Nahal Oz, one of the border kibbutz attacked by Hamas on October 7.

    These are all first-person testimonies of experiences of being under attack, though those attacks differ. We might say they fit into the genre adopted in truth commissions, such as the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa: a response to the nation’s years of living under the apartheid laws, discarded when Nelson Mandela took power in 1994.

    The commission was one effort to heal from this past. But, like the Eichmann trial, it needed stories to explain the histories of violence, and it needed the pain to be voiced to explain its impacts on communities, families and relationships.

    The use of people’s narratives to “bear witness” to the complex layers of legally sanctioned and militarily executed pain, loss and the traumas they can produce, is sometimes effective in helping audiences understand them. The Bringing Them Home Report in 1997 used this form to explain the incidence and impacts of the forced removal of Indigenous children by the Australian state. It was effective as one form of creating a shared reality for all in Australia, who then understood the term “stolen generations” and the pain, loss and genocidal intent to which this phrase refers.

    More recently, the Yoorrook Justice Commission in Victoria, Australia’s first formal truth-telling inquiry into historic and ongoing systemic injustices perpetrated against First Nations Peoples by colonisation, has also brought histories of loss, dispossession and abuse to light, using stories. Stories can make sense of the impact incurred through the intertwined web of policies, statistics, discrimination and quotidian violence at the hands of the state.

    The work of testimony

    The narratives in these books written since October 7 2023 are part of this genre of testimony or storytelling. But at least two of these books are not attempting to explain the past. They might be described better as pleas to stop what the International Court of Justice has called “a plausible genocide” happening in the present.

    They are, in one reading, wishes for the world to understand the experience of pain, rage, loss, fear, distress and defeat that accompanies destruction and unbearable loss. A wish for the world to hear, or perhaps feel, the words on the page – and make the pain stop.

    They wish the world would “awaken” to what is happening right now.

    The dynamic of awakening is the stock in trade of truth commissions. One party testifies or speaks to an experience, and the audience wakes up to what has been happening. As a result, they either change or facilitate change. The truth, captured as testimony, is supposed to set people free. Not just the speaker, but the community of speakers weighed down by history – or by the struggles of the past or the present.

    In legal forms the reason to speak is clear. The reason to speak in literature, biographies and works of nonfiction is less clear. What does the author want from us, the readers? But perhaps more importantly, what can we offer?

    Plestia wants her life back

    Plestia Alaqad is very clear about what she wants in her book, The Eyes of Gaza: A Diary Of Resilience.

    She wants the genocide to stop. She wants a free Palestine. She wants her home and her life back. The stories in this book show readers outside Gaza some of the life and death of those first six and a half weeks.

    Her last entry before she leaves Gaza for Egypt – and then Australia – is dated Day 45. During those 45 days, she puts on a press helmet and jacket, which both give her protection and weigh her down. And then she speaks: to cameras, to followers, to anyone who will listen. Her social media feeds documenting the war gained worldwide attention, her Instagram following rising from around 3,700 to 4.1 million today.

    There are too many deaths to be witnessed – by her and the reader. She describes genocide as an understatement for what is occurring in Gaza: “we lose more people than our hearts can handle”. She has seen so much death, heard so many screams. By day 30, all you can hear is a voice crying for help from under the rubble. You turn your back and walk away, because there’s nothing you can do to help.

    But Plestia’s project is more than documenting death. She is careful to show many aspects of life in Gaza. She shows how Palestinians retain relationships, family and pets. How a young boy just needs his “pot plant” from his destroyed house, under skies filled with drones and bombs. This is a plea for the genocide to stop, but it is also a celebration of being Palestinian. It is an homage to life in Gaza.

    It is also a plea to see Palestinians as more than numbers – and more than how they are depicted by Israel.

    “The world,” she says, “sometimes treats us like terrorists, trying to justify its complacency in allowing us to be massacred. And we know the perception, we read the propaganda just like everyone else. But the reality is that we’re the opposite.”

    She describes gentle moments of love and care between her fellow journalists and the people they interview. The children they bring sweets for, the “bird lady” who renames her tortoise “Plestia” after her. Both Plestia the tortoise and the “bird lady” are now living in a tent. She speaks of the doctors who work tirelessly.in the midst of brutal amputations and unimaginable burns, she recounts the care of a doctor giving cream for a skin rash that has tormented her, diagnosed as a product of her anxiety. Anxiety seems a gentle diagnosis for symptoms produced by witnessing and documenting such brutality.

    Anxiety over her helplessness, perhaps, over the lack of sleep, of nourishing food: dwindling even in those first 45 days. Anxiety seems like a Western preoccupation, from this writing distance. What Plestia experiences seems more like layers of embodied distress. Her empathy allows her to feel, perhaps too much. Empathy can be an enemy.

    Around page 100, she begins to deteriorate. “It’s funny how genocide changes a person,” she writes, describing herself as “Genocide Plestia”. She’s devastated, exhausted. She has lost hope. The journal entries are shorter, more repetitive. They recite her helplessness with what Jacqueline Rose, co-director of the Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities, has called the “repetitive thud of referentiality”.

    You feel Plestia’s effort to try to speak with some life in the pages, to use writing as a therapeutic tool. You wish it for her, but she has trouble summoning the energy, the life, any hope. As she poignantly quips: “Fake it till you make it doesn’t work during a Genocide”. What is there to say in such relentless days of loss?

    You want Plestia to get up, you want a happy ending, for a conclusion to the painful story, but the problem is time. The reader’s time, the reality of time since she wrote her book.

    Day 45, her last day in Gaza, is Monday November 20 2023. I read this book in June 2025, 646 days later – and it hasn’t stopped. When Plestia leaves Gaza and finally arrives here in Melbourne, the conditions she describes have been ongoing for more than 20 months. A recently released survey by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research estimates almost 84,000 people died in Gaza between October 2023 and early January 2025, as a result of the war. And that was six months ago.

    50 letters from Gaza

    The numbers are a way of reducing the experience of grief, devastation, loss (and the viewer’s guilt) to simple digits. Digits have no face and no sound. This is helpful to viewers, but it does not do justice to the 84,000, as Gideon Hausner knew well. No one awakens by hearing the numbers. But they matter.

    In Letters from Gaza, psychologist Ahmed Mortaja fears becoming a news story, “a dull number … I don’t want my name and my family name to be reduced to mere numbers, whether odd or even”.

    This book, a fragmented collection of 50 poems, stories and accounts, is devoted to giving life to those numbers. To animating the loss, so readers can apply their own imaginations, so we can understand the incomprehensible. It is a collection of fragments of lives since October 7 2023, squeezed into expressive pages. There is no “letter” more than six pages long. They are backed up against each other, permeating one another.

    Each letter tells a different story and the same story. Each finds a detail that has no language: flowers in a girl’s hair, dreams of careers that will perhaps never be, the sounds of explosions. They are stories of the impossible search for bread, the longing for a bed and a pillow. And, as in Plestia’s account, they evoke the relentless buzz of the drones in the sky in Gaza: everywhere, all day, every day since October 7 2023. Like tinnitus, like torture.

    The book begins with an effort to give names to numbers. On the first page, in the publisher’s note, we read that two of the authors, Sara al-Assar and Basma al-Hor, cannot be contacted. Because of communication lines and constant displacements, the details “may not reflect their current location or circumstances”. Authors may have died or been further displaced. Communication towers are destroyed. Tents are moved as people are moved on. Tents are destroyed.

    In Plestia’s accounts, there are displacements to safe zones that then become unsafe, so they move again and again – until the only choice is tents, often without food or blankets. She describes seeing 33,000 people in a displacement shelter, this number increasing daily. Just as numbers are not people, tents are not homes. In Letters from Gaza, the displaced tents are character, metaphor and reality.

    The stories are different, as are the deaths and losses within them, but these painful accounts help explain each other. The personal stories help animate words like displacement, refugee camp, genocide, so they do not fall into the pile of legal terms disconnected from names.

    But after the United Nations declarations in the opening pages, we hear no more of law – and little of justice. As Palestinian human rights lawyer and founder of the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, Raji Sourani said: Gaza is in danger of becoming “the graveyard of international law”. What is left are stories. The short stories, poems and brief accounts are packaged so they do not ask too much of the reader – just enough to provoke tears, and perhaps donations. Many readers will feel some of the helplessness in these pages.

    There are stories of hunger; the loss of grandmothers and children. I cried many times reading this book, but the next story would quickly arrive and sometimes bring relief. There is something sad, but ordinary, about details like a cat who finds a tent too hot. Unlike Plestia’s clear analysis and summation of the genocide in Gaza, the politics of this book are comparably quiet. Not absent, but quiet. The word genocide is mentioned four times, “Holocaust” only once. (I counted.)

    In Letters from Gaza, no one says Israel, only “the occupiers”. Husam Maarouf writes, “we no longer want anything from you […] Only to die in safety.” His entry is dated March 1 2024; he may well be dead. Batool Abu Akleen makes simple requests of the reader (or perhaps of God): “I want a grave, I don’t want my corpse to rot in the open road.” But the book seems to intentionally not accuse. We are told:

    this is not a book about war. It is a book about human souls that strive to avoid being hunted down by war. It is about how innocents are forced to learn how to survive when everything around them is about killing, destruction and death.

    But the accusation is there. How could it not be? Against Israel as occupier and aggressor – and the reader as bystander.

    Accusation sometimes comes embedded in questions. “Is one person’s pain greater than another’s?” asks Gaza poet and teacher Doha Kahlout. This question resonates with one inscribed on the Holocaust Memorial Tree in Hungary: “Whose agony is greater than mine?”

    When comparing agony, only one can live

    Jewish author, philosopher and psychoanalyst Jessica Benjamin, writing on Palestine and Israeli peace struggles, cautions against pitting stories from Israel and Palestine against each other, such that “only one can live”. Only one story, one narrative, one version of pain and loss.

    Holding multiple stories of suffering in mind is very difficult: for the survivor, for the listener and even for the psychoanalyst. Many survivors suffer symptoms of trauma that reduce the world to interpretation through their experience of its painful histories.

    In Eyes of Gaza, writing from Melbourne, Plestia shows a moment of this:

    On the train home, I see a lady with a suitcase, and the first thing that I think of is displacement, imagining how everyone in Gaza carries their whole life in their bag […] Then the announcement: Next Stop […] And I’m snapped back into reality.

    In this moment, the suitcase is only read through the lens of the past. It’s what is described colloquially as living in the past – a type of banal flashback, often a symptom of trauma. But when pain colonises bodies and narratives, recognising the pain of others is difficult to see. It may be impossible to see the experiences of the other’s world through any other lens than one’s own pain. Whose agony is greater than mine? is a competitive statement, not a question.

    In the war of greater pain, an Israeli child in fear may be read against a Palestinian child enduring the loss of their limbs and their whole family. Only one (story) can live.

    To hold two competing stories of pain, loss and agony in mind requires a feat of mental health endurance few are capable of: the Nelson Mandelas of this world. Working in the field of transitional justice, I have met a few.

    Most have experienced great loss and know there is no comparison at the level of agony. They resist “the repetitive thud of referentiality” because it drowns out conversation, annihilating curiosity and empathy alike. They know all stories must have their time.

    In October 2023, “liberal” London Jewish journalist and filmmaker Michael Segalov, once a “staunch defender of Israel”, tried to hold competing stories. He wrote about seeing Israel–Palestine through the lens of “fear and trauma – of the Shoah, of the Nakba, of generations now born into perpetual fear”.

    Early Jewish settlers were not “imperial soldiers”, but “a persecuted population failed by global governments pre and post Holocaust”, he points out. But by 1948, the year after the UN resolution that called for Palestine to be divided into Arab and Jewish states, “more than 750,000 Palestinians were made refugees, 15,000 killed”.

    “While these lands might well feel a Jewish ancestral home,” he wrote, “within living memory, it was shared with another people: the majority.” In 1922, in the first census carried out under the British Mandate, the population of Palestine was 763,550: 89% were Arabs and 11% Jewish.

    As Palestinian psychiatrist Eyad El Sarraj stressed while talking with Jessica Benjamin during peace negotiations, we must “stand simultaneously for the recognition of all injuries, while at the same time being clear that one side was coming from the position of Occupied and less powerful, the other Occupying and dominating”. Stories matter, politics matters.

    And some stories take more time than others – some stories are given more time than others. This is a matter of politics and practicality.

    Surviving the October 7 attacks

    Israeli journalist Amir Tibon and his family survived the October 7 attack on Kibbutz Nahal Oz, on the Gaza border; they are now internal refugees in northern Israel. He and his partner settled in Nahal Oz and raised a family. On the morning of October 7, they heard the sounds of the attack and raced to their safe room, spending the next five hours in there trying to keep their children – Galia, 3 years old and Carmel, aged 19 months – quiet.

    In discussing Tibon’s book, Gates of Gaza: a story of betrayal, survival and hope in Israel’s borderlands, I risk comparison and competition. Sometimes stories speak to each other, even when they speak to the silences. I resisted this one’s proximity to the above stories. But that is also to resist reality. It is to resist the importance of difference. All experience is valuable, but sometimes comparison reveals inequality.

    Plestia knows this well. The survivor guilt of which she writes is part of the hierarchy experienced by all survivors of mass violence. That she and her family survived, that she migrated, is to feel guilt for escaping the fate of those who have been starved, tortured, obliterated.

