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Arts Features | Fiction | Nonfiction | Poetry
Celebrity – by Chris McTrustry
… “Well, yeah, acting. What’s that all about? Remember a few lines and don’t walk into the props.” … John Markham is a children's literature veteran with more than fifty titles to his name. He’s recently embarked on a soap opera acting career at the age of fifty-seven. “Yeah, it’s a bit of fun. You rock up, knock off a couple of scenes and hit somewhere trendy for a long lunch. Nothing to it.” …
Fisher Girls – by Barry Lee Thompson
Over time we’ve come to call them the fisher girls. There were three of them that day, whip-thin and dressed head to toe in black, with jet-black hair scraped off their faces and secured into tails at their necks. Long, those tails, swinging this way and that as the girls walked in measured steps to the river’s edge.
We watched as they unzipped their narrow bags and deftly assembled short, sturdy rods. I thought they must have come to the river to fish, and how unlike the usual fishermen they were. But when it looked as if they might be about to cast, they turned their backs on the water and stood still and silent in a line, facing us. Expressions impassive, rods held steady …
Cake Flat - by Marion May Campbell
Cake Flat. The finality of the spondee – stressed syllable plus stressed syllable. Flat-footed, no pretence. With her low salary and her boy to support she heads for Cake Flat, the dormitory suburb on the coastal plain where she, as they say, can get a foot in the door, a state-subsidised mortgage deposit. Then the interest rates shoot up. Real cake is spongey moist succour and chocolate-dark. Not Cake Flat …
An Encounter - by Katerina Gibson
One day in a foreign country in a district you did not know existed until the year previous, you will run into someone you know, or used to know, from your childhood. Seeing you first, they will be so shocked as to stop short, which, when the moment of recognition hits — after the mental arithmetic required to identify a face you know in a place you don’t and age it, applying wrinkles, receding hairlines — you do also …
Captain Boner - by Alex Cothren
Captain Honor: Brooklyn-based superhero who is capable of flight and superhuman strength. Known as the ‘Guardian of the Bridge’ due to the high number of suicide attempts he has prevented from the Brooklyn Bridge. Captain Honor is currently under review for acceptance into Manhattan’s Hall of Justice supergroup …
Into the Clear Blue - by Susan McCreery
… Here’s my theory: you can tell a lot about a man and his opinion of women by his lap-lane etiquette. Men who shift to one side at the wall, nod off you go, are allies. Fast women swimmers are no threat to these men. Then there are those who refuse to give way, no matter how obvious it is they’re being out-swum, who, according to my theory, expect you to do everything except take out the bins, who get the shits when your salary outstrips theirs, and who rage whenever you’re curled up in sorrow about your grandmother, who is interstate and dying …
Surrogate Mother - by Helena Pantsis
Her body grew transparent under the weight of the water, her skin shrinking against the porcelain. The spiders spent more time inside these walls than she had. She hadn't been home in years.
Is it okay, ma, if I stay here a while?
Take as long as you need, darling …
An August for My July Mother - by Karina Ko
‘Augustus is an interesting name for a Vietnamese man,’ I’d said to Felix when we first met in a community hall in Parramatta. We were upcycling fences into benches. He’d told me that he lived with an Augustus after I asked whether his own name was inspired by something ancient Roman, or the fat cat …
The Good Woman - by Anneliz Erese
She wakes up before her husband. Turns on the shower for him. Hot, steamy, just the way he likes it. She waits with a fresh towel. Hands it to him, warm, soft, just the way he likes it. Not long after, she cooks breakfast in the kitchen. No radio, only newspaper. She prepares the tea. Hot, steamy. Cups in perfect order. Quiet …
A Man Alone - by Mark O’Flynn
Take a house in any land and in it place a man. A man alone: demonstrable, verifiable, did not get there by himself. He must have had progenitors. A carpenter at least. A man like this, who has never lived in any other house. At least not one that he can remember; but then memory is a flippant thing. In any event, there are no other houses nearby, unless you count the lightning-struck ruin next door, whose owner shook his fist at the sky …
Boxing Day - by Fiona Robertson
Nadine placed a hand on Herc’s chest. Above the bed, the fan stirred tropical air. ‘We should have sex,’ she said, ‘since we didn’t for Christmas.’
