Brothers & Sisters - reviews, interviews & extracts
Interviews
Charlotte Wood speaks about Brothers & Sisters on The Book Show, ABC Radio National - listen or download audio here.
Reviews
'Sibling love doesn't always play so sweetly, but whatever its course, it is a perennial fascination. This collection of 12 stories chosen by Charlotte Wood (author of The Submerged C'athedral), who has also written one of the stories, is an inquiry into that concept "sibling". The concept "Australian" is as much a commonality as the sibling thence - there's something about the voice. Comment on the invigorating quality of the Australian light is commonplace: its clarity and strength, a shimmering transluscence rather than depth. These Australian voices have a similar notable quality: tough, open, sensitive, but not over-refined ... strong and diverse tales about the perversities and pleasures of siblings, while Ashley Hay goes out to bat for the single child. Really, the theme is just an excuse to show off all this talent. A refreshing and strong collection."
'This little book is a keeper; it's also a potential teaching anthology. I now have a whole list of names of writers whose books I want to read ... Here's a volume of human stories, told in language as clear as stream water. "
" Wood has intentionally added new literary lights in the collection, lending the book balance and freshness ... Christos Tsiolkas's story about a man having to return to his brother's property and provide his eulogy is so touching it was almost painful to read ... This is a worthy collection to give as a gift to one who bears the unmistakably similar strands of DNA as yourself."
"Almost everyone is a brother or sister or wants to know what it's like to have one, and the rivalries and resentments and the powerful, persistent love show through each of these stories like a watermark."
“This collection of stories by some well-known and some fresh Australian voices deserves a prominent place. It’s a measure of the strength of the form, and of the calibre of contemporary Australian writers using it, that the writing is keen, sharp and challenging."
"I've been a fan of Charlotte Wood's since I read her novel The Children, in which she shows great interest in the sibling dynamic and great skill in representing it, an impression further borne out by the brilliant, funny, moving introduction to this new book. "
Extract, Christos Tsiolkas's The Disco at the End of Communism
Australian Literary Review, October 09
Extract of Ashley Hay's The Singular Animal - On Being and Having.