Reviews:

Australian Literary Review article by Peter Pierce February 17-18 2018

Oz article

Reviewed by Jamie S. Scott

Yarn spinners: A story of friendship, politics and a shared commitment to a distinctive Australian literature, woven through the letters of Dymphna Cusack, Florence James, Miles Franklin and their congenials, by Marilla North, Blackheath, NSW, Brandl & Schlesinger, 2017, 568 pp., AU$39.95 (paperback), ISBN 978 0 9944 2960 5

There are many ways to read as rich and detailed a book as Marilla North’s Yarn Spinners: A Story of Friendship, Politics and a Shared Commitment to a Distinctive Australian Literature, Woven through the Letters of Dymphna Cusack, Florence James, Miles Franklin and their Congenials, an updated and substantial reworking of Yarn Spinners: A Story in Letters – Dymphna Cusack, Florence James, Miles Franklin (2001). North herself suggests one approach when, in an online interview, she describes how she developed the earlier collection of selected correspondence among three mid-20th-century Australian literatae into a more complex “hybrid text” or “bio- graphical narrative” involving a good deal of “detective work” to fill in chronological gaps among the letters. As a result, you may start the book on the opening page, as you would a novel, and follow the three “politically active” eponymous characters as, on either side of World War II, they negotiate their way through several decades of ups and downs with one another, publishers, family members, assorted friends and rival writers, government bureaucrats and a host of other figures in their determination to play a part in creating and defending “an authentic and truly Australian literature” (17).
Alternatively, North’s exhaustive index allows you to dip and fish with whimsy or more ear- nestly in Yarn Spinners for particular persons, places, topics and events. Now, for example, you might stumble upon the traumatic prospect of thorocaplastic surgery for Cusack’s student and close friend Kathleen “Kay” Keen (1910–48), whose eventual demise from tuberculosis inspired the writer’s international bestseller, Say No to Death (1951); or now, upon Cusack’s “bouts of acute nostalgia”, when, wintering from England in Menton-Garavan on the French Mediterranean coast, she smells “the smoke of wood-fires in care-takers’ cottages where they have been stoked with gum-tree twigs or leaves” (178, 348). For my own part, interest in Cusack’s socialist affection for the city and people of Newcastle, which also happens to be the equally socialist North’s home town, had me skipping around Yarn Spinners for references to Australia’s “steel city” and to Cusack’s various literary and existential engagements with it and its inhabitants. In particu- lar, I was pleased to discover tidbits about the making of her industrial novel Southern Steel (1953), which dramatizes diverse and sometimes fraught relations among blue-collar workers and middle-class management on the one hand and, on the other, Australian locals and United States servicemen, during Newcastle’s tense World War II years.
In addition, Yarn Spinners benefits from North’s meticulous annotation; maps; a plethora of black-and-white illustrations placed judiciously throughout the text; a chronology of the interwoven lives of Cusack (1902–81), James (1902–93) and Franklin (1879–1954); and almost 200 “pen portraits” of the supporting cast of past and present characters. These felicities further enrich our understanding of the essential role of North’s triumvirate of women writers in the forging and articulation of Australia’s distinctive literary history and political culture (443).
Nor will our understanding of this complex yarn-spinning end with the final pages of Yarn Spinners. This new edition is the first volume of a planned trilogy revolving around Cusack’s life and writings and collectively titled Come in Dymphna, echoing the award-winning novel Come in Spinner (1951), which is set in World War II Sydney and which confirmed the literary reputations of co-authors Cusack and James. Publication of the second volume of Come in Dymphna is scheduled for 2018.
 
Jamie S. Scott
York University, Toronto, Canada
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https://doi.org/10.1080/17449855.2017.1368130
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             


Reviewed by Dr. Rowan Cahill

     When Yarn Spinners was initially published in 2001 by University of Queensland Press, it was lengthily titled Yarn Spinners. A Story in Letters: Dymphna Cusack, Florence James, Miles Franklin. Marilla North was credited as ‘Editor’. The title partially explained the contents of the book, but did not do justice to the nature of the book. Nor did the status ‘editor’ do justice to North’s achievement in creating the book. More than an edited collection of letters, it was a biographical study, via letters, of the personal, emotional, intellectual, and political relationships between three Australian women writers during the twentieth century. This was recognised when the book was awarded the Fellowship of Australian Writers Award for Biography in 2001.