Herc raised his eyebrows. ‘Wow, what an offer.’ He began to lift her fingers one by one, flexing them back a little too far, so that she pulled her hand away.
‘Herc, don’t.’
Severe Weather Warning - by Miriam Webster
I was walking the dog at the beach when I saw rats throwing themselves into the sea, spilling over the shoreline in a great tumble of nose and tail. All the birds left. The dogs’ hair prickled and stood on end; electrified, we thought, by atmospheric changes ominous and invisible. At dusk they let out one, unified bark. The cats stayed indoors, licking themselves. Those who find meaning in constellations blamed it on the moon in Scorpio, that volatile sign. Those of sound mind blamed it on climate change …
Three Fragments - by Cameron Hindrum
Three delicate, beautiful, devastating vignettes from a versatile Tasmanian writer.
… I start the car and the old man listens and my great-grandmother is sitting next to me, holding flowers in her papery hands …
… Can’t describe the sound. Tyres locked up, a squeal harsh in the darkness, a soft crump, metal hitting metal like a full stop at the end of the squealing and glass breaking …
King of Sweets - by Atul Joshi
Baba believed in kismet and Yaseen believed in Baba. He had come here, started uni, then went into lockdown …
It’s time to go home, the Prime Minister said on TV. If you can’t support yourself, there’s an alternative. Return to your home country.
A short story set in Western Sydney - as part of our new 5-piece suite from South-Asian Australian writers inspired by the COVID situation in India and the Australian response
Agency - by Tasnim Hossain
‘Well, they shouldn’t have gone back in the first place, not during a pandemic,’ said Denny … ‘They all live on top of each other, so what do you expect? Diseases just waiting to spread.’
A short story - as part of our new 5-piece suite from South-Asian Australian writers inspired by the COVID situation in India and the Australian response
Go Get Boy – by Alison Flett
WINNER, OLGA MASTERS SHORT STORY AWARD 2020
I’m The Fetcher, Go Get Boy, barrelling along in the back of Darren’s ute, riding high on the highest pile of drydry firewood, gunna burn so good. I’m one of three, that’s me, that’s who I am, and the three of us are building one good fire. Others are building their own fires but ours’ll be biggest, ours’ll be best, ours’ll burnburnburn forever. No-one’ll forget us when they see our blaze …
Tiefenzeit - by Tricky Walsh
They never told us not to look at the sun, so I had not known what to expect when that second fiery ball made its unplanned descent. I can still note the smell of my borrowed skin as the hot air turned it to dust. It took some time to reconstruct this visage afterward …
The Lever, the Pulley and the Screw - by Andrew Roff
Leon: is a betting man. And he bets they will never build this tunnel. Glances again at the crease-worn spreadsheet, traces the critical path with his finger, swearing fuck fuck fuck.
Scott: could really use a fuck. But not Paula; you don’t shit where you eat …
The Voices of the Magpies - by Laura McPhee-Browne
For Elizabeth Jolley; in response to ‘A New World’
I am in the sick bed four days before a visitor. There have been trips to the toilet, and watery meals eaten whilst a tiny television sounds in the far corner of the room, dangling as if a puppet. But no one has come to see if I have settled in …
The Tick Tock Killer - by Alex Cothren
Rodriguez, suddenly looking pale: God damn. I sure hope we don’t find anything like that.
Close shot as the make-up brush cuts short its hula. The Make-up Girl’s face dips into the mirror. Dark, hard eyes.
Make-up Girl: You fucking better find something like that. I need this job, okay? My dog’s on dialysis …
Archive
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Arts Features
- 12 Jun 2024 We Were Here – by Sarah Firth
- 2 Apr 2024 The perfect human – by Niki Bañados
- 11 Dec 2023 The Last Ever Comic to be Published in a Literary Magazine…Ever!!
