A REVIEW OF REVOLUTIONARY BABY: from Chris Stevenson, artist and avid reader.

REVIEW: REVOLUTIONARY BABY: Strange Tales from the Twentieth Century

Born in the same year as the author I found some of these stories echoed my own confusion when the personal coincided with the political. These “strange tales” are sometimes gripping, at times nostalgic and always thought-provoking.

Women’s liberation is just one of the “revolutions” addressed in Revolutionary Baby. The author is careful not to side with women only. When Max in the first story attempts to seduce an unwilling young Judith, she is rescued by Gabro who is, perhaps unsurprisingly, European.

As the first female in my family to attend university, I recognised Judith’s mother’s description of university study as “sham-work, not real work” in the first story, “Beyond Engagement”.

Having participated in the anti-Vietnam protest marches, I particularly enjoyed the second story “Revolutionary Baby”. The single-mindedness of a heavily pregnant woman’s insistence on taking part in a violent demonstration is counterpointed by the confusion of her solicitor husband contending with different voices: his father “you can’t let women talk to you like that” or his mother “you shouldn’t have married her, she’s a slut” (p. 42). Hamilton is empathetic with the perspective of both genders ensuring that her book will appeal to both male and female readers.

Locations for the stories are varied and vitally important to the narrative. Hamilton describes the jacarandas “bursting into purple on the Birchgrove waterfront” (p. 68). And evoking Bangkok in another story, “Rain falls in October, the gutters fill, the laneways overflow”. (p 145).

The stories that are most poignant are those set in various Sydney suburbs – or is this bias on my part because I grew up in Sydney? The following passage encapsulates an attitude shared by many women of my generation: “She wanted a revolution all right but it wasn’t one with slogans and arguments and men fighting each other over who was top dog in the park. She wanted a revolution where people looked out for each other … where people took care of the weak … gave each other what they needed”. (p. 37).

I strongly recommend this book to the Baby Boomer generation and the one following it. I’d like to think that the next generation would appreciate learning more about the revolutions both in Australia and abroad that simultaneously stimulated and confused the generations of their parents.

An update on Regret Horizon

Things have changed for Regret Horizon, so long delayed, yet again. It is hard to explain briefly, but I have put the publication, due originally for November 2023, on hold again, as some re-edits have led to the need to consult again with some of those appearing in the book. Also, I have realised it is a memoir, not the first in the Outside the Frame series, so that leads to some different authorial comments. There has even been a strong suggestion that I shouldn’t publish it at all, which forced me to think again about why I wanted to do so in the first place. What a series of twists and turns all this leads to! Anyway, a possible publication date has now been pushed out to early next year, and we will see what other options may come up in the meantime.

My Three Favourite Books in 2023

Some of you may have heard of the Shepherd project. It is a new initiative from book-loving genius Ben Fox.

Here’s what he has to say about the project: https://shepherd.com/bboy/2023

“I believe that books build better humans, and I am on a mission to help everyone find the book they didn’t know they were looking for. 

I created Shepherd to add magic and serendipity to online book discovery. 

When I look for a new book online, it feels soulless. Online bookstores sell books like toothpaste or powdered gravy mix. Something about that is profoundly wrong. 

Books are magic.

Books are imagination fuel. 

Books change how we see the world.

Books change the direction of our lives.

Books transport us across time and space. 

Books let us see the world through another person’s eyes and emotions. 

I believe they are one of the biggest net positives in the world. “

I was one of the authors contacted by Ben, invited to contribute to the “three favourite books” of 2023. The Shepherd project aims to provide a new way to help readers find books they otherwise might not come across, using the usual digital approaches eg via an Amazon search. But the Shepherd project aims to be much more than that. Check out the website at shepherd.com and follow the various links on the site. Ultimately, this book discovery site should enable a much richer mix of possible book-searches and the discovery of all kinds of new and exciting writing from an unlimited variety of sources: traditional, independent, online only via a website, and others. Click below to see my three book choices.

https://shepherd.com/bboy/2023/f/annette-hamilton

I found it very hard to decide which books were my favourites. I have very eclectic tastes, obviously, and the choices I ultimately made reflected some of my reading practices during 2023. This was a difficult year for my own writing, trying to do final edits on Revolutionary Baby, to make decisions about whether or not to publish Radiant Sands, who to send the final draft of my memoir Regret Horizon to, and other issues I was wrestling with. I realised I had read well upwards of thirty books during that year, including quite a few paperbacks from Australian authors published by Australian publishers. Then there were the very many books I dipped into thanks to my membership of Kindle Unlimited. I found it very hard to finish most of these. In part, I joined Kindle Unlimited to get a sense of what the contemporary indie writers were doing. I will write a post soon about what I discovered, if I have the heart for it.

Meantime, I am supporting Shepherd as a financial member, although you don’t have to do this to use its program, as I think anything which will re-open the wide world of books and writing beyond the current restrictions imposed by Amazon algorithms and such must be a Very Good Thing!