     This new edition of Yarn Spinners, from independent publisher Brandl & Schlesinger operating out of Blackheath (NSW), has been fully revised and extended, part of what will be a trilogy centred on the life and times of Dymphna Cusack (1902-1981). Narratives and explanations linking and contextualising the letters have been revised and extended; new research has been taken into account; footnotes in the earlier edition have been greatly expanded and become endnotes; the biographical list of characters and personalities that enriched the text of the first edition, has been significantly expanded, as has the first edition’s chronology of the lives of the three writers. Illustrations placed in the middle of the first edition have been added to and integrated into the text of the revised edition, which has also been redesigned and is a very attractive publication.

     North has spent nearly three decades researching and creating/writing this book and the two that will follow. At times she has worked in academia, but mostly outside of it, which has given her the freedom to research, write and publish independent of production modes and schedules shaped by grants and neoliberal university production demands which would have discouraged this singular project. North’s commitment to the life and work of Cusack is due to her being born and raised in Newcastle, where Cusack was once a school teacher, and the impact Cusack’s novel about the city during WWII, Southern Steel (1953), had upon her. North also empathises with Cusack’s leftism and social justice concerns.

     Cusack was a secondary school teacher until medical issues later diagnosed as multiple sclerosis forced early retirement, bringing with it a small pension. Her lifetime of literary production, initially as a dramatist, includes twelve novels. Variously published in thirty-four countries, her oeuvre has generated sales numbered in millions. Cusack regarded the pen as her sword, and her literary activity as the way she could combine rage and politics, addressing social reform and justice issues in the quest for a better world. Today she is probably best known as the co-author with Florence James of Come in Spinner (1951), a novel about wartime Sydney, published in the UK when Australian publishers got cold feet regarding its realities and the possibility of libel actions. Still in print, Come in Spinner has sold over a million copies and is regarded as an Australian classic.

     The focus of Yarn Spinners is Cusack, and her literary and personal relationships with two other Australian literary women: Miles Franklin (1879-1954) inspirational mentor, friend, and literary collaborator; Florence James (1902-1993), Cusack’s close friend since university days, and also literary collaborator. The period covered in the book is 1928-1954, from the beginnings of Cusack’s literary career, through to the death of Franklin, which coincides with the ramping up of the Cold War, locally and internationally, by which time both Cusack and James were working abroad in various literary capacities: Cusack writing her novels and battling illness; James a literary agent successfully gaining publication in the UK for Australian authors. And all the while, Come in Spinner raced away as an international best-seller.

     The three women shared common ground, foremost as advocates for, champions and creators of, Australian narratives, literature, culture. They were feminists working in a gendered world where women were not meant to be self-determining people with agency they decided upon and created independent of paternalism, and within that macro-world, the similarly structured micro-world of literature and publishing where the deck was stacked against women. They also operated in an imperial world, similarly weighted, where British publishers and their ‘readers’ had significant say and control over what was published in the ‘colonies’, and where successful publication came with the inequitable distribution of royalties. It is this complexity of forces the three women battle in Yarn Spinners, and they were instrumental in eventually gaining royalty justice for Australian writers.

     North’s curation of the letters of the three woman is poignant, moving, inspiring, frank, at times painful, at times humorous. The women were marvellous letter-writers. But there is more to the book than this, for it provides a gateway to the vibrant and rich liberal/radical democratic leftist culture that existed in Australia in the 1930s, 40s, and 50s, one which the long ideological rule of Prime Minister Menzies and his cohorts strenuously sought to silence, close down, eliminate.

     Yarn Spinners abounds with people, all biographically described by North, many relatively ‘unknown’. My favourite is Norman Freehill (1892-1984), Cusack’s eventual partner, later husband. Yachtsman, financial journalist for the capitalist press, stockbroking familiar, a foundation member of the Communist Party of Australia (CPA), and of the Australian Journalists’ Association, founding editor of Common Cause, the Miners’ Federation newspaper, chief-of-staff of the CPA’s significant publishing interests in the 1940s, later head of Foreign Languages Press in Beijing. Freehill is a reminder of the hugely talented and diverse pool of expertise and backgrounds the CPA drew upon in its heyday, and the richness of the Australian cultural left in the 1940s and in the early years of the Cold War, a world Cusack was part of. I await the remainder of North’s trilogy with anticipation and pleasure.

