Recent reviews | Adès | Oxley | Fry | Southorn

David Ades, ‘The Toolmaker and Other Poems, reviewed by Martin Duwell (‘Australian Poetry Review’, April 2026)

A slim volume, The Toolmaker and Other Poems seems, on the surface, a deliberate corrective to A Blink of Time’s Eye. It’s a set of portraits, all in a similar fifteen-line format, in which the personality of the poet doesn’t enter in any obvious way. The first poem is about a toolmaker and his knowledge that one day his tools might fail him, knowledge that enables him to have a more balanced and humane approach to the work itself. This is obviously pregnant with allegorical possibilities about the poet’s own vocation. On the book’s cover, however, the author explains how, having written the first as a way of suggesting that his own career as a lawyer leads others to an inadequate sense of what his self is really about, other poems in the same mode “insisted on being written”.

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Louise Oxley, ‘Range Light’, reviewed by Martin Duwell, (‘Australian Poetry Review’, March 2026)

There are seventeen years between Buoyancy, Louise Oxley’s second book, and this new one. There were five years between her first book, Compound Eye – little larger than a chapbook, really – and Buoyancy. Barely over a hundred poems in more than twenty years must make Louise Oxley the most restrained of Australia’s better poets. This new book, while a little thinner than Buoyancy, has poems of as high a standard and has a lot of connections with that earlier book.

Louise Oxley

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Kathryn Fry, ‘To Speak of Grasses’, reviewed by Stephanie Greene, (‘StylusLit’, March 2026)

The lasting impression of Kathryn Fry’s latest poetry collection, To Speak of Grasses, rests in its evocation of wonder. These poems explore the living world, through nature, art, music and family, attending, most of all, to awareness of being. In the titular poem ‘To Speak of Grasses’ – which appears in the first section of the book – the poet travels through the Pilbara, observing both continuity and impermanence as ‘home-spun hummock grasses grow the land’, which she finds ancient in form, rich in wildlife. ‘It‘s hard to process the time taken’, she writes, ‘to gouge shapes   to foster life’ (8-9). In this poem, as in many others, there are subtle references to brutality and sadness.

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Ed Southern, ‘Pareidolia’ reviewed by Jane Frank (‘StylusLit’, March 2026)

In the blurb I provided for this striking first full collection of poetry, I noted the poet’s ‘wide ranging and sensory appreciation of history, mythology, art, land and coast,’ as well as his unrelenting interrogation of fundamental human questions in ways that surprise the reader and draw us in. These are also poems that pay close attention to public events and frame them expertly— at times, a kind of documentary poetics— in keeping with Southorn’s career background as a newspaper reporter of 32 years in Australia and the United Kingdom.

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Sunday 5th Oct, Hobart: Tas Poetry Festival feature reading by six poets

2.30 – 3.45pm, Sunday 5 October

Tasmanian Poetry Festival Feature Reading in Hobart

The Tasmanian Poetry Festival presents a special Hobart feature reading by award-winning poets:

Enjoy this delightful afternoon reading by some of Tasmania’s finest poets addressing themes of nature, family, attention, and joy.

Hosted by Fullers Bookshop, 131 Collins Street, Hobart.


About the poets:

Erin Coull is an editor and contributor for WhyNot and is a past winner of the Andrew Hardy Poetry Prize, and has been published in FortySouth, Togatus, The Trailblazer and WritetheWorld Review. Her writing explores quiet anxieties, uncertain futures and complex connections.

Susan Austin is an award-winning poet, mental health occupational therapist, eco-socialist activist and mother, who has two poetry collections and a verse novel. She will read poems about times when we feel lost – with parenting, relationships and work – and ways we re-establish connection with nature and each other.

Young Dawkins has been published in two collections and numerous literary journals, and has performed his work internationally at major festivals, main stages, competitions and countless questionable bars. His poems draw on autobiography.

Ben Walter is a Walkley award-winning essayist, and the author of a book of short stories, What Fear Was, and the new poetry collection, Lithosphere. His poems explore the Tasmanian natural world in surprising ways.

Esther Ottaway is the winner of the $25,000 Tim Thorne Prize for Poetry in the Tasmanian Literary Awards, and holds multiple national and international shortlistings. Her poems are about family bonds, Tasmanian life, experiences of joy, and winter swimming!

Louise Oxley‘s three collections include poems that have won major awards, attracted state and federal grants and earned residencies at Varuna the Writers House and the University of Prince Edward Island, Canada. She will read poems on the theme of mother and child.

Free event! Book here, or just attend on the day: https://www.fullersbookshop.com.au/event/tasmanian-poetry-festival-feature-reading-in-hobart/

This special event is a preview event leading up to the Tasmanian Poetry Festival full days of readings, held in Launceston from 10-12 October, and featuring Erin Coull, Liz Winfield, Les Wicks, Kim Nielsen-Creeley, Kit Kelen, Alex McKeown, and guest, Pam Schindler. Workshops include Constraint-Based Writing, Writing an Interior Monologue, Taking Your Words for a Walk, and Plan to be Published. You can view the program and book tickets at www.taspoetryfest.org