Introducing The Best Australian Essays 2012

 When looking for wisdom it’s a good idea to range widely.Writing in the years after the Great Crash of ’29,  James Thurber noted corporate heads had started to speak double-talk expressed in low, muffled tones  "because nobody knew what was going to happen and nobody understood what had.”In contrast, the voices in these essays are strong.  The language is direct and there is confidence in its expression. It made me wonder about what had happened in the year to evoke such certainty.In politics, big moves detonated big responses. While the 'coup' against Kevin Rudd still smarts in some quarters of the Labor Party, there were thoughts and counter thoughts on why it happened and whether it was inevitable. Two essays here approach the nub of the matter from different sides of the fence. There was much analysis of big personalities. David Marr’s essay on the gladiatorial Tony Abbott may well make waves beyond 2012, as did his previous dissection of Rudd , which turned, for  a while at least, into a political autopsy.The Australian economy was buoyant, and what amount of this we could sheet home to the mining boom was the subject of speculation. Gina Rinehart, one of the country’s biggest mining speculators and the world’s richest woman, was in the public eye more than usual - and possibly more than desirable. Folktales and facts are presented in the essay on the intriguing mining matriarch.The drought broke. There were arguments over water in the Murray-Darling Basin, and an orchestrated response against the findings of the world’s climate scientists that global warming requires an urgent response.  The newly ubiquitous  Mrs. Rinehart used some pocket money to promote those who deny the obvious.In an intruiging deluge of interest, animals were in the minds of a range of Australian writers. Here are essays on killing cattle in Indonesian abattoirs, on shooting rabbits for food, on the wily mind of a dog, and on the thrill of horse riding and jumping and writing about movement when illness binds you to the earth.It was the year that finally saw the exoneration of Lindy Chamberlain for the death of her daughter Azaria. The dingo did it and now we all know. The decision was a long time coming, and the essay  is from a close observer of the sorry story.Our only living Nobel prize winning writer analysed the poetry of our unofficial poet laurate, and was both stern and admiring.We remembered giants of film criticism, music and  radio documentaries. We analysed pornography with verve and humour; we scrutinised our obsession with cooking programs and gave in to the seductions of fashion.In our families, mothers wrote of their passionate engagement with their children – born and unborn. We thought about sisters and fathers and of wild best friends. We finally came to an understanding about just who calls the shots in remote indigenous communities. All the essays are gifts to us of honesty and the struggle to be fair.This year we begin Best Australian Essays with two short pieces which illuminate each other, on men and friendship, drinking and fame. And we end with an essay in the best tradition of the form, taking us by the hand as we are shown the night sky in the High Tatra Mountains of Slovakia, and, then, via the work of Gershon Scholem on the 18th century Polish mystic Joseph Frank, transported to the early days of the Western Desert art movement of Australia, and to the religious  revolutions that can be found along the way.I have adored reading across the vast terrain of interests that our writers have explored, transported both by their words and by the energy of their voices. Here’s to your enjoyment of the year as seen by the Best Australian Essayists of 2012.Ramona KovalEditor, The Best Australian Essays 2012, Black Inc.The Best Australian Essays 2012http://www.blackincbooks.com/books/best-australian-essays-2012

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Return to Triple R - Melbourne Independent Radio - 102.7FM What's Going On Triple R News Audio: Ramona Koval talks writing and reading

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Jane Sullivan's interview for The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald