Title | : | Kill Your Darlings, July 2015 |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | - |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780994163875 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 189 |
Publication | : | First published July 1, 2015 |
EDITORIAL
Brigid Mullane
COMMENTARY
Gillian Terzis ‘Death Trends: Hashtag Activism and the Rise of Online Grief’
Eleanor Hogan ‘In Search of Lost Sleep: Through the Fog of Fatigue’
Tim Robertson ‘The Anzac Myth: Holocaust Denial and the Birth of the Australian Nation’
Jessie Cole ‘The Tasmanian Boy: A Shuffle of the Deck’
Omar Sakr ‘The Privilege of Starvation: On Art and Creative Writing Courses’
Diane White ‘A Conscious Choice: Remaining Childfree in an Uncertain World’
Ara Sarafian ‘The Importance of Being Hairy: Waxing, Shaving and Other Unnecessary Thrills’
FICTION
Jessica Au ‘Those Who Know We Are Here’
Sonja Dechian ‘The Race’
INTERVIEW
Gerard Elson in Conversation with Nick Cave
REVIEWS
Carody Culver ‘No Such Thing As Monsters: Shirley Jackson and the Unspeakable Everyday’
Rachel Hennessy ‘Words, Flesh and Tech: Contemporary Literature and Our Future Selves’
Brigid Mullane
COMMENTARY
Gillian Terzis ‘Death Trends: Hashtag Activism and the Rise of Online Grief’
Eleanor Hogan ‘In Search of Lost Sleep: Through the Fog of Fatigue’
Tim Robertson ‘The Anzac Myth: Holocaust Denial and the Birth of the Australian Nation’
Jessie Cole ‘The Tasmanian Boy: A Shuffle of the Deck’
Omar Sakr ‘The Privilege of Starvation: On Art and Creative Writing Courses’
Diane White ‘A Conscious Choice: Remaining Childfree in an Uncertain World’
Ara Sarafian ‘The Importance of Being Hairy: Waxing, Shaving and Other Unnecessary Thrills’
FICTION
Jessica Au ‘Those Who Know We Are Here’
Sonja Dechian ‘The Race’
INTERVIEW
Gerard Elson in Conversation with Nick Cave
REVIEWS
Carody Culver ‘No Such Thing As Monsters: Shirley Jackson and the Unspeakable Everyday’
Rachel Hennessy ‘Words, Flesh and Tech: Contemporary Literature and Our Future Selves’
Kill Your Darlings, July 2015 Reviews
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KYD are going from strength to strength lately. Omar Sakr's piece on the whole "starving artist" ideal, and the disdain for the MFA, was particularly good. Ara Sarafian's piece on being an Extremely Hairy Dude was also excellent.
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A mix of excellent essays and stories alongside some less inspiring stuff. The Jessica Au short was wonderful, and reminded me how much I enjoyed
Cargo a few years back.