UWA Logo
  Site Map   
           
Home
About The Press
New Writing
Fiction
Contemporary Issues & Society
Women's Studies
Australasian Studies
Indigenous Studies
Literary Criticism
Biography
About WA
History
The Staples Fund
Food & Health
Children's Books
Thackray Aural Series
Trade Orders
Contact Us
Publishing With UWA Press
Shopping Cart
Site Map

New Writing Series

The Concerto InnThe Concerto Inn

Jo Gardiner
2006
978 1 920684 145 $24.95 Pb Add to cart

The Concerto Inn weaves together the story of two sisters, two betrayals and two acts of violence – years apart – that lead both women back to the mythical place of their childhood in Ravello, Italy.

The Concerto Inn is a poet’s novel, in which words and their associations are lovingly presented.’ - The Canberra Times

‘…great lyrical beauty and psychological intensity…’ - The Sydney Morning Herald


Cusp

Josephine Wilson
2005
978 1 920694 560 $24.95 Pb Add to cart

Mavis Hawkins feels she has spent her whole life waiting. But with her only daughter about to arrive from New York, life is about to change forever… A poignant and funny novel rich in mother-daughter insights.

‘Wilson does dialogue brilliantly… and almost every page of Cusp offers a phrase or image to savor.’ - Australian Book Review


A History of the Beanbag and Other Stories

Susan Midalia
2007
978 0 9802965 0 1 $24.95 Pb Add to cart

Listen to a podcast preview now! PART ONE PART TWO

Also available on iTunes

With photographic precision, author Susan Midalia captures the fleeting beauty, light and darkness to be found in the ephemera of everyday life. From the silences between people and the ordinariness of places, objects and events, she conjures narrative jewels of intelligence and grace.

A History of the Beanbag is a short story collection with a difference – a scenic tour of the surprises, secrets and fears beneath the cracked veneer of domesticity and suburban complacency.


Last Book coverThe Last Book You Read and Other Stories

Ewan Morrison
2007
978 0 980296 4 7 1 $24.95 Add to cart

Listen to a podcast preview now!

Also available on iTunes

Morrison’s no-holds-barred collection of short stories tells of people caught between places and lovers as well as between desire, addiction and regret. Whether male or female; gay or straight; young or old; married, single or divorced – the urban battlefield of modern relationships is here charted with such a streetwise precision and heart-wrenching tenderness that this collection is destined to be an instant classic.

‘…the most compelling Scottish literary debut since Irvine Welsh’s Trainspotting.’ – The Sunday Times (London)



The Mystery of the Cleaning Lady:
A Writer Looks at Creativity and Neuroscience

Sue Woolfe
2007
978 1920694 968 $24.95 Pb Add to cart


Bestselling author Sue Woolfe takes readers on a very personal search, exploring the connections between neuroscience and the ‘felt experiences’ which inform the art of storytelling.

Using Eva - the cleaning lady protagonist from her acclaimed 2003 novel The Secret Cure - as both catalyst and metaphor, Woolfe explores Western science, psychology and epistemology for clues as to how these influence a writer’s very being and, by extension, the creative process.


The Poet Who Forgot

Catherine Cole
2008
978 1920401 04 6 $24.95 Pb Add to cart

For anyone who has ever written a fan letter and dreamt of a reply...

As a young, undergraduate student of Australian literature, Catherine Cole sent a letter to AD Hope. This sparked a correspondence that became a deep and lasting friendship.

In her book, Cole uncovers their unique exchanges and explores the ways in which we move towards maturity, remembering and forgetting as we travel.

The Poet Who Forgot offers new perspectives on Hope's literary legacy while revealing how his influence generously shaped an emerging writer.


A New Map of the Universe

Annabel Smith
2005
978 1 920694 552 $24.95 Pb Add to cart

A story of grief and passion, architecture and astronomy spanning two generations and both hemispheres in which characters navigate a new map of their universe. A lyrical and engaging novel about the paths to finding yourself.

‘Impressive in scope and beautifully written…’ - The Weekend Australian

Paydirt

Kathleen Mary Fallon
2007
978 1920694 975 $24.95 Pb Add to cart

When Kate, a white Australian foster mother, takes her 18-year-old Torres Straight Islander foster son back to Brisbane to meet his sick birth mother, Kate’s own mother has a homecoming of a very different kind planned for her daughter.

A companion piece to author Kathleen Mary Fallon’s AWGIE-nominated script for the acclaimed Australian film Call Me Mum, Paydirt provides ample proof that our nation’s past – and future - is anything but black versus white.

The Seamstress

Geraldine Wooller
2007
978 1 920694 937 $24.95 Pb Add to cart

Jo narrates the story of her strong, passionate mother, Willa, whose gradual slide into dementia shifts them into a new and difficult relationship. Willa’s life since arriving in Australia from Scotland as a young woman is re-created in vignettes: her spectacularly wrong choice in husband, the eccentricities of her family, the community of friends that sustain her, and her enduring capacity for joy. And in the telling, Jo also confronts her own life choices as a woman addicted to ‘being perpetually worried about something or other. And certainly addicted to love.’

The Seamstress is a memorable tale of friendship and love between women, infused with abundant warmth and wry humour.


Wild BeesWild Bees: Selected Poems

Martin Harrison
2008

978 1921401 107 $24.95 Pb

Add to cart

Martin Harrison is a writer whose poetry is both a meditation and a meeting place between the immensity of Australian environment and the hi-tech urbane world of everyday Western life. In this new collection Harrison has gathered together some of his best works and included some alluring and lyrical new works.

“Harrison is concerned with the ‘magic’ of poetic sight and sound; with our everyday perception being stretched almost to the point of non-perception.” - David McCooey, Australian Book Review

“Harrison re-creates ‘livable’ locales in his poems, utterly convincing places where ordinary happiness might reside.” - Nigel Wheale, London Review of Books


Top of Page