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I Go Down to the Shore – by RT Wenzel
In the scheme of rivers, this river is not extraordinary. The surface is sometimes lustrous with scum and agricultural runoff, the riverbed coated in sludge and bacterial matting. Not a river you’d travel to see – although tourists do come for the platypuses.
Stretches of picturesque wilderness aren’t far away; this is Tasmania, after all. Golden mountainscapes and unpeopled beaches are always within driving distance. But I crave intimacy with my own backyard, and in particular, the uncultivated part beyond the marked beds, apple trees and sometimes-mown lawn. The terrain beyond the fence where the river lies …

The Shimmer of Flying Fox Landscape – by Matthew Chrulew
… We are in William Robinson’s Flying Fox Landscape. At first we were just looking at this oil painting from 1989. We stood there trying to orient ourselves, bewildered by shifting perspectives. We knew what the artist had called it and followed his hint, searched for the flying fox. Perhaps it’s just named for the locale near his home. But that name must have come from their presence. Perhaps that’s the flying fox there, just below centre, a brush of angular purples caught up in some to-do with a magpie. But perhaps it is us. Sucked into this scene, thrown about by its winds, flipped this way and that …

Animal Rescue – by Bastian Fox Phelan
My first experience of rescuing a native animal doesn’t end well. It’s after midnight and I’m driving home to Newcastle from Sydney. At the big roundabout in Jesmond, there’s a flash of pale-coloured feathers in my headlights. I swerve. Did I hit it? We pull over. When my partner spots the bird, it’s mounting the gutter on the far side of the highway. I can see its pink and grey plumage under the streetlights. It’s a galah, seemingly unfazed by its brush with death, strutting in the confident, plucky way that parrots do – perhaps just out for a midnight stroll? But that doesn’t seem right. Galahs aren’t nocturnal, and if they can still fly, they shouldn’t be walking across roads. Something about its wing looks funny – the way its tapered tip sags like a door that’s come off its hinges …

In the Rain Shadow – by Jessica Carter
I wake to the smell of fading red blossoms. The air is warm already. There are bushfires in the west, yet the haze is not smoke but dust. Late last night I arrived here, on the other side of the Great Dividing Range, the one marked by rain shadow, and the absence of tall buildings, rushing humans, city fumes and ocean breeze. The sky is wider, the plant leaves tighter. Breathing comes lightly.
I’m back on the family farm, but the return is always fraught – a mixture of trepidation and a deep pull somewhere near my heart. A reminder of the queasy combination of fear and hope that comes with being tethered to something …

The Magpie and the Scarecrow – by Helena Pantsis
Mangia, Mangia, the men call out, throwing bread through the metal fence, its tessellating wire pattern opening onto a park, sod wet and uneven. The factory sits directly beside the park. The men sit in the adjoining alleyway, cigarettes burning holes in their mouths while they tear their lunches apart with ashy hands. Mangia swoops lithely down from the gum. He opens his mouth – his voice threads through the gaps, a loud artillery, fine and fluty. A short, descending call. Mangia, Mangia, the men say in response to his carolling, c’mon magpie, time for lunch …

The Right One to Rescue – by Sharon Kent
… ‘Mum! There’s a cat on the road. With a bucket on its head.’
I am studying the map. From somewhere, I half-hear this ludicrous statement, but I dismiss it, like an annoying mosquito that I can’t be bothered to swat away. I turn to my son. ‘It’s going to be dark soon. Will – you – get – in – the – car!’ I flash him a stony look. ‘Hurry up!’
He hesitates, looking down the road forlornly, before trying a different tone.
‘There’s a cat on the road. With a bucket on its head.’ He speaks evenly, as if he’s dealing with someone who doesn’t understand his language, where there’s no point becoming exasperated or overly excited …

The Grass Painter – by KA Rees
When you look at me, you wonder what it is like. To be an artist. I think what you are really asking is what it is like to be a failed artist. Let’s face it, where are the successful ones? Does anyone know? You may know of them, from catalogues sitting unread in your magazine rack, from guest spots on Arts on Sunday, but you do not know them. You do, however, know artists like me who serve you. Who work as your baristas, your cleaners, your children’s entertainers. Who arrive at the door with glitter and metallic paint and large brushes that scream of ruined furniture.