- 2 Jun 2021 Fury - by Andrew Harper, on Lucienne Rickard’s ‘Extinction Studies’
- 2 Jun 2021 Julie Gough: Tense Past
- 1 Jun 2021 Tiefenzeit - by Tricky Walsh
- 1 Jun 2021 Islands and Ships - by Joshua Santospirito
- 1 Jun 2021 The Intimacy of Daily Life: The News is the Weather - by Rosie Flanagan and Miriam McGarry
- 1 Jun 2021 Fragments of Place - by Andrew Harper
- 1 Jun 2021 Beware of Imposters (the secret life of flowers) - by Selena de Carvalho
- 31 May 2021 Welcome Territory - Selena de Carvalho responds to Tanya Lee’s ‘Landing’
- 27 May 2021 Sisters Akousmatica: Herstory of Radio
- 25 May 2021 Double Yolker - by Mish Meijers
- 23 May 2021 Stepping Back from The Edge: Re-imagining Queenstown - by Cameron Hindrum
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Fiction
- 8 Oct 2024 Chrysalis – by Lachlan Plain
- 11 Sep 2024 The mystery of the lost hours – by Sue Brennan
- 4 Sep 2024 Masters – by Andrei Seleznev
- 7 Aug 2024 Paan – by Josefina Huq
- 18 Jul 2024 A major theft – by Emma Rosetta
- 17 Jul 2024 Devotion – by RT Wenzel
- 10 Jul 2024 He is the candle – by Lucy Norton
- 10 Jul 2024 These are no clear directions – by Lars Rogers
- 3 Jul 2024 Bound – by Liz Evans
- 26 Jun 2024 Prelude to a flight – by Joel Keith
- 30 May 2024 Dear life – by Susan Francis
- 27 May 2024 Refuse – by Hei Gou
- 15 May 2024 bodytruth – by Orlando Silver
- 15 May 2024 Lux – by Linden Hyatt
- 15 May 2024 Gristle and bone – by Jade Doyle
- 18 Apr 2024 Kevin – by Sarah Langfield
- 18 Apr 2024 Start where you are – by Jenny Sinclair
- 9 Apr 2024 Light hazard – by Sophie Overett
- 14 Mar 2024 Magic – by Maria Takolander and David McCooey
- 4 Mar 2024 The Budgie - by Jing Cramb
- 27 Nov 2023 The Interpreter – by Mariam Tokhi
- 13 Nov 2023 This Time Next Week – by Richard Rebel
- 13 Nov 2023 The Cheesewring – by Campbell Andersen
- 27 Oct 2023 Rat – by Anjelica Rush
- 14 Sep 2023 Nursery – by Nicola Redhouse
- 14 Sep 2023 Home of the Pure Heart, House of the Dying – by Rafael SW
- 21 Aug 2023 Sandcastles – by Ruth Armstrong
- 20 Aug 2023 The Mowing – by Ivy Ireland
- 16 Aug 2023 In the Archives – by Keely Jobe
- 11 Aug 2023 A Thin, Brilliant Line – by Lal Perera
- 6 Jul 2023 The River Path – by Tadhg Muller
- 6 Jun 2023 Strokes of White – by Julian Fell
- 23 May 2023 The Blue Fox – by Michael Burrows
- 23 May 2023 How to Kill a Pea – by Lara Keys
- 14 Apr 2023 Dottie and Pin Go Somewhere – by Kate Kruimink
- 29 Mar 2023 The Planet Terrarium - by Philomena van Rijswijk
- 2 Feb 2023 Sloane on the Mountain – by Alexander Bennetts
- 2 Feb 2023 Infrared – by Ryan Delaney
- 2 Feb 2023 The Day the Wave Came – by Paul Mitchell
- 17 Jan 2023 Collateral Damage – by John Tully
- 17 Jan 2023 Philomela – by Orana Loren