    Yehiel Dinur spoke from this position of guilt on the stand in 1962, saying he was speaking for those who died in Auschwitz. In the face of others’ death, all survivors struggle with justification. Competition is one form of this: Whose agony is greater than mine?

    Tibon was a resident of Nahal Oz, having moved there with his partner because of its beauty, nine years before October 7. He describes it as having “a strong, left-wing, liberal political leaning”, and says residents of the border areas are “some of the strongest advocates of Israeli–Palestinian peace”. He writes that the kibbutz movement has, “for decades”, been in favour of “a compromise that would allow Jews and Arabs to share this land, with agreed-upon borders – borders that, of course, would have to be protected”.

    In the 300-plus pages, Tibon describes the morning of October 7 in detail. The fear of his children and his partner as they stayed quiet in a safe room for some five hours. The sounds of shootings and desperation as he read pleas and accounts from other residents on the community’s WhatsApp group as the attacks unfolded.

    The narrative of that morning is interspersed with accounts from people who survived in his community: his parents, some of those who attended the Nova music festival, and Israeli Defense Force (IDF) soldiers. The narrative moves between that morning and a history of the kibbutz, framed in a history of Israel’s political lurching between right and left – and back again – over the 87 years since its recognition as a nation state by the UN.

    In one reading, this is a history book of 87 years – not just an account of five hours. It is a particular history.

    The narrative of those five hours is intense, peppered with stories of his parents racing from Tel Aviv to the kibbutz. Tibon’s father is a crucial figure in this narrative. A retired IDF general with “more than three decades” in the military, including combat experience, he seemingly has the capacity to assess situations and navigate a war zone with skill. It is his father who finally knocks on the “safe room” door in the afternoon (about halfway through the book). Tibon reports hearing “a strong bang and a familiar voice” from inside.

    The father, we could say, is the embodiment of Tibon’s feelings for – and belief in – a strong, kind Israel. An army general, protective husband and grandfather (in Hebrew, Saba), he is longed for by Tibon’s young children, who “loved their grandparents”, particularly his father, “who pampered and spoiled them at every opportunity”. This grandfather’s presence at the safe-room door allows the family to re-enter the safety of Israel.

    If the father is Israel, the sleeping children are its citizens. Carmel and Galia slept through much of the conflict, barely awakened by gunshots. They were rushed to the safe room the moment the shots were heard.

    Once you know the stories from Letters of Gaza, it is hard not to compare this to the waking of Mohammed Al Zaqzooq’s three boys – Baraa, Jawad and Basil – to the sound of “Huge missiles in large numbers making terrifying sounds” and the need to flee. Not least, because Amir’s children were barely awakened by shots outside. Their safe room kept the noise muffled and the danger at bay. This is not to say their fear won’t impact on their actions later. Transgenerational trauma has a way of influencing the future.

    Mohammed’s children moved quickly, within half an hour, to a refugee camp. At the time of writing, they remain there. His story is five pages long. Amir’s is 300-plus. Amir, an author and award-winning diplomatic correspondent for Haaretz, Israel’s liberal paper of record, has access to a computer, electricity and the security required to think, research and write.

    But why does he write this book? In the acknowledgements, he describes himself as needing to be encouraged, unsure of the worth of telling the story of his five hours in the safe room. But he describes much more than five hours.

    His book is a story of Israel – and particularly, of its informal settlements. In the early 1950s, he writes, 20 young soldiers – ten men and ten women – were taken by bus to this site to settle it. Nahal Oz is so close to Gaza, it has “agricultural lands which literally touch the border fence”. The kibbutzim functioned as a kind of human border, with increased populations: the 20 broke into couples, then families. Within a few years, they had a small farming community, with a person devoted to security.

    Empty land?

    This is not a story of military invasion and colonisation, however. It is a story of settlement on land represented as empty. We know this story well in Australia. In this context, it can be a plea for a recognition of innocence.

    As Amir tells it, there were no Palestinians in the place before: no one was removed or relocated. Only in passing does he mention the Bedouin who passed through the area before.

    In Australia, Irene Watson and Aileen Moreton-Robinson have, in different ways, explained lands do not need to be sites of permanent agriculture to be crucial to the survival of some groups or nations. Borders and settlements can disturb land, law and life regardless of whether houses are demolished or not.

    The beauty of Nahal Oz, Amir writes, was due to its access to water and its site on fertile land, where trees provided shelter and probably food. Its loss was likely no small thing to people who required sustenance and shelter as they moved through. After the settlement, they no longer could.

    After Israel set up its border there, only Israelis could pass through without being subject to the checkpoints that are well documented sites of humiliation and arbitrary punishment for Palestinians.

    By 1997, the walls went up near Nahal Oz. But the walls to shield Nahal Oz from Gaza – and particularly from its people – were not enough. Amir describes the elaborate and extensive tunnels used by Palestinian soldiers to enter Israel (he calls them “terrorists” and “suicide bombers”).

    The tunnels became the problem of Palestinian attacks on Israeli settlers. To deal with this problem, the concrete walls were built, reaching 160 metres underground, preventing any permeation. Then, on October 7, the walls could not provide security. Then, there was only the safe room.

    The safe room is an obvious metaphor in this book. It is Israel under attack. One of these rooms has been built into every house in the kibbutz, so families can be safe from the mortar attacks from Gaza – a regular occurrence since the 1987 Intifada.

    Plestia tells us that the materials for a safe room are not allowed to be brought into Gaza. There are no safe rooms there. Tibon doesn’t mention this; maybe he doesn’t even know this fact, which is its own symptom of the political and social environment in Israel.

    He does describe “the unimaginable destruction that Israel has unleashed on Gaza in the aftermath” of the October 7 attacks. He is critical of this “destruction”, though he does not use the term genocide. (There are those who wait for the International Court of Justice to decide if it was more than “plausible” – and there are those who cannot wait.)

    Tibon is critical of Israel’s right wing, which cultivates war. He wants peace. But peace here is its own violence.

    Like the rhetoric of reconciliation in South Africa, calls for peace can do violence to historical experiences of injustice. There, reconciliation discourse has been criticised, along with its apolitical leanings. Reconciliation in South Africa has largely meant people subject to historical injustices must reconcile themselves to their losses and their reality.

    A story attributed to Father Mxolisi Mapanbani, of Tom and Bernard and the bicycle, has been used many times to critique “reconciliation” rhetoric in South Africa. It is helpful here.

    Tom and Bernard are friends and live opposite each other. One day, Tom stole Bernard’s bicycle. Every day, Bernard saw Tom cycling to school on it. After some time, Tom went up to Bernard and said, “Let us reconcile and put the past behind us.” Bernard said, “Okay, let’s reconcile – what about the bicycle?” “Oh no,” said Tom, “I’m not talking about the bicycle, I’m talking about reconciliation.”