Nithing – by Clayton O’Toole
… He lived in the inert dark between night and early morning. Things that had been snug in the afternoon light were cold to him now. The house was a void corralled by clean, white, modern lines. There was furniture; a thin TV. Nooks clung in clusters to the walls, filled with picture frames and souvenirs and little baked-clay monsters. From the kitchen you could see the paddock. From the table you could see the paddock. From the wrong end of the lounge room you could see the paddock …

Far Out, Cats – by M.T. O’Byrne
I confess that I am more of a dog person than a cat person but am not so enamoured of man’s best friend that I am incapable of acknowledging the feats of cats, or that they have achieved such fame as to equal any dog, save Lassie. An average, healthy cat, for example, can jump six times its own length, which is double that of a chihuahua, assuming a chihuahua could be bothered. In human terms – according to the World Health Organisation in 2021 – this would mean being able to jump 10.2 metres if you’re a man and 9.6 metres if you’re a woman. Or, being able to jump as high as two London buses, or three stories of a building and still have enough left in the tank for a celebratory Black Russian and a Montecristo N4 cigar …

Animal Life of Penang – by Claire Aman
It is lovely to have Claire back in Island again! Long before 'Animal Life of Penang', Claire's very first published short story, 'Sustenance', appeared in Island issue 109 in 2007.
Penang used to be interesting. Back then, young, you could pay to let a swallow escape from a wicker cage. You could choose a crab from a tank in a laneway. You could wake up on the beach at dawn. The tide could be out, your clothes slightly damp. You would remember nothing. Afterwards, you could live your whole life …

Butter – by Daniel Ray
It’s that time of morning when everything’s clean with cold and I can smell Dad’s aftershave spilling with gold light from the bathroom. My mouth is dry. I’m still shrugging off sleep and dark misshapen dreams. I focus on the yellow cut of light, imagining sheafs of steam, and Dad, face red with razor burn, looming in the mirror, clipping his fingernails while Mum ties back her hair and leans in to spit foaming toothpaste into the sink. For a moment their images converge in the mirror as if they are one person. Then they split apart like anagrams into body parts—ears, hair, noses, eyes—before they resolidify. I know little about them apart from this: their routines, their tiny ministrations. It’s as if they both died when they married …

Not Gone, Just Different – by Rae White
Our neighbour’s latest pandemic purchase lounges on the front porch, brown fur glistening in the sun and big limbs stretching across the stairs.
‘Babe!’ I holler to my wife, as I stare out our finger-smudged window. ‘Looks like next door’s got a dog.’
In the backyard sit more of our neighbour’s recently acquired bargains: a shiny new barbecue, a blow-up kids’ pool (now deflated) and a crashed drone lolling on the highest branch of a tree.
Brooke comes over and wraps her arms around me, her old woollen jumper scratching at my upper arms. She peers over me, leaning her chin on my head. ‘Looks like a good dog,’ she comments …

Rigel and Betelgeuse – by A E Macleod
R looks at their ball of thread on the floor. They are never sure when they pull the first thread where it is coming from. Is the beginning really blissfully unaware of the end? … R has been marking their movements with thread for years to thwart the loss of time; letting it out, taking it in. R is not sure who recommended this …

Get Joy from GetJoy – by Alex Cothren
Your neighbours all have one. Your work colleagues never talk about anything else. Celebrities, star athletes and even the Pope have gotten in on the action. Yep, it’s official: GetJoy fever is sweeping the globe! But while obtaining your very own GetJoy is just a click away, being a host with the most can be trickier business. So, if you find your jubilation turning to frustration, more despondency than joie de vivre, well we’re here to help with our top tips to get joy from GetJoy …

Straight From the Horse’s Mouth: Windsor Chairmaking in Tasmania – by Dan Dwyer
… The democratic chair is designed to be made with a small number of hand tools, hence democratic. If a student learns this chair, they can make more complex Windsor chairs. ‘It wouldn’t be a Windsor chair without a bit of blood on it,’ Jon said … My vision of soulful strokes and wispy shavings, the Zen and the Art of Chairmaking, had become a crash course in kindling. I took another spindle, and returned to first principles, ‘one long stroke, two short ones.’ Secretly, I breathed a sigh of relief that Jon was away; I could embarrass myself in peace …

Living Poets – by Jessica Lim
Recently I read Virginia Woolf’s 1929 classic A Room of One’s Own while my daughter slept off her adenotonsillectomy overnight in hospital … Of course the limitations of Woolf’s common sitting-room with all its openness and interruptions would naturally resonate. The sureness of her message, I suppose, had accounted for the lack of any real urgency on my part to read it – a 100-year-old truth will still be true tomorrow …