- 7 Dec 2022 The Museum – by Gemma Parker
- 7 Dec 2022 The Moths – by Gillian Britton
- 5 Dec 2022 Finger-branches – by Eliza Henry-Jones
- 10 Nov 2022 The Grass Painter – by KA Rees
- 23 Sep 2022 Nithing – by Clayton O’Toole
- 25 Aug 2022 Animal Life of Penang – by Claire Aman
- 25 Aug 2022 Butter – by Daniel Ray
- 15 Aug 2022 Not Gone, Just Different – by Rae White
- 15 Aug 2022 Rigel and Betelgeuse – by A E Macleod
- 1 Aug 2022 Get Joy from GetJoy – by Alex Cothren
- 20 Jun 2022 No Tomorrow – by Catherine Deery
- 20 Jun 2022 The Great Aviary of Love – by Kathryn Goldie
- 26 May 2022 Moss – by Jane Rawson
- 14 Apr 2022 Bombera – by Josefina Huq
- 17 Mar 2022 One Man’s Trash – by Piri Eddy
- 2 Mar 2022 Geometry of Lament – by Alicia Sometimes
- 10 Feb 2022 Interiors – by Zac Picker
- 21 Jan 2022 Phantom Menace Hours – by Victoria Manifold
- 21 Jan 2022 Sea Legs – by Sophie Overett
- 23 Nov 2021 Celebrity – by Chris McTrustry
- 5 Nov 2021 Fisher Girls – by Barry Lee Thompson
- 15 Oct 2021 Cake Flat - by Marion May Campbell
- 1 Oct 2021 An Encounter - by Katerina Gibson
- 16 Sep 2021 Captain Boner - by Alex Cothren
- 2 Sep 2021 Into the Clear Blue - by Susan McCreery
- 26 Aug 2021 Surrogate Mother - by Helena Pantsis
- 17 Aug 2021 An August for My July Mother - by Karina Ko
- 10 Aug 2021 The Good Woman - by Anneliz Erese
- 28 Jul 2021 A Man Alone - by Mark O’Flynn
- 13 Jul 2021 Boxing Day - by Fiona Robertson
- 2 Jul 2021 Severe Weather Warning - by Miriam Webster
- 24 Jun 2021 Three Fragments - by Cameron Hindrum
- 7 Jun 2021 King of Sweets - by Atul Joshi
- 6 Jun 2021 Agency - by Tasnim Hossain
- 2 Jun 2021 Go Get Boy – by Alison Flett
- 1 Jun 2021 Tiefenzeit - by Tricky Walsh
- 1 Jun 2021 The Lever, the Pulley and the Screw - by Andrew Roff
- 1 Jun 2021 The Voices of the Magpies - by Laura McPhee-Browne
- 1 Jun 2021 The Tick Tock Killer - by Alex Cothren
- 1 Jun 2021 Birds - by Anne Casey-Hardy
- 1 Jun 2021 The Wolves - by Josephine Rowe
- 1 Jun 2021 Cod Opening - by Wayne Marshall
- 27 May 2021 Stingrays - by Christine Kearney
- 25 May 2021 Eve - by Laura Elvery
- 23 May 2021 The Teeth and the Curl: A Note to a Cousin - by Robbie Arnott
- 23 May 2021 Extension - by Anthony Lynch
- 23 May 2021 Okay is a Verb - by Erin Hortle
- 23 May 2021 Into the Flames, Down to Our Shoes, Vienna - by John Saul
- 23 May 2021 Just Maybe - by Dominic Amerena
- 23 May 2021 46 - by Ana Duffy
- 23 May 2021 Apple Suite - by Danielle Wood
- 23 May 2021 Foundations - by Michael Blake
- 22 May 2021 Blackbird - by Magdalena Lane
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Nonfiction
- 31 Oct 2024 The ballet school – by Helena Gjone
- 25 Sep 2024 Great flying soar and in command – by Lily Chan