    In the Australian context, after Kevin Rudd’s apology to the stolen generations in 2008, human rights and social justice campaigner Tom Calma described this form of reconciliation as the “unfinished business of justice”.

    The apology might have offered some form of acknowledgement, and gone some way toward creating a shared reality on the injustices of the past, but while justice remains unfinished, many are not at peace.

    Amir wants peace. He doesn’t want to live in a safe house – but he wants his house and his family to live securely in Nahal Oz. He wants Palestinians to be at peace with this reality.

    The word “peace”, like “reconciliation”, does a lot of work to present Tibon on the side of “the good”. Just like, in Letters From Gaza, the relative lack of the word “genocide” keeps the accusation at bay and politics in the background – and it keeps its calls for recognition of suffering at the fore. In this book about “human souls”, the editors call for a recognition of shared humanity.

    Tibon is careful not to group “terrorists” under that name – though he uses a Hebrew word that means exactly that. (Mehablim, he calls the people who attacked Nahal Oz.) Why? Though he writes in English and undoubtably spoke Hebrew throughout the siege, why does he speak of the Palestinian attackers as Mehablim?

    The answer might be found in the fact no Palestinian name, beyond former Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, appears in these pages. He has interviewed many people, but none of them are Palestinian. Their narrative remains outside his text.

    We must find the humanity of the Palestinians in other stories.

    If the safe room is a metaphor for Israel, the tent – as described in so many of the stories in Letters from Gaza, and in Plestia’s account of those 45 days – is a metaphor for the lives of Palestinians in Israel, and perhaps the world’s eyes.

    A tent is permeable, fragile, disposable. Bodies within it are subject to displacement, starvation, genocide. Every house in Tibon’s kibbutz has a safe room. There have been at least seven bombings of tent camps in Gaza. How can you not do the maths?

    Stories, awakening and halting the bombs

    Stories demand people are not reduced to mathematics. They place the reader in the scene and plead for identification and understanding. Writing on the Eichmann trial, Holocaust historian and legal scholar Lawrence Douglas describes “the words of the survivors that built a bridge from the accused to the world of ashes”.

    Afrikaaner journalist and poet Antje Krog writes, on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa, “In all the stories a landscape is created.”

    But this landscape, if it is to have any effect, must be mapped across previous perceptions. For that, it must do damage to the secure world – the pre-existing imaginative landscape – of the reader or of the listener.

    Moral philosopher Rai Gaita describes remorse as “a dying to the world”: a little death is required of the listener or reader who is implicated as a bystander, encountering the suffering of others. A death of complacency. A small disintegration that may mean our own peaceful worlds are no longer tenable.

    This is why stories, particularly, are mobilised in truth commissions. They animate the impossible numbers – the dry policies and repetitive loss – with scenes of humanity. Testimony – personal stories – link the words (genocide, massacre, terror) to an imagination of a scene, a person, a child or a parent. To people we can identify or empathise with.

    Like the two worlds connected in Ahmed Mortaja’s poem, Hubb and Harb, In Letters from Gaza:

    tonight I will fall asleep telling myself that the noise outside is fireworks, a celebration and nothing more.
    That the frightened screams of children are the gleeful terror of suspense before something long-awaited, like Eid.
    Tonight, I will fall asleep scrolling through the photos on my phone, telling myself that my evening with friends wasn’t that great – really, I was bored – so now I’m skimming through memories to pass the time.

    If empathy were all it took to halt the counting of the 646 days in Gaza, then Letters from Gaza and Eyes on Gaza would achieve their aim. But empathy rarely produces political change.

    Stories – the 50 voices in Letters from Gaza, accounts like Plestia’s – make us cry, perhaps make us donate, but they do not halt the bombs. This, and more, might be what Yehiel Dinur meant when he asked for the world to “awaken”, that it change, that it stop what Tibon calls “the unimaginable destruction”.

    Until then, Dinur pledged to remain Katzetnik 135633. Until then, we will likely only know “Genocide Plestia”: “it’s funny how genocide changes a person”.

  • The Coachbuilder’s Column: Volume 15: Issue 12: 18th August, 2025:  a selection of recent readings

    This contribution looks at a variety of reading genres over recent weeks about which I have made a few personal comments together with the views of an occasional more professional writer.  Books covered in this article are as follows:

    • The Eye of the Storm by Patrick White [1973];
    • The Shortest History of Scandinavia by Mart Kuldkepp [2025];
    • Outback Reunion by Rachel Johns [2024];
    • Under the Greenwood Tree’ by Thomas Hardy [1972]; and,
    • The Shortest History of France’ by Colin Jones [2025]

    28th July

    ‘The Eye of the Storm’ by Patrick White, published in 1973 [of 608 pages].

    This was the 3rd of White’s novels I’ve managed to read – and in truth, all have proved a difficult choice of reading, at times somewhat tedious, and with occasions of long-drawn-out periods of prose. Yet at the same time, in this book as with the others, White’s intuition of life’s realities and human nature, as certainly relevant in his era, kept this reader interested. One frustration to my mind was the ‘annoying’ inclusion of various sections of prose [generally relating to the interpretation of dreams experienced by some the characters] where ‘no punctuation’ at all is used, at one stage near the end of the book, covering nearly two and half pages!!

    I also admit that I inherited this book from my late Mother, after giving it to her as a Christmas gift in December 1973. I wonder if she ever actually got around to reading it?

    Patrick White [1912-1990] was awarded numerous prizes throughout his career as an author and playwright, the most notable of which was the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1973 after the publication of ‘The Eye of the Storm’, although he pleaded illness as the reason for not attending to accept the award. The Nobel citation praised him “for an epic and psychological narrative art, which has introduced a new continent into literature”. He was also awarded the Australian of the Year in 1973. In his acceptance speech, he said that Australia Day should be “a day of self-searching rather than trumpet blowing” and that historian Manning Clark, comedian Barry Humphries and communist trade union leader Jack Mundey were more worthy of the award.

    White was also among the first group of the Companions of the Order of Australia in 1975 but he resigned in June 1976 in protest against the dismissal of the Whitlam government in November 1975 by the Governor-General Sir John Kerr and the subsequent reintroduction of knighthoods as part of the order.

    I would imagine that this is not a book that the average modern ‘novel’ reader would take much interest or delight in. ‘The Eye of the Storm’ was apparently written about the meaning of the author’s own mother’s death.