An Open Space – by Luke Johnson
… To become a part-time firefighter, you have to make it through two weeks of intense training … If you do not want to know what they tell you at firefighter training concerning housefires and deceased children, then you should stop reading here. Because this is not a work of fiction …

A Shadow From Country – by Naomi Parry
SHORTLISTED, ISLAND NONFICTION PRIZE 2021
… I’ve been researching the Gai-mariagal warrior Musquito since 2003 and today we are looking for a name list that I have heard about, which is supposed to tell a story of the time he was exiled from Sydney to Norfolk Island. We go through indexes and bibliographies and footnotes without finding anything. Then Melissa flicks through the computer catalogue and pulls up an image. It’s a seraphic face, illuminated in the computer’s glow.
Who is this?
It’s Black Jack. It’s his death mask.

The Sound of Light – by Verity Borthwick
SHORTLISTED, ISLAND NONFICTION PRIZE 2021
Children conceived under the northern lights are blessed with intelligence and wisdom. It turns out this is a recent urban legend masquerading as ancient knowledge. Still, it has propagated and even appears on the Greenland tourism website, which is where I read it. I did not know this when I visited Greenland, but something about the idea of phantasmal lights had the feel of fate, and it gave me hope. It’s strange how much I let in the idea of fate during that time …

If You Join the Circle, You Must Dance – by Katerina Cosgrove
SHORTLISTED, ISLAND NONFICTION PRIZE 2021
… I think of her when I sweep my outside decks in the morning. I think of her when I scour cooking pots with steel wool at night. I wonder, when I put on a load of washing, how it felt for her to soak and wring out those heavy woollen jumpers, like the one she wore when she died, or handwash her soiled nylon stockings in the cold grey light of a Melbourne winter.
She ended up with one of those stockings around her neck.
I find a photo stapled to Kalliope’s marriage certificate. It’s the first time I’ve seen her face …
Archive
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Arts Features
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- Jul 10, 2024 These are no clear directions – by Lars Rogers
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- Mar 14, 2024 Magic – by Maria Takolander and David McCooey
- Mar 4, 2024 The Budgie - by Jing Cramb
- Nov 27, 2023 The Interpreter – by Mariam Tokhi
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- Nov 13, 2023 The Cheesewring – by Campbell Andersen
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- Sep 14, 2023 Home of the Pure Heart, House of the Dying – by Rafael SW
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- Aug 20, 2023 The Mowing – by Ivy Ireland
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- May 23, 2023 The Blue Fox – by Michael Burrows
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- Mar 29, 2023 The Planet Terrarium - by Philomena van Rijswijk
- Feb 2, 2023 Sloane on the Mountain – by Alexander Bennetts
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- Feb 2, 2023 The Day the Wave Came – by Paul Mitchell
- Jan 17, 2023 Collateral Damage – by John Tully
- Jan 17, 2023 Philomela – by Orana Loren
- Dec 7, 2022 The Museum – by Gemma Parker
- Dec 7, 2022 The Moths – by Gillian Britton
- Dec 5, 2022 Finger-branches – by Eliza Henry-Jones
- Nov 10, 2022 The Grass Painter – by KA Rees
- Sep 23, 2022 Nithing – by Clayton O’Toole
- Aug 25, 2022 Animal Life of Penang – by Claire Aman
- Aug 25, 2022 Butter – by Daniel Ray
- Aug 15, 2022 Not Gone, Just Different – by Rae White
- Aug 15, 2022 Rigel and Betelgeuse – by A E Macleod
- Aug 1, 2022 Get Joy from GetJoy – by Alex Cothren
