Table of Contents
Foreword
Rhyll McMaster
- The webs that we weave
Amelia Walkley
- Show time
Adrian Richardson
- The adventures of Ann Aurora
Rosa Campbell
- Marine Parade
Matthew Fenwick
- I see you everywhere
Maria El-Chami
- Exhale
Raymond Baltas
- Fiend
Nicole Chunge
- Chicken
Colin Dray
- Five blocks
Katia Audencial
- Paths
Amelia Walkley
- Moon
Ruth Stubbings
- A stately procession
Siang Lu
- Untitled
Raymond Baltas
- Swimming
Christopher Roche
- Cold snap
Theodore Ell
- The mending
Barbara Hatten
- The house by the mouth of the river
Lauren Arcamone
- Moon, she a coin
Amelia Walkley
- Summer is
Amelia Walkley
- The redness of red
Rachel Olding
- Dreaming (a palindrome)
Lauren Arcamone
- Pardon the scherzo
Theodore Ell
- Greed ain't good
John Walsh
- Loving war
Cale Leslie Hubble
- Windows
Lyn Vellins
- Picture
Raymond Baltas
- The delivery
Claire Marnane
- Moth
Amelia Walkley
- Two ways
Cathleen Inkpin
- My dearest, darling Beatrix ...
Amelia Walkley
- Tangled
Rachel Barratt
- Train
Jack Crittenden
- Stained-glass windows
Simone de Simone
- One of many days in oncology
Nathan Droguett
- Not without vision
Christine Greaves
- A full circle
Zainab Rifaath Anver
- Stationary
Hannah Croke
- Roach's inheritance
Raymond Baltas
- Fading
Joan Short
- Borrower
Lauren Arcamone
- Dead bird
Alicia Gilmore
- Product(s) of the past
Tara N. McKenzie
Acknowledgements
Promotional Information
Take the passage through the cellar door, as the pages of this
anthology lead you down dark steps into a room lit up with ideas,
words and wonder.
About the Author
The University of Sydney Student Anthology is an annual
publication showcasing the creative works of current University of
Sydney students. The project is run by students from the Master of
Publishing program, and supported by the School of Letters, Arts
and Media and Sydney University Press.
Reviews
'The collection includes some excellent stories: Matthew
Fenwick's "Marine Parade", Barbara Hatten's "The Mending", Joan
Short's "Fading" and "A Full Circle" by Zainah Rifaath Anver are
substantial and powerful. ...''The standout talent in in this
collection is poet Theodore Ell, whose poems "Cold Snap" and
"Pardon the Scherzo" show a loving familiarity with the history of
poetry in England, as well as great confidence and skill with
poetic techniques and forms.'Sydney Morning Herald, 3 January
2009