    Wikipedia describes White as an Australian novelist and playwright who explored themes of religious experience, personal identity and the conflict between visionary individuals and a materialistic, conformist society…. developing a complex literary style and a body of work which challenged the dominant realist prose tradition of his home country, and was satirical of Australian society, and sharply divided local critics. That kind of description in 2025 is probably a complete turn-off to the modern novel reader!!

    In short, the novel tells the story of Elizabeth Hunter, the powerful matriarch of her family, who still maintains a destructive iron grip on those who come to say farewell to her in her final moments upon her deathbed.

    From the Patrick White Catalogue

    Plot: In her large Sydney home, Elizabeth Hunter is dying, attended by her longtime German Jewish housekeeper, a succession of hired nurses, and a solicitor with a long memory. Elizabeth is a dominating force who heavily influenced her two children, both of whom have lived in Europe for many years and return to be with their mother. Sir Basil, a famous, womanising actor based in London, is down on his luck financially. His sister Dorothy, the Princess de Lascabanes, has long left her colonial past behind to develop a new identity, and a return to Australia is especially confronting for her. Both siblings hope to reconcile with their past – and perhaps gain something from their mother’s death.

    Elizabeth is plunged into the past, especially memories of her deceased husband Bill, and a revelatory moment on Brumby Island when she came face to face with the eye of a storm, and an incredible sense of calm and meaning like never before. But the past looms large and has space for everyone: Basil, Dorothy, the housekeeper Lotte who survived the Holocaust, the passionately loyal solicitor Arnold Wyburd, and the three nurses who give in to its demands despite their own personal doubts. Each of these figures must reassess their lives in the wake of this startling woman…. Yet her true complexity will never be understood by those closest to her, especially not her children, who have yet to experience anything as transcendent as has she.

    Described as a profound exploration of family dynamics and societal norms, centred around the dying matriarch Elizabeth Hunter and her complex relationships with her children, White dramatizes the universal themes of love, loneliness, old age and death. He reveals the flux of power and dependency, the ultimate nuances of love and hatred that fester beneath the surface of family relationships.

    Writing in literopedia.com in 2024, we read the following.

    “The Eye of the Storm” is a novel written by the Australian author Patrick White, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1973. Published in the same year, the novel is considered one of White’s most significant works and a notable contribution to Australian literature. The narrative is set in post-colonial Australia and revolves around the Vass family, particularly the aging and wealthy matriarch, Elizabeth Hunter.

    The story commences with the death of Elizabeth’s husband, Sir Athol Hunter, bringing the family together for the funeral. As the plot unfolds, it exposes the intricate dynamics within the Vass family, revealing strained relationships, power struggles, and hidden secrets. The title, “The Eye of the Storm,” metaphorically reflects the deceptive calm at the centre of tumultuous family and societal dynamics.

    Key themes explored in the novel include family relationships, social class distinctions, individual identity, and the impact of the past on the present. White’s narrative technique involves shifting perspectives, providing readers with insights into the thoughts and emotions of various characters.

    The plot introduces significant characters such as Basil and Dorothy, Elizabeth’s estranged children, as well as nurses Flora and Nurse Davidson, whose arrival disrupts the family’s established order. The novel masterfully navigates issues of power, control, and the facade of societal respectability.

    White’s exploration of complex characters, coupled with his keen observations on societal norms and human psychology, contributes to the novel’s critical acclaim. “The Eye of the Storm” received the prestigious Miles Franklin Award in 1973 and has since remained an important part of the Australian literary canon.

    The novel has been praised for its intricate narrative structure, rich character development, and exploration of themes that transcend cultural and geographical boundaries. White’s storytelling prowess and his ability to capture the essence of human relationships make “The Eye of the Storm” a timeless work that continues to be studied and appreciated by readers and scholars alike’.

    Whether that ‘description’ would apply to te modern scholar in 2025, I have my doubts.

    2nd August

    A touch of history now  –   ‘The Shortest History of Scandinavia’ by Mart Kuldkepp, published in 2025 by Black Inc [of 258 pages]\  –  an abbreviated history, one of a set of three that I purchased a few weeks ago from Swartz Media.

    This was an interesting read, although at times, I found the various scenarios between the ‘separate’ Scandinavian nations to be a little confusing and difficult to keep track of, and found myself wishing I had an individual history separately of Sweden, Norway, Denmark Finland [even Iceland].. However, as one reviewer noted, the book was ‘the perfect starting point for anyone interested in Scandinavian history’. The fault most likely remained with myself, in that so often [especially of late], while finding the material I’m reading of essential historical interest, my ability to retain much of that information would probably restrict my passing an examination of the facts just read!!  I had previously read [and reviewed in the Coachbuilder’s Column] the book ‘Saga Land’ by Richard Fidler & Kari Gislason’ published in 2017 which dealt with the stories of Iceland from the time of the Vikings

    So, what does this short history cover?  Basically, ‘from the Stone Age to ‘Scandimania’ – a brisk, illuminating journey through 14,000 years of Nordic history’ referencing the five nations mentioned plus Greenland, and the more substantial islands off the Scandinavian coastline.

    As noted in one of the reviews, outsiders have long viewed Scandinavia as special, starting with the ancient Greeks and their myths of ultima Thule, a place ‘where the Sun goes to rest’. Today, we admire Scandinavia for its universal welfare, equality, peacefulness and untouched nature – not to mention its interior design, crime literature and love of all things hygge. Yet Nordic history has had its hardships and dark periods too: pandemics, war, the expansionism of the Viking Age and the eighteenth century, alliances with Nazi Germany in World War II and a eugenics movement in the twentieth century.

    In The Shortest History of Scandinavia, historian Mart Kuldkepp masterfully sketches the outlines of Scandinavia’s rich history – from the first known peoples of the region, who followed the ice sheet north as it retreated at the end of the last Ice Age, to the Scandinavians living in nations that are among the happiest in the world today. The author, Mart Kuldkdepp, is a professor and researcher of Estonian and Nordic history at University College London, where he specialises in the political history of the Baltic and Nordic regions.

    In this short but deeply insightful volume, Kuldkepp illuminates the concept of ‘Nordicness’ – a hard-to-define quality that has nonetheless steered the region to respond to major challenges, actively shaping their history and exerting a considerable influence on European and global history in the process. Throughout their history, there are numerous changes in the relationships and alliances between these nations, and I have to admit that it was the complexity of those alliances which I found hard to kept abreast of at times. Apart from the very early history, and in particular the sections dealing with the Viking and other related invasions of early Britain and continental Europe, I did find the examination of the author’s coverage of the political and economic changes that occurred in the C20th and early C21st centuries of special interest. I’d not also realised the extent of the ‘hold’ or dominance that Russia held over Finland for such a long period in that time, while the supposed ‘neutrality’ of Sweden during WWII and the difficulties faced in trying to ‘satisfy the needs of both sides of the conflict without appearing to favour one over the other, made for interesting reading.