- Jun 20, 2022 No Tomorrow – by Catherine Deery
- Jun 20, 2022 The Great Aviary of Love – by Kathryn Goldie
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- Mar 17, 2022 One Man’s Trash – by Piri Eddy
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- Oct 15, 2021 Cake Flat - by Marion May Campbell
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Nonfiction
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- Jan 28, 2025 ‘Called to beauty’ – an interview with Elizabeth Gilbert
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- Jan 10, 2025 Bunya: Axis limen – by Justin Russell
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- Nov 22, 2024 Brackish tongue – by Roanna McClelland
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- Sep 19, 2024 Dhanggal Bawagal: Mussel Sisters – by Michelle Vlatkovic
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- Jul 24, 2024 Snakes in the valleys, in their hair – by Ben Walter
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- Jun 26, 2024 Conversation IV: Permission to witness – by Libby King
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- Jun 12, 2024 Clothing the whiteness – by Isabella Wang
- Jun 12, 2024 The other hand – by Carly Stone
- Jun 12, 2024 Collection of collections – by Meredith Jelbart
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- May 27, 2024 Bog bodies: Iron Age dreamland – by Lucinda Lagos
- May 15, 2024 Its bowl of red blooms out of sheer love of me – by Xiaole Zhan
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- Mar 31, 2024 This Moon – by Megan Coupland
- Mar 14, 2024 Ghost streets – by Alexandra Sangster
- Mar 4, 2024 A thousand gifts – by Maki Morita
- Feb 1, 2024 Gifts from a harsh continent – by Tehnuka
- Dec 11, 2023 The Last Ever Comic to be Published in a Literary Magazine…Ever!!
- Nov 27, 2023 The Hairy Iceberg – by Kylie Moppert
- Oct 27, 2023 Scarface 1–5 – by Kylie Mirmohamadi
- Oct 27, 2023 The Conversation of Weaving – by RT Wenzel
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- Sep 14, 2023 In the River – by Searlait O’Neill
- Aug 16, 2023 Hawksbill – by Grace Heathcote
- Aug 11, 2023 Woonoongoora – by Caroline Gardam
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- Jun 6, 2023 The Dark House – by Emma Yearwood
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- Apr 28, 2023 The Long Daylight – by Jo Gardiner
- Apr 28, 2023 Chaste – by Suri Matondkar
- Apr 14, 2023 Landfall – by Megan Coupland
- Feb 2, 2023 Lines of Curiosity – by Margaret Aitken
- Jan 17, 2023 Learning to Be Tame – by Carla Silbert
- Jan 17, 2023 Rubbish – by Liz Betts
- Dec 8, 2022 Pamirs – by Nathan Mifsud
- Dec 7, 2022 Compare and Contrast – by Gillian Bouras
- Dec 6, 2022 Who Owns the Greek Myths? – by Katerina Cosgrove
- Nov 22, 2022 I Go Down to the Shore – by RT Wenzel
- Nov 22, 2022 The Shimmer of Flying Fox Landscape – by Matthew Chrulew
- Nov 22, 2022 Animal Rescue – by Bastian Fox Phelan
- Nov 22, 2022 In the Rain Shadow – by Jessica Carter
- Nov 22, 2022 The Magpie and the Scarecrow – by Helena Pantsis
- Nov 22, 2022 The Right One to Rescue – by Sharon Kent
- Sep 23, 2022 Far Out, Cats – by M.T. O’Byrne
- Aug 1, 2022 Straight From the Horse’s Mouth: Windsor Chairmaking in Tasmania – by Dan Dwyer
- Jul 25, 2022 Living Poets – by Jessica Lim
- Jul 25, 2022 An Open Space – by Luke Johnson
- Jul 14, 2022 A Shadow From Country – by Naomi Parry
- Jul 14, 2022 The Sound of Light – by Verity Borthwick
- Jul 14, 2022 If You Join the Circle, You Must Dance – by Katerina Cosgrove
- Jul 14, 2022 Hospitality – by Nicole Melanson
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- Nov 8, 2021 The Funeral [Farewell Kenny-G] – by W<J>P Newnham
