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The World Was Whole
The World Was Whole | Fiona Wright
3 posts | 3 read | 2 to read
The follow-up to Fiona Wright’s essay collection Small Acts of Disappearance – winner of the Nita B. Kibble Award and the Queensland Literary Award for Non-fiction, shortlisted for the Stella Prize and the NSW Premier’s Award for Non-fiction. Our bodies and homes are our shelters, each one intimately a part of the other. But what about those who feel anxious, uncomfortable, unsettled within these havens? In The World Was Whole, Fiona Wright examines how we inhabit and remember the familiar spaces of our homes and suburbs, as we move through them and away from them into the wider world, devoting ourselves to the routines and rituals that make up our lives. These affectingly personal essays consider how all-consuming the engagement with the ordinary can be, and how even small encounters and interactions can illuminate our lives. Many of the essays are set in the inner and south-western suburbs of a major Australian city in the midst of rapid change. Others travel to the volcanic coastline of Iceland, the mega-city of Shanghai, the rugged Surf Coast of southern Victoria. The essays are poetic and observant, and often funny, animated by curiosity and candour. Beneath them all lies the experience of chronic illness and its treatment, and the consideration of how this can reshape and reorder our assumptions about the world and our place within it. 'In this exquisite follow-on from her award-winning memoir-in-essays Small Acts of Disappearance, Fiona Wright continues to set the standard for the essay form in Australia.' — Jo Case, Books+Publishing Praise for Small Acts of Disappearance: 'Wright has a gift for compression, lyricism, and a poet’s ear for rhythm, all of which animate even the most heartbreaking passages.' — The Australian 'Each essay works as a kind of poetic auto-ethnography, moving between inexplicable realities of the self and those of the world-at-large; between life’s surfaces and interiors.' — Sydney Morning Herald
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AntoinetteBuchanan
The World Was Whole | Fiona Wright
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Back in ER. Glad I downloaded this #2019stellaprize longlist book last night. Although reading about Wright‘s own medical issues isnt comforting, it is interesting

Soubhiville I hope you‘re on the mend soon. 6y
AntoinetteBuchanan Thanks @Soubhiville - hoping to be home soon 6y
Marilyncjackson Get better soon 6y
See All 14 Comments
JacqMac I hope you‘re home soon and feeling better. 6y
BookNAround Goodness! Whatever they‘ve circled on your poor leg doesn‘t look happy. Hope you‘re feeling better and get sprung soon. 6y
Samplergal Feel better. That spot looks angry. Hope you gets some great care and heal quickly. 6y
DarcysMom I hope you are home and on the road to recovery very soon! 6y
AntoinetteBuchanan Thanks @Marilyncjackson @JacqMac @BookNAround @Samplergal @DarcysMom home now with super-copper strength antibiotics and an instruction to go to bed with a good book. Bloody cellulitis 6y
sprainedbrain Oh no. Glad you‘re home and hope you feel better fast! 6y
CarolynM Hope you're up and around again soon. In the meantime, enjoy those books! The only one from the Stella list I've read - I loved it 6y
AntoinetteBuchanan Thanks @CarolynM . This is my 7th off the Stella long list. Too Much Lip is my current favourite (and finding it hard to imagine anything else topping it) 6y
Eggs Be safe be well and welcome to Litsy 🌺 6y
AntoinetteBuchanan Thanks @Eggs on the mend now 6y
17 likes14 comments
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Brona
The World Was Whole | Fiona Wright
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Louise Gluck writes, ‘A room with a chair, a window,/ A small window, filled with the patterns light makes...the world// was whole always.‘

9 likes2 stack adds
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Brona
The World Was Whole | Fiona Wright
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‘The inner west is also the only area in Sydney that grows less culturally diverse each time the Bureau Of Statistics takes its measures.‘

Lizpixie Really?? I would‘ve thought the opposite honestly.🤔 6y
Brona @Lizpixie I thought this was curious too, which is why I noted it down. Perhaps it refers to the loss of all the little shops, grocers, delis to big supermarket chains or the gentrification of the Inner West (ie loss of socio-economic diversity). Wright cited this article in her notes for this chapter - http://www.academia.edu/12916012/At_Home_in_the_Entrails_of_the_West_Multicultur... (edited) 6y
Brona @Lizpixie the last census data would appear to support the statement - http://quickstats.censusdata.abs.gov.au/census_services/getproduct/census/2016/q... 6y
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