1.
Duwell review of Fay Zwicky: Picnic: New Poems Mar., 2007 Mar 1, 2007 ... The floor plan of Fay Zwicky’s poetic house was described brilliantly by Ivor Indyk in an article in Southerly published nearly thirteen ...
2.
Duwell review of Wearne: The Australian Popular Songbook 1st May 2008 May 1, 2008 ... “Like something someplace in some gemstone trade . . .” “G’day,” you’ll hear a sardonic Kiwi mutter, “I’m Terry Clark.” ...
3.
Duwell review of Owen: Poems 1980 - 2008 1st August 2008 Aug 1, 2008 ... In one of the most brilliant of these “exotic” poems, “The Pangolins” from Timedancing, the animal itself - and the poem devotes itself to ...
4.
Duwell review of Petra White: The Incoming Tide Sept., 2007 Sep 1, 2007 ... My sense of the poems of The Incoming Tide, however - accurate or not - is that they locate the self of the poet in three different ways: as ...
5.
Duwell review of Beesley This first book by Luke Beesley is the product of a deeply unusual poetic sensibility and it says something about the power of the book that it leaves a ...
6.
Duwell review of Fay Zwicky: Picnic: New Poems Mar., 2007 Mar 1, 2007 ... The floor plan of Fay Zwicky’s poetic house was described brilliantly by Ivor Indyk in an article in Southerly published nearly thirteen ...
7.
Duwell review of Millett: Circles of Love 1st March 2009 Others of the poems in Circles of Love form a sequence which is distributed throughout the book. It is tempting to read this autobiographically as though it ...
8.
Martin Duwell: Australian Poetry Review There will also be work in a series of essays on Australian poetry as well as incidental essays as I get to write them. I also hope, eventually, ...
9.
Duwell review of Petra White: The Incoming Tide Sept., 2007 Sep 1, 2007 ... One of the difficulties with first books - and this superb debut by Petra White is no exception - is the lack of a host of previous ...
10.
Duwell review of Simon West: First Names Oct., 2007 Simon West: First Names (Glebe: Puncher & Wattmann, 2006), 58pp. Posted 1st October, 2007. This impressive first book is marked by an elegant lyricism and ...
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