    Throughout the book there are various ‘text boxes’ which often provide a more detailed if not brief analysis of a particular aspect of Scandinavian history, lifestyle, culture and artistic successes referred to only sparsely in the main text.

    Writing in the August 2025 edition of The Australian Book Review, Margaret Clunies Ross notes ‘That important Scandinavian artists, writers and thinkers are largely confined to the text boxes, while associated cultural movements are mentioned briefly, sometimes obscurely, in the main narrative.  One of the important intellectual movements of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, Romantic nationalism, is described briefly in Chapter Eleven, but how this movement was enriched by philosophers like Soren Kierkegaard, poets such as Adam Oehlenschlager, and the multifaceted endeavours of  the influential Danish writer N.F.S. Grundtvig is not clearly explained. Hans Christian Anderson, on the other hand, gets both a picture of his statue in Copenhagen and a whole text box to himself”. That criticism may well simply reflect the personal prejudices of the reviewer [who apparently is a Knight of the Icelandic Order of the Falcon] and her desire for specific features to be covered in a book which the author himself admits in his Preface that  ‘It goes without saying that any short history of a whole region must be selective, in terms of what it covers and how it is structured’ and this limitation should be recognised by any reader.  

    I’ll just copy one small section from the closing pages of the book which provides one summary aspect of Scandinavia’s history.

    From pages 234-235.

    ‘It was the Viking Age, with its raids, trade and settler colonialism, that rudely pushed Scandinavia into the centre of European awareness. The pacification of these militant pagans of the north took centuries, and, in the end, the problem did not have a military solution. Instead, gradual and voluntary Christianisation, along with the wealth amassed in the Viking Age, helped to kickstart the successful development of European-style kingdoms in Scandinavia. Going forward, these remained mostly concerned with succession struggles and conflicts with each other, and no longer presented an acute threat to the rich countries of Western Europe.  At the same time, Scandinavia managed to avoid the fate that befell some other parts of the Baltic Sea region, which were targeted by medieval crusades and Christianisation by force, leading to foreign dominance and serfdom of the native population”.

    One aspect revealed in the book which I found disturbing – Sweden during the post-war period, as part of that country’s ambitious social-welfare plans, indulged in a philosophy which led Scandinavia down a darker path   involving forced sterilisations of people seen as not ‘productive enough’, a moral failure largely concealed by the overall success story of the Nordic welfare state’ [p.238].

    4th August

    For something very different – ‘Outback Reunion’ by Rachel Johns, published in 2024 [of 334 pages]. An easily read, relatively light-hearted ‘Australian rural romance’ novel, read over about 24 hours. Another Aussie female author who writes fictional novels about rural life in her country – I think from memory, this is the first of her books I’ve read, simply chosen at random, as after some fairly heavy recent reading, I felt the need for a quick easily digested story, and this took me exactly to that ‘place’!’  Apparently this story is one of series of novels set in the fictional town of Bunyip Bay in Western Australia.

    In basic outline: –

    A moving story of lost love, second chances, and the healing power of truth under the big top in a small town.    They spent one magical night together, but when he woke up she was gone …

    Eight years later, Gabriela Jimenez is hoping a couple of weeks in Bunyip Bay with the Grand Jimenez Family Circus will give her and Luna, her daughter, the chance to reconnect after the tragic death of Luna’s father. The last thing Gabi expects is to run into the man she once knew. Mark Morgan is still as sweet and sexy as she remembers, but Gabi is harbouring guilt and dealing with the grief of her in-laws. She can’t afford to let him get under her skin again.

    After his successful career in AFL was cut short due to a crushing injury, Mark is struggling to readjust to small-town life and working the family farm. As if this isn’t bad enough, his wife’s betrayal means he may never be able to risk his heart to love again. Mark couldn’t be less interested in the circus that has arrived in town … until he discovers that the woman who vanished from his bed all those years ago without saying goodbye is part of it.

    Will a chance meeting lead to something more?

    As described by the publishers and others – The unforgettable, hotly anticipated return to Bunyip Bay from bestselling Australian romance author Rachael Johns.

    So, if it’s the Romance genre your looking for, this is the book for you. I enjoyed the storyline, but generally only turn to this type of fictional story for a bit of occasional light-reading.

    AN EXCERPT: [near the beginning]

    ‘For one crazy moment, she contemplated staying right where she was, never going back to the circus. Maybe there could be something between she and Mark? Could she give up everything she’d ever known and risk a new life?
    But then she glanced around Mark’s bedroom, taking in his footy posters and barbell weights in the corner, remembering what he’d said about not really having time for dating, and she knew staying was an even worse idea than what she’d already done.
    So, for the second time that night, she snuck out on someone sleeping.
    Only this time she wasn’t running away from her life, but back to it’.

    13th August

    A bit of a Hardy classic,  ‘Under the Greenwood Tree’ by Thomas Hardy [first published in 1972, this a 1982 Penguin edition], of 248 pages.   Presumably passed to my mother from her sister, Jean in the 1980s, and subsequently inherited by myself!  One of the small paperbacks I’ve retained from time to time in the car glovebox reading a few pages at a time while waiting for appointments, etc. I decided to remove it from that location, and complete a reading. An interesting little novel, and in some ways, fairly simple in its construction and storyline once the reader manoeuvres their way through C19th English cadences and accents of some of the characters depicted.

    Described as the best-loved, and certainly the happiest of all Hardy’s novels, his second published novel, and a story which led to the writing of a series of ‘Wessex’ novels by Hardy.

    The story is best described as a pastoral romantic novel by Thomas Hardy, that explores themes of love, tradition, and change in a rural English village. An interesting little novel, in some ways, fairly simple in its construction and storyline once the reader manoeuvres their way through C19th English cadences and accents of some of the characters depicted, with their mode of talk, described as being full of observation and humour. It was apparently based upon a vivid and authentic recreation of the author’s own childhood environment, and modelled the villagers in the novel, on people he had known intimately. 

    In basic summary  –  The novel is set in the fictional village of Mellstock and follows the romantic entanglements of Dick Dewy, a church musician, and Fancy Day, a new schoolmistress. The story begins with the Mellstock parish choir, which includes Dick and his family, as they perform during Christmas festivities. Dick falls in love with Fancy at first sight during a schoolhouse performance. However, Fancy has other suitors, including the wealthy farmer Frederic Shiner and the new vicar, Mr. Maybold, who wishes to replace the choir’s traditional music with a mechanical organ.  As the story unfolds, Dick and Fancy become secretly engaged, but complications arise when Fancy’s father initially opposes their union. Eventually, after a series of events, including a proposal from Maybold, Fancy faces a dilemma between love and social status, leading to a poignant conclusion. 

    The novel explores several themes, including:

    Thomas Hardy [1840-1928] was himself actually a struggling provincial architect in the mid-1800s, and he began to write novels [and poetry] in order to make money. This novel set him on the way to making a living. During his ‘literary’ life, he wrote up to 18 novels, numerous short stories, poetry [which was his first love], And in his senior years, some drama productions.

    17th August

    ‘The Shortest History of France’ by Colin Jones, published in 2025, of 260 pages.

    Another relatively easily read book, although, as with the Scandinavia short history, there were many aspects of this reading that I would have liked to explore in more detail and depth, eg, France’s 1789 revolution, or the despised role of the Vichy in France and its collaboration with the NAZIS especially in respect of the Jewish situation, during WWII, or the country’s racism and brutality arising from its colonisation of Algeria,  and participation later in the slave trade in various parts of the globe..

    This short history covers more than two millennia of France’s history from so-called ‘glorious defeat’ in 52BCE to Julius Caesar to what was described as a somewhat unexpected triumph of the 2024 Paris Olympics shortly after a national election.  A ‘melting pot’ of influences from internal conflicts, European neighbours and international circumstances.

    Black Inc, publishers of this book and others in the Shortest History series describe this publication ss follows.

    From Roman conquest to Emmanuel Macron, the Gauls to de Gaulle, trade to war, religion to migration, colonialism to slavery, Joan of Arc to Asterix …

    France is the most popular tourist destination in the world, thanks to its unsurpassed cultural and historical riches. Gothic architecture, Louis XIV opulence, revolutionary spirit, café society, haute cuisine and couture – what could be more quintessentially French?

    Rarely, however, do we think of France as a melting pot, but historian Colin Jones asserts it’s no less a mélange of foreign ingredients than the United States, and by some measures more. As nationalism and anti-immigration rhetoric surge in France (and elsewhere), The Shortest History of France presents a portrait of a nation whose politics and society have always been shaped by global forces.

    Clear-eyed and avoiding traps of national exceptionalism, Jones unfolds France’s first millennium of invasions and subjugation by its neighbours and iterations of the Roman Empire, to the Enlightenment, The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and The Paris Agreement. Meanwhile, its darker moments have included overseas colonisation, the Vichy regime and the Algerian War, along with persistent racism, police brutality, and civil unrest.  The Shortest History of France is a dynamic, global story enhanced with touches of cultural radiance – truly a retelling for our times.

    After reading this book, I must admit that my idyllic view of France as a cultural and in some ways ‘peace-loving’ European nation has somewhat been thwarted by many of the events described and covered in this short history, even up to more recent times.

    Barnes & Noble describe the book as – The Shortest History of France reveals a nation whose politics and society have always been shaped by global forces. With up-to-date scholarship that avoids the traps of national exceptionalism, Jones reminds us that it was only after the first millennium of French history—after constant subjugation to the Roman Empire and Germanic tribal forces—that a nation-state began to emerge, while absorbing influences from its European neighbours. Later, the Crusades and subsequent overseas colonization paved the way for cultural exchange with Africa, the Caribbean, East Asia, and elsewhere.  France has been home to the Enlightenment, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the Paris Agreement . . . but also to the Vichy regime, the Algerian War, and persistent racism and civil unrest. By turns serious and spirited, The Shortest History of France is a dynamic, global story for our times.

    Jones himself, as the author, argues that (though his terms aren’t quite so blatant) the French aren’t really French at all. “Scratch a French icon,” he writes about Asterix, “and traces of the wider world are never far beneath the surface.” We are reminded that the cartoon character meant to embody the spirit of the Gaulois resistance was, in fact, created by a Polish Jew.  He also writes at length of the conflicting influences that have shaped France’s hexagonal frontiers and the nation within it. “French borders have always been porous,” Jones writes, suggesting the history of France is truly the history of who most influenced France at any given time. Certainly, this aspect is revealed time and again throughout the book.

    Writing for The Standard.co.uk in March, 2025, William Hosier suggests that ‘Jones’ book should appeal to both philistines and experts: it reads as A History of France for Dummies as well as an encyclopedia of erudition. The tone is journalistic and fancy-free, its author darting nimbly from the Aristotelian influence on medieval universities to the differences between Romanesque and Capetian architectural styles. The style is learned, yet unsnobby: it doesn’t matter how much or little you know about the figures mentioned, since all are described in simple monikers (“leading politician Léon Gambetta”, “statesman Jules Ferry”). A bit repetitive, perhaps: but immeasurably more helpful than the opposite’.

    As for the author, Colin Jones, CBE, FBA, is Emeritus Professor of History at Queen Mary University of London. He is the author and editor of many works on French history, including The Cambridge Illustrated History of France, The Great Nation: France from Louis XV to Napoleon, The Fall of Robespierre: 24 Hours in Revolutionary Paris and a host of others.

    An interesting read, with perhaps the reservations on brevity mentioned above, where more detail and expansion of the subject matter to be searched out through other avenues.

  • The Coachbuilder’s Column: Volume 15: Issue 11: 15th July, 2025:  about the author Graham Greene, letters and novels.

    I’ve just read  ‘Graham Greene: A Life in Letters’ edited by Richard Greene [no relation], published in 2007 [446 pages]………….I’d never read any of Greene’s novels though knew I had one somewhere, eventually tracked it down, a Penguin paperback of The Honorary Consul’, first published in 1973, which I refer to later, as I decided I had to read at least one of his novels.

    As revealed through his letters, his novels were generally based upon people he’d met, or places and international conflicts that he found himself involved in. And as revealed through the letters, a vivid portrait of a fascinating writer, a mercurial man of courage, wit and passion. 

    As Amazon describes it – “One of the undisputed masters of twentieth-century English prose, Graham Greene (1904-1991) wrote tens of thousands of personal letters. This exemplary volume presents a new and engrossing account of his life constructed out of his own words. Impeccably edited by scholar Richard Greene, the letters–including many unavailable even to his official biographer–give a new perspective on a life that combined literary achievement, political action, espionage, travel, and romantic entanglement. The letters describe his travels in such places as Mexico, Vietnam, and Cuba, where he observed the struggles of mankind with a compassionate and truthful eye. Letters to friends such as Evelyn Waugh and Muriel Spark offer a glimpse into the literary culture in which he wrote, while others reveal the agonies of his heart. The sheer range of experience contained in Greene’s correspondence defies comparison”.

