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Griffith Review 71 book cover
Griffith Review 71
Remaking the Balance
2021
First Published
4.18
Average Rating
352
Number of Pages

Part of Series

Griffith Review 71: Remaking the Balance explores our relationships with all that’s animal, vegetable, mineral and beyond, mapping out ways we might shape a more sustainable future. With new work from Barbara Kingsolver, Matthew Evans, Clare Wright, Sophie Cunningham, Inga Simpson, John Kinsella, Jo Chandler, Gabrielle Chan and more, it’s an edition that sets out to question how we might do better with what we have, and how we might rethink the world in the post-pandemic years.

Avg Rating
4.18
Number of Ratings
11
5 STARS
27%
4 STARS
64%
3 STARS
9%
2 STARS
0%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Ashley Hay
Ashley Hay
Author · 9 books

Ashley Hay’s new novel, A Hundred Small Lessons, was published in Australia, the US and the UK and was shortlisted for categories in the 2017 Queensland Literary Awards. Set in her new home city of Brisbane, it traces the intertwined lives of two women from different generations through a story of love, and of life. It takes account of what it means to be mother or daughter; father or son and tells a rich and intimate story of how we feel what it is to be human, and how place can transform who we are. Her previous novel, The Railwayman’s Wife, was published in Australia, the UK, the US, and is heading for translation into Italian, French and Dutch. It won the Colin Roderick Prize (awarded by the Foundation for Australian Literary Studies), as well as the People's Choice award in the 2014 NSW Premier's Prize, and was also longlisted for both the Miles Franklin and Nita B. Kibble awards. Her first novel, The Body in the Clouds (2010), was shortlisted for categories in the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and the NSW and WA premier’s prizes, and longlisted for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. Her previous books span fiction and non-fiction and include Gum: The Story of Eucalypts and Their Champions (2002), Museum (2007; with visual artist Robyn Stacey), and Best Australian Science Writing 2014 (as editor)s A writer for more than 20 years, her essays and short stories have appeared in volumes including the Griffith Review, Best Australian Essays (2003), Best Australian Short Stories (2012), and Best Australian Science Writing (2012), and have been awarded various accolades in Australia and overseas. In 2016, she received the Bragg UNSW Press Prize for Science Writing.

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