Dr. Rowan Cahill
Honorary Fellow
Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts
University of Wollongong, NSW

Co-author 'Radical Sydney'

http://www.newsouthbooks.com.au/books/radical-sydney_places-portraits-and-unruly-episodes/

 


 

Reviewed by Dr. Larry Buttrose

     This book by Marilla North is a highly engaging, fascinating window onto the lives of three of Australia's foremost authors of the mid- 20th century - Dymphna Cusack, Miles Franklin and Florence James.

     The book is an updated and expanded version of a volume published in 2001 by University of Queensland Press, with nearly 150 pages of extra information and details included, in a beautifully presented new edition by Brandl & Schlesinger.

     In her Introduction, North describes her method as "narrative biography", weaving together the letters between the three authors over decades, as well as press excerpts from the period and other ephemera, linked with essential explanatory passages by North that keep the narrative flow brisk, smooth and seamless.

     As Mary Kostakidis puts it in her Preface, "Dymphna Cusack, Miles Franklin and Florence James come alive in these pages through their friendships, their aspirations, their passions and achievements, their disappointments, insecurities and triumphs."

     And come alive they do. The correspondence is openly honest and ever witty, urbane, acerbic and compelling as the three forge their way through the labyrinth of conservative Australian society and its stodgy literary world of the 1930s, ’40s and ’50s, reaching a pinnacle with the international bestseller, the acclaimed and now classic "Come In Spinner."

     North details the endlessly frustrating, byzantine path the book took to publication and success, from winning the 1946 Sydney Daily Telegraph novel prize, and Cusack and James receiving the £1000 prize money, but ultimately not being published by the paper's press as had been promised because of fears about content deemed too racy and salacious, and, ultimately, too on the money. The book lifts the lid on the seamy side of Sydney at the end of World War Two, when American servicemen were "overpaid, oversexed and over here" and follows the lives and loves of women in a story centred on flash city hotel and its beauty salon.

     Cusack is essentially the central character in North's book, and through her we experience the struggles lasting many long years, and the eventual triumph of the book.

     Another earlier writing project from the 1930s that Cusack  co-wrote with Miles Franklin called “Pioneers on Parade” that satirised the fawning attitude of sections of Sydney society to British visiting aristocracy,  is also followed in satisfying detail, including its bumpy ride with conservative readers and critics.

     Interwoven through the stories of writing and publishing are the social causes the three women championed throughout their lives, for women's rights, for a fair go for workers and free speech against the backlash of post WWII anti-Communist hysteria, and, after Cusack's move to London in the early 1950s, her involvement in the peace and ban the bomb movements.

     And throughout her long career, Cusack never loses sight of the aspiration she expressed as a young aspiring writer, to present women "as we know them. Thinking, working, loving, desiring... Moving between ecstasy and despair. Full of longing for the wider horizons - and a little afraid of the snapped cables and the dragging anchors. In brief

     - Women. I find them fascinating and utterly incalculable."

     In the pages Cusack also stoically endures decades of poor and often debilitating health, suffering from MS, which was not a diagnosed disease in her time, and which she simply dubbed her "dogs disease".

     At the centre of all these currents and crosscurrents of stories, North works more as a weaver than a puppeteer, and the reader follows each fascinating thread to its conclusion. She has shaped this edition to work as the first volume of her biographical trilogy, re-creating the life and times of Dymphna Cusack and those with whom she shared her incredible life's journey.

     In all "Yarn Spinners" is a beautifully curated and crafted work, meticulous in its detail and annotation and superb in its evocation of the vivid colour and lived lives of three writers and the Sydney they all called home, and who endured illness, heartache, professional jealousy, moralistic judgement and backward political obstruction, ultimately to triumph, as North does herself in this remarkable volume.  It's a Southerly Buster of a book.

     Dr Larry Buttrose