Thursday, December 18, 2025

"Crossing" in the anthology Professor Feiff's Trans-Dimensional Travelogue, Meanjin's Closure and the Heinous Shooting at Bondi


I had written this celebratory post, along with the bit on the Meanjin closure, before the heinous event in Bondi occurred. That makes this blogpost confusing in terms of tone and events. I decided that it would be ethically inept though not to express my sorrow and outrage at what went down. Such an incredibly sad, dark day for all of Australia.

'Crossing' in New Anthology 

One of my stories titled "Crossing" has found a second home in Professor Feiff's Trans-Dimensional Travelogue Ed. Jessica Augustsson, and the anthology looks an entertaining ride.  It's my third story in a JayHenge anthology this year and the tireless team there of Jessica and Kim have been fab to work with.

"Crossing" was originally published in 2016 in the Sir Julius Vogel Award winning anthology At the Edge edited by the talented duo, Lee Murray and Dan Rabarts. The story was scheduled for a Year's Best anthology that never eventuated due to valid reasons relating to the editor's health. At the Edge had a fabulous little run —what else would you expect from an effervescent globetrotting promoter like Lee Murray at the helm— but the anthology eventually came to an end and is no longer in print, so it's especially a treat timing wise to see the story find a place in   

"Crossing" was originally published in 2016 in the Sir Julius Vogel Award winning anthology At the Edge edited by the talented duo, Lee Murray and Dan Rabarts. The story was scheduled for a Year's Best anthology but it never eventuated due to valid reasons relating to the editor's health. At the Edge had a fabulous little run —what else would you expect from an effervescent globetrotting promoter like Lee Murray at the helm— but the anthology eventually came to an end and is no longer in print, so it's especially a treat timing wise to see the story find a place in Professor Feiff's Trans-Dimensional Travelogue.  


"The ebook can be found on Amazon US here: https://amazon.com/dp/BOG57TDPM9


And the other intentional Amazon stores using the same end number. The paperback and hard cover copies will soon follow. The book in all three formats may not be available yet everywhere, but within a few days it should be. Paperback versions may not be available yet everywhere, but within a few days it should be. Paperback versions are now being released in Australia, I believe." Jessica Augustsson, 5th December 2025

Professor Feiff's Trans-Dinmensional Travelogue ToC – congratulations to all the contributors:

The Forecast for the Week / Joyce Frohn 

Astral Amusement / Zary Fekete 

Grandpa’s Birthday Barbeque / Robert Runté 

Triskellion’s Maze / Mike Adamson 

Halfway Home / Rodrigo Culagovski 

Endgame Careful, Careful / Regina Clarke 

The Tourist / Don Bisdorf 

In the Land of Imagination / James Rumpel 

10mