becleighton's review

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3.0

This was a real mixed bag of a collection. I was curious as to what it'd be like, being a sense of place anthology about a place so affected by gentrification, and I nearly didn't read any further after Catherine Deveny's appalling introduction.

It picked up quite a bit from there, though, and while some of them were seriously dreadful (Edward Burger and Paul Mitchell being the two worst, bit stunned to discover at the end they're actually published writers), some of them were great (especially Naomi Byrne-Soper and Angela Costi), I found myself Googling quite a few names to see if they'd published anything I could get my hands on, and I'm really glad I bothered to read this for those stories, at least. It was worth reading the dreadful ones to see some good writing about places so familiar.
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