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- Sep 9, 2021 The Orchid - by Erica Wheadon
- Aug 26, 2021 Various Emilys/Gondals - by Josie/Jocelyn Deane
- Aug 17, 2021 Fluctuations in Landscape/Language/Lasagne - by Christine Howe
- Aug 10, 2021 Witchcraft, charming, &c. - by Eliza Henry-Jones
- Jul 29, 2021 Submerged - by Nova Weetman
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Poetry
- Jul 8, 2025 Anglerfish – by Siobhan Hodge
- Jun 16, 2025 My fisherman – by Scott-Patrick Mitchell
- Jun 16, 2025 Rescue – by Toby Davidson
- Jun 2, 2025 with flowers – by Alexander Bennetts
- May 15, 2025 An Island of Dogs – by Ronald Araña Atilano
- Apr 3, 2025 Movable – by David Ishaya Osu
- Mar 20, 2025 The Burial Feathers – by Yasmin Smith
- Mar 20, 2025 Lateral ambling gait – by Emilie Collyer
- Mar 20, 2025 and – by Helen Jarvis
- Mar 11, 2025 Pedder Galaxias Pantoum – by Toby Fitch
- Feb 27, 2025 Night Movements – by Daniel Ray
- Feb 19, 2025 Chinese Funerals as Theatre – by Xin Lee
- Feb 5, 2025 Love Poem – by Luoyang Chen
- Dec 18, 2024 Washing my mother’s hair – by Helen Jarvis
- Nov 27, 2024 Friesland Farm under red clouds – by Cameron Lowe
- Nov 13, 2024 Dementia – by Anna Kerdijk Nicholson
- Oct 31, 2024 Visitor Ghazal – by Megan Cartwright
- Oct 14, 2024 1. – by Bobby K
- Aug 22, 2024 The Ascension on a MacBook Air – by Sam Morley
- Aug 14, 2024 The Edit / An Edit – by Michael Farrell
- Aug 7, 2024 Dysesthesia – by Shey Marque
- Jul 24, 2024 Dinner Call – by Anders Villani
- Jul 3, 2024 ‘Helen’ by Euripides – by Andrew Sutherland
- Jun 21, 2024 white nonsense – by Alice Allan
- Jun 19, 2024 Telegram – by Natalie Susak
- Jun 19, 2024 new year’s day – by Mitch Cave
- Jun 19, 2024 Advice and Warnings – by Jill Jones
- Apr 9, 2024 If Movement Were a Language: Triptych – by Svetlana Sterlin
- Mar 20, 2024 Posture – by Jo Ward
- Mar 20, 2024 23 vignettes on the rental crisis – by Anna Jacobson
- Mar 20, 2024 Stanzas – by Jo Gardiner
- Mar 20, 2024 Parturition Chairs I-V – by Isabella G Mead
- Mar 20, 2024 Grandmother’s Limbs – by Svetlana Sterlin
- Mar 20, 2024 Friendly fire – by Tricia Dearborn
- Feb 21, 2024 Day 210 – by Brigid Coleridge
- Feb 21, 2024 Shedload – by Chris Andrews
- Feb 21, 2024 Improbable Acts of Proximity – by Shey Marque
- Feb 24, 2023 Sestina After B Carlisle – by Stuart Barnes
- Feb 20, 2023 Antarctica – by Andrew Sutherland
- Feb 20, 2023 The Girls Become – by John Foulcher
- Mar 2, 2022 Jobs for Women: Annunciate – by A Frances Johnson
- Mar 2, 2022 Heating and Cooling in the Time of Isolation – by Jessica L Wilkinson
- Mar 2, 2022 Self-portrait as Frida Kahlo – by Katherine Brabon
- Mar 2, 2022 Exoskeletons – by John Kinsella
- Mar 2, 2022 The Memory of Water - by Amy Crutchfield
- Jun 7, 2021 In My Father’s House - by Suneeta Peres da Costa
- Jun 2, 2021 Another Kind of Winter - by Anne Kellas
- Jun 2, 2021 Water on Rock, Wind in Trees - by Pete Hay
- Jun 1, 2021 Voyager I - by Sarah Day
- Jun 1, 2021 Thirty Pieces - by A Frances Johnson
- Jun 1, 2021 Maria-Mercè in the Palm Grove - by Eileen Chong
- Jun 1, 2021 gadhalumarra - by Yaaran Ellis
- Jun 1, 2021 Pink Sun - by Toby Fitch
- Jun 1, 2021 Beach Front - by Ellen van Neerven
- May 31, 2021 Walking a Forest Trail One Summer Afternoon - by Judith Beveridge
- May 28, 2021 Sunlight / Dear Mum - by Graham Akhurst
- May 28, 2021 Hippophobia - by Chloe Wilson
- May 25, 2021 Tend - by Jo Langdon
- May 25, 2021 Distorted Depiction - by Cassandra Atherton
- May 23, 2021 Ash in Sydney - by Jake Goetz
- May 23, 2021 On the Day You Launch - by Damen O’Brien
- May 23, 2021 What the Glass Holds - by Jill Jones
- May 23, 2021 Ekphrasis - by Belinda Rule
- May 23, 2021 I Protest - by Ouyang Yu
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