Imagen del autor

John Kinsella (1) (1963–)

Autor de Peripheral Light: Selected and New Poems

Para otros autores llamados John Kinsella, ver la página de desambiguación.

65+ Obras 386 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

John Kinsella is a poet, novelist, critic, the international editor of the Kenyon Review and a fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge University. He lives in Western Australia.

Series

Obras de John Kinsella

The New Arcadia: Poems (2005) 23 copias
Armour (2011) 23 copias
Poems 1980-1994 (1997) 15 copias
Fast, Loose Beginnings (1964) 14 copias
Hunt (1998) 14 copias
Jam Tree Gully: Poems (2011) 9 copias
Crow's Breath (2015) 7 copias
Visitants (1999) 7 copias
Eschatologies (1991) 6 copias
The Hierarchy of Sheep (2000) 5 copias
Lightning Tree (1996) 5 copias
School days (2006) 5 copias
Sack (2014) 5 copias
A Salt reader (1996) 5 copias
Genre (1997) 5 copias
Firebreaks : poems (2016) 5 copias
Open Door (UWAP Poetry) (2018) 5 copias
Auto (Salt Modern Lives) (2001) 4 copias
Grappling eros (1998) 4 copias
Tide (2013) 4 copias
Hollow Earth (2019) 4 copias
Graphology poems (2016) 4 copias
New Fremantle Poets 1 (2010) — Autor — 4 copias
Zoo (2000) 2 copias
Old Growth (2017) 2 copias
Cellnight, a verse novel (2023) 2 copias
Divinations : four plays (2002) 2 copias
Displaced : a rural life (2020) 2 copias
Full fathom five (1993) 2 copias
Post-Colonial : a Recit (2009) 2 copias
Love sonnets (2005) 1 copia
On the outskirts (2017) 1 copia
The Radnoti Poems (1996) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Granta 153: Second Nature (2020) — Contribuidor — 37 copias
The Best Australian Stories 2006 (2006) — Contribuidor — 31 copias
The Best Australian Stories 2010 (2010) — Contribuidor — 22 copias
The Best Australian Stories 2007 (2007) — Contribuidor — 22 copias
The Best Australian Poems 2017 (2017) — Contribuidor — 15 copias
The Best Australian Stories 2017 (2017) — Contribuidor — 13 copias
The Best Australian Stories 2013 (2013) — Contribuidor — 12 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1963
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Australia (birth)
Lugar de nacimiento
Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Lugares de residencia
Gambier, Ohio, USA
Ocupaciones
farm labourer
Premios y honores
Christopher Brennan Award (2008)

Miembros

Reseñas

Many people will read this verse novel for its passionate tribute to the natural environment; for the celebration of the spirit of sacred Noongar country in southern Western Australia; and for the truths it tells about colonisation. But I read it for its denunciation of escalating militarism and taxes/ directed/ towards/ the military/ rather than health/ and learning,/ housing/ and environment.
Peace is a universal necessity (p.112)

Cellnight is an elegy for a time when there was passionate activism.

To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2023/03/12/sensational-snippets-cellnight-a-verse-novel...
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Denunciada
anzlitlovers | Mar 26, 2023 |
Kinsella, a noted Poet, provides a personal reflection on why he didn't play football after Grade 4. His observations, memories and opinions cover predictable but confronting topics such as sexism, racism, domestic violence, corporatism and the commodification of sport, and nationalism. He doesn't 'hate' the game but finds it symptomatic of a greater malaise. Readers may find it intriguing or irritating.
 
Denunciada
Readingthegame | Jul 9, 2020 |
John Kinsella (b.1963) is a well-known Australian poet, essayist, critic and novelist, but Hollow Earth is his first venture into science fiction. This is the blurb:
Fascinated by caves and digging holes since childhood, Manfred discovers a path through to another realm via a Neolithic copper mine at Mount Gabriel in Schull, Ireland. The world of Hollow Earth, while no Utopia, is a sophisticated civilisation. Its genderless inhabitants are respectful of their environment, religious and cultural differences are accommodated without engendering hate or suspicion, and grain, not missile silos are built. Yet Ari and Zest accompany Manfred back to the surface world. ‘Come with me and see my world.’

So begins an extraordinary adventure in which the three wander the Earth like Virgil’s Aeneas, Ari and Zest seeking re-entry to their own world. The Hollow Earthers are shocked at the cruelty and lies of the surface world, the dieback spreading through the forests. Yet they are seduced by the world’s temptations.

Kinsella’s parable draws on a rich tradition of Hollow Earth literature and science fiction including Bradshaw’s The Goddess of Atavatabar (1892). With strange beauty, its alluring trajectory vividly captures our 21st-century world in crisis. Like Manfred, we are often blindly complicit in the earth’s downfall. ‘Happiness is under our feet.’ sings the narrator in this passionate, layered and compelling new novel.

So, in echoes of well-intentioned colonists of earlier eras who took the naïve by 'invitation' to see a different world, we see Manfred escorting Ari and Zest around the surface world. In short chapters of often only a paragraph or so, Kinsella depicts a different way of thinking about so much that is the norm for us:
19.
Our bodies function the same way yours do. Skin colour — you object to our skin colour being the colour of leaves, of grass? Of soil? Of rock? Of water? What is it with you, that you are so out of tune with your surroundings that you differentiate between a person and the world they are part of? (p.41)

Some chapters are devastatingly short, just a single line on an otherwise blank page:
23.
Zest took a liking to codeine, Art to ephedrine. (p.47)

While another amplifies this motif:
33.
Alcohol, not manufactured but manifested through natural processes of fermentation, was not part of Hollow Earth's sensual register, for it had no effect beyond poisoning if taken in excess and was only used as a preservative. Manfred had warned them that consuming alcohol on the surface would affect them, and would have consequences. So when they found the minibar, the temptation proved too much and Ari and Zest swallowed three miniature bottles of scotch and vodka (he wasn't sure who ended up with which) in rapid succession, which set off a chain reaction that had far-reaching consequences for their sense of self-worth and their understanding of their own ontologies. They didn't act drunk, in a surface sense, but had deep crises of purpose, belonging, and identity. There was nothing uplifting and then depressing about it — it was all depressing and depression. (p.59)

Kinsella doesn't go out of his way to depict an imagined world full of hi-tech gadgetry or a landscape of diaspora. Rather, he simply alludes, for example, to a future where there are different forms of communication now that the World Wide Web is obsolete, (though pleasingly, there is still a bookshop, at least in Cork). But in general there is nothing to laugh about on the surface, it is a world written with disturbance, and although below is no Utopia either, Ari and Zest are peeved about the way Manfred has misrepresented his world: they want to know why surface dwellers had starved each other to death...

To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2020/02/03/hollow-earth-by-john-kinsella/
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Denunciada
anzlitlovers | Feb 3, 2020 |
This autobiography is the epitome of postmodernism. The narrative jumps around, and at times can be difficult to follow, but nonetheless it's one of the most engaging autobiographies I've ever read.
 
Denunciada
earlgreyrooibos | Sep 11, 2006 |

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Premios

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Estadísticas

Obras
65
También por
7
Miembros
386
Popularidad
#62,660
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
134

Tablas y Gráficos