    These letters, as published by his namesake, were written over 70 years, from September, 1921 to the 21 March, 1991 [14 days before he died]. As a prolific writer of diaries, personal notes and reflections myself, I guess that was the reason I was attracted to the book. He was not just an author – but a journalist, reporter, investigator, confidante of the famous in both literary and political circles, constantly travelling around the world, usually to political hotspots and war or revolutionary zones in Asia, Central and South America, Africa, Russia and other Communist controlled countries during both the years of World War II, and the subsequent Cold War period, with his life and personal safety often at risk. His letters generally pulled no punches, many of a highly personal and romantic nature.  His correspondence relationship with so many great authors [many of whom I was not familiar with] including in particular that great novelist and diary writer, Evelyn Waugh [whom I always believed was a woman for some reason] provided for me, a fascinating insight into the world of writers, publishing and books in general.

    [Incidentally, I don’t have any of Waugh’s novels, but do have a massive volume of his life’s Diaries, which admittedly, I’ve not yet tried to tackle!!].

    In addition to the actual letters, there are footnotes on most pages. Providing either a brief biography of the person to whom he is writing, or where it was known why he was writing in particular instances. These notes of course do slow down the reading process, but are an invaluable aid to understanding [usually] the purpose of the letter and Greene’s connection with the recipient.

    Grahame Greene himself notes that – There have been a number of Graham Greene biographies, but none has captured his voice, his loves, hates, family and friends–intimate and writerly–or his deep understanding of the world, like this astonishing collection of letters…………………………………………………………………..
    Graham Greene is one of the few modern novelists who can be called great. In the course of his long and eventful life (1904—1991), he wrote tens of thousands of letters to family, friends, writers, publishers and others involved in his various interests and causes. A Life in Letters presents a fresh and engrossing account of his life, career and mind in his own words.

    In summary a comment from Google.books provides another encouraging description of the book  –  ‘In several letters, the individuals, events or places described provide the inspiration for characters, episodes or locations found in his later fiction. The correspondence describes his travels in Mexico, Africa, Malaya, Vietnam, Haiti, Cuba, Sierra Leone, Liberia and other trouble spots, where he observed the struggles of victims and victors with a compassionate and truthful eye. The volume includes a vast number of unpublished letters to authors Evelyn Waugh, Auberon Waugh, Anthony Powell, Edith Sitwell, R.K. Narayan and Muriel Spark, and to other more notorious individuals such as the double-agent Kim Philby. Some of these letters dispute previous assessments of his character, such as his alleged anti-Semitism or obscenity, and he emerges as a man of deep integrity, decency and courage. Others reveal the agonies of his romantic life, especially his relations with his wife, Vivien Greene, and with one of his mistresses, Catherine Walston. The letters can be poignant, despairing, amorous, furious or amusing, but the sheer range of experience contained in them will astound everyone who reads this book.’

    While from the book cover – “When he loved, he loved fervently, but he also struggled  to manage the  unpredictable mood swings, the highs and lows of bipolar disorder that drove him from exalted happiness to despair. Letters to friends like Evelyn Waugh, Muriel Spak, Anthony Powell and R.K. Narayan offer a glimpse 

    into the literary culture in which he wrote. Other letters reveal the agonies of his heart, how his manic depression wreaked havoc on his marriage to Vivien Greene and injured his relations with his mistress Catherine Walston.”

    A book that gives new perspective to a life that combined literary achievement, political action, espionage, travel and romantic entanglement….following him through joy and turmoil, from the gnarled and fissured forests of Indo-China to war-torn Sierra Leone, from the mountains of Switzerland to hotels in Havana and a connection of sorts with leaders like Fidel Castro, and various revolutionary characters from South America.

    The letters also reveal much about his support at times, and other times, conflict with the Catholic Church, and his inter-action with a couple of the Popes of his era, and other religious intermediaries.

    A brief comment on The Honorary Consul by Grahame Greene [published in 1973, of 268 pages [my Penguin edition].  After having read Greene’s letters, I expected his novels to be essentially based on parts of the world he had travelled to, often with the purpose of exploring those areas and lifestyles for incorporation into a planned novel. I wasn’t sure what to expect, not having read him previously.  This story, I found somewhat enjoyable, if at times, realistically unpleasant in terms of the subject matter.

    A gripping tragicomedy of a bungled kidnapping in a provincial Argentinean town, considered to be one of Greene’s finest novels. The story is set in the provincial city of Corrientes, part of the Argentine Littoral, on the shore of the Paraná River. Eduardo Plarr is an unmarried medical doctor of English descent who, as a boy, fled to Buenos Aires with his Paraguayan mother to escape the political turmoil of Paraguay. His English father remained in Paraguay as a political rebel and, aside from a single hand-delivered letter, they never hear from him again. Throughout the novel, there is much reflection by various characters on the absence of ‘father figures’ for numerous reasons. I believe the story is also set on the eve of Argentine’s ‘dirty War’ in the early 1970’s.

    In this provincial Argentinian community, Charley Fortnum – a British consul with dubious authority and a notorious fondness for drink – is kidnapped by rebels in a case of mistaken identity. Fortnum, 61 years old is married to Clara, a young ex-whore from Senora Sanchez’s brothel. The young but world-weary Doctor Eduardo Plarr, is left to pick up the pieces and secure Fortnum’s release, wading through a sea of incompetence and unearthing corruption among authorities and revolutionaries in the process.

    First published in 1973, The Honorary Consul is a British thriller novel, and  was one of Greene’s own favourites of his works and is regarded amongst his finest novels, with Plarr perhaps the most moving and convincing figure in his fiction.  The story is set in an unnamed city in northern Argentina, near the border with Paraguay which can be assumed to be the city of Corrientes.

    In what is described as a ‘perfectly executed narrative’, Greene explores the repercussions of the bungled kidnap, and gives special attention to Dr Plarr whose deficient emotions form the heart of the story.

    While I won’t go into the article itself, a piece written on a site named literarysum/com and titled ‘Unveiling the Layers: A Comprehensive Literary Analysis of The Honorary Consul by Graham Greene’, introduced the subject as follows – ‘The Honorary Consul by Graham Greene is a complex novel that delves into the themes of love, betrayal, and political intrigue. This article provides a comprehensive literary analysis of the novel, exploring its various layers and uncovering the hidden meanings behind its characters and plot. Through a close examination of the novel’s themes, symbolism, and narrative structure, this article aims to provide readers with a deeper understanding of Greene’s masterpiece’ which all indicates we have more than just a ‘British thriller novel’, another indication of Greene’s literary talents.

    As described at the time of publication, by the Daily Mail: ‘The prose is monkishly spare and taut.  The minor characters are brilliantly and sardonically drawn, that ever he has given us’. It sounds as though I made the right choice, in being introduced to Greene’s writings [apart from his letters].

    The book was made into the 1983 film The Honorary Consul (also released as Beyond the Limit), directed by John Mackenzie, with Richard Gere as Plarr and Michael Caine as Fortnum.[3][4] The soundtrack theme was composed by Paul McCartney and performed by John Williams.