- 19 Sep 2024 Dhanggal Bawagal: Mussel Sisters – by Michelle Vlatkovic
- 29 Aug 2024 The libraries we must enter, the songs we will sing – by Jamil Badi
- 22 Aug 2024 Girl/Monster – by Simmone Howell
- 14 Aug 2024 Words inside words – by Ouyang Yu
- 24 Jul 2024 Snakes in the valleys, in their hair – by Ben Walter
- 17 Jul 2024 Wave and blue – by Beth Kearney
- 26 Jun 2024 Conversation IV: Permission to witness – by Libby King
- 12 Jun 2024 Rain Rain – by Indigo Bailey
- 12 Jun 2024 Clothing the whiteness – by Isabella Wang
- 12 Jun 2024 The other hand – by Carly Stone
- 12 Jun 2024 Collection of collections – by Meredith Jelbart
- 12 Jun 2024 We Were Here – by Sarah Firth
- 30 May 2024 Thrift – by Catherine Zhou
- 27 May 2024 Bog bodies: Iron Age dreamland – by Lucinda Lagos
- 15 May 2024 Its bowl of red blooms out of sheer love of me – by Xiaole Zhan
- 18 Apr 2024 Laptop death – by David Thomas Henry Wright
- 18 Apr 2024 The goose of granite islands – by Suyanti Winoto-Lewin
- 2 Apr 2024 The perfect human – by Niki Bañados
- 1 Apr 2024 In Quarantine – by Megan Clement
- 31 Mar 2024 This Moon – by Megan Coupland
- 14 Mar 2024 Ghost streets – by Alexandra Sangster
- 4 Mar 2024 A thousand gifts – by Maki Morita
- 1 Feb 2024 Gifts from a harsh continent – by Tehnuka
- 11 Dec 2023 The Last Ever Comic to be Published in a Literary Magazine…Ever!!
- 27 Nov 2023 The Hairy Iceberg – by Kylie Moppert
- 27 Oct 2023 Scarface 1–5 – by Kylie Mirmohamadi
- 27 Oct 2023 The Conversation of Weaving – by RT Wenzel
- 14 Sep 2023 Sharehouse Archaeology – by Ale Prunotto
- 14 Sep 2023 In the River – by Searlait O’Neill
- 16 Aug 2023 Hawksbill – by Grace Heathcote
- 11 Aug 2023 Woonoongoora – by Caroline Gardam
- 22 Jun 2023 Objects of Illness/Recovery – by Anna Jacobson and Katerina Bryant
- 6 Jun 2023 The Dark House – by Emma Yearwood
- 23 May 2023 Lines of Location – by Johanna Ellersdorfer
- 23 May 2023 How to Build a Brother – by Helena Pantsis
- 28 Apr 2023 Selfish Ghosts – by Heather Taylor-Johnson
- 28 Apr 2023 Sudden, Temporary Deaths – by Chris Fleming
- 28 Apr 2023 Wingsets and Snowdrifts: A Subantarctic Year – by Emily Mowat
- 28 Apr 2023 The Long Daylight – by Jo Gardiner
- 28 Apr 2023 Chaste – by Suri Matondkar
- 14 Apr 2023 Landfall – by Megan Coupland
- 2 Feb 2023 Lines of Curiosity – by Margaret Aitken
- 17 Jan 2023 Learning to Be Tame – by Carla Silbert
- 17 Jan 2023 Rubbish – by Liz Betts
- 8 Dec 2022 Pamirs – by Nathan Mifsud
- 7 Dec 2022 Compare and Contrast – by Gillian Bouras
- 6 Dec 2022 Who Owns the Greek Myths? – by Katerina Cosgrove
- 22 Nov 2022 I Go Down to the Shore – by RT Wenzel
- 22 Nov 2022 The Shimmer of Flying Fox Landscape – by Matthew Chrulew
