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The forbearance
of those writers who entered the Australian Book Review
and Reader's Feast Short Story Competition has been as exemplary
as their commitment to short fiction.
I
am pleased to be announce the shortlist:
Ian
McFarlane: 'A Balance of Probabilities'
Katarina
Mahnic: 'Flying Recipe'
B.E.
Minifie: 'There Has to be a Resemblance'
Carrie
Tiffany: 'Dr Darnell's Cure'
Susan
Yardley: 'The End Is Where We Start From'
All
three prizes will be announced in the December/January issue.
In the same issue, we shall also publish the story that wins
the first prize.
Changes continue to be rung at ABR. Later this month,
we shall be moving upstairs into larger and more suitable premises.
Please note that our postal address, telephone number and e-mail
addresses will be unchanged. Nor will the December/January issue
be affected. Subscribers will receive their copies at the beginning
of December. A new feature will be 'The Best Books of 2001',
in which regular ABR reviewers and a range of writers,
publishers and other literary figures will be invited to nominate
three notable books of 2001, including the one that surprised
them most.
Pleasingly,
given the recent abundance of new Australian publications and
the quality of material coming our way, this issue will be longer
than previous ones. This is something we hope to continue in
2002, funds permitting. The theme of the December/January issue
will be Reference Books, of which there have been a large number
in recent months.
In
previous years, the December/January issue our summer
one has been followed by another double issue (February/March).
Two issues in four months strikes us as being too infrequent.
Henceforth, we will separate the two double issues. They will
appear in December/January and June/July. Otherwise, ABR
will appear each month.
In
recent weeks, I have been a little more peripatetic than usual,
because of the publication of my own new book. I also took part
in the National Library of Australia's conference 'The Secret
Self: Exploring Biography and Autobiography'. For everyone involved
the audience, but also, to an unusual
degree, in my experience, the speakers this conference
proved to be absorbing and, at times, quite stirring. As in
Melbourne during the Federation Lectures, the audiences were
large each day, once again demonstrating the public's desire
for lively, questioning and discursive talk.
In
my absence, Aviva Tuffield, the Assistant Editor, has supervised
the preparation of this issue with her customary aplomb, and
I am grateful to her. I should also thank Chong, Dianne Schallmeiner,
Anne-Marie Thomas and Mirian Wood, who have worked on this issue.
Peter
Rose
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