- 22 Nov 2022 Animal Rescue – by Bastian Fox Phelan
- 22 Nov 2022 In the Rain Shadow – by Jessica Carter
- 22 Nov 2022 The Magpie and the Scarecrow – by Helena Pantsis
- 22 Nov 2022 The Right One to Rescue – by Sharon Kent
- 23 Sep 2022 Far Out, Cats – by M.T. O’Byrne
- 1 Aug 2022 Straight From the Horse’s Mouth: Windsor Chairmaking in Tasmania – by Dan Dwyer
- 25 Jul 2022 Living Poets – by Jessica Lim
- 25 Jul 2022 An Open Space – by Luke Johnson
- 14 Jul 2022 A Shadow From Country – by Naomi Parry
- 14 Jul 2022 The Sound of Light – by Verity Borthwick
- 14 Jul 2022 If You Join the Circle, You Must Dance – by Katerina Cosgrove
- 14 Jul 2022 Hospitality – by Nicole Melanson
- 8 Jun 2022 The Ocean Sounds Like a Motorway – by Melissa Fagan
- 8 Jun 2022 The Backyard Project: Notes from Stolen Land – by Lia Hills
- 8 Jun 2022 Schrödinger’s Butterflies – by Dave Witty
- 8 Jun 2022 Feel the Quiet – by Zohra Aly
- 8 Jun 2022 And a Moth Flew Out – by Helena Kadmos
- 8 Jun 2022 A New Garden – by Erica Nathan
- 26 May 2022 The Third Angel of Chernobyl – by Carmel Bird
- 13 Apr 2022 A Year Without Mirrors – by Sarah Klenbort
- 17 Mar 2022 The Turkeys – by Saraid Taylor
- 2 Mar 2022 Spectral Coordinates – by Brigid Magner
- 10 Feb 2022 Falling Asleep Under the Love Umbrella – by Clare Millar
- 6 Dec 2021 A Waving Forest – by Zowie Douglas-Kinghorn
- 6 Dec 2021 Changing Spots – by Sharon Kent
- 6 Dec 2021 A Questionable Survey of Suburban Eucalypts – by Uthpala Gunethilake
- 6 Dec 2021 The Rats Move In – by Karen A Johnson
- 6 Dec 2021 Fire There Is – by Searlait O’Neill
- 6 Dec 2021 Riverine – by Kavita Bedford
- 24 Nov 2021 How to Be a Better Mother – by Lisa Kenway
- 8 Nov 2021 The Funeral [Farewell Kenny-G] – by W<J>P Newnham
- 28 Oct 2021 6 Years, 6 Months and 24 Days Apart – by Saanjana Kapoor
- 8 Oct 2021 Good For It - by Lillian Telford
- 21 Sep 2021 Peace Body Pain Body - by Jarad Bruinstroop
- 9 Sep 2021 The Orchid - by Erica Wheadon
- 26 Aug 2021 Various Emilys/Gondals - by Josie/Jocelyn Deane
- 17 Aug 2021 Fluctuations in Landscape/Language/Lasagne - by Christine Howe
- 10 Aug 2021 Witchcraft, charming, &c. - by Eliza Henry-Jones
- 29 Jul 2021 Submerged - by Nova Weetman
- 13 Jul 2021 Pilgrimage to Frog Hollow - by Clare Murphy
- 2 Jul 2021 You Can’t Go Home Again - by Jenny Sinclair
- 24 Jun 2021 31.5°S, 159°E - by Keely Jobe
- 7 Jun 2021 Athai - by Lakshmi Narayanan
- 6 Jun 2021 Reality Check - by Jocelyn Prasad
- 4 Jun 2021 Principles of Permaculture - by Sam George-Allen
- 2 Jun 2021 Fury - by Andrew Harper, on Lucienne Rickard’s ‘Extinction Studies’
- 2 Jun 2021 How Do You Make Them Let You Belong? - by Erin Hortle
- 2 Jun 2021 Housing Climate: From Plastic to Concrete - by Miriam McGarry
- 1 Jun 2021 Thirst - by Rick Morton
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Poetry
- 31 Oct 2024 Visitor Ghazal – by Megan Cartwright
- 14 Oct 2024 1. – by Bobby K
- 22 Aug 2024 The Ascension on a MacBook Air – by Sam Morley
- 14 Aug 2024 The Edit / An Edit – by Michael Farrell
- 7 Aug 2024 Dysesthesia – by Shey Marque
- 24 Jul 2024 Dinner Call – by Anders Villani
- 3 Jul 2024 ‘Helen’ by Euripides – by Andrew Sutherland
- 21 Jun 2024 white nonsense – by Alice Allan
- 19 Jun 2024 Telegram – by Natalie Susak
- 19 Jun 2024 new year’s day – by Mitch Cave
- 19 Jun 2024 Advice and Warnings – by Jill Jones
- 9 Apr 2024 If Movement Were a Language: Triptych – by Svetlana Sterlin
- 20 Mar 2024 Posture – by Jo Ward
- 20 Mar 2024 23 vignettes on the rental crisis – by Anna Jacobson
- 20 Mar 2024 Stanzas – by Jo Gardiner
- 20 Mar 2024 Parturition Chairs I-V – by Isabella G Mead
- 20 Mar 2024 Grandmother’s Limbs – by Svetlana Sterlin
- 20 Mar 2024 Friendly fire – by Tricia Dearborn
- 21 Feb 2024 Day 210 – by Brigid Coleridge
- 21 Feb 2024 Shedload – by Chris Andrews
- 21 Feb 2024 Improbable Acts of Proximity – by Shey Marque
- 24 Feb 2023 Sestina After B Carlisle – by Stuart Barnes
- 20 Feb 2023 Antarctica – by Andrew Sutherland
- 20 Feb 2023 The Girls Become – by John Foulcher
- 2 Mar 2022 Jobs for Women: Annunciate – by A Frances Johnson
- 2 Mar 2022 Heating and Cooling in the Time of Isolation – by Jessica L Wilkinson
- 2 Mar 2022 Self-portrait as Frida Kahlo – by Katherine Brabon
- 2 Mar 2022 Exoskeletons – by John Kinsella
- 2 Mar 2022 The Memory of Water - by Amy Crutchfield
- 7 Jun 2021 In My Father’s House - by Suneeta Peres da Costa
- 2 Jun 2021 Another Kind of Winter - by Anne Kellas
- 2 Jun 2021 Water on Rock, Wind in Trees - by Pete Hay
- 1 Jun 2021 Voyager I - by Sarah Day
- 1 Jun 2021 Thirty Pieces - by A Frances Johnson
- 1 Jun 2021 Maria-Mercè in the Palm Grove - by Eileen Chong
- 1 Jun 2021 gadhalumarra - by Yaaran Ellis
- 1 Jun 2021 Pink Sun - by Toby Fitch
- 1 Jun 2021 Beach Front - by Ellen van Neerven
- 31 May 2021 Walking a Forest Trail One Summer Afternoon - by Judith Beveridge
- 28 May 2021 Sunlight / Dear Mum - by Graham Akhurst
- 28 May 2021 Hippophobia - by Chloe Wilson
- 25 May 2021 Tend - by Jo Langdon
- 25 May 2021 Distorted Depiction - by Cassandra Atherton
- 23 May 2021 Ash in Sydney - by Jake Goetz
- 23 May 2021 On the Day You Launch - by Damen O’Brien
- 23 May 2021 What the Glass Holds - by Jill Jones
- 23 May 2021 Ekphrasis - by Belinda Rule
- 23 May 2021 I Protest - by Ouyang Yu
- 23 May 2021 Pulled Apart by Seahorses - by Gavin Yates
- 23 May 2021 Sonnet 29 - by Stuart Barnes
- 23 May 2021 Waiting Room - by Felicity Plunkett
- 23 May 2021 Analogue - by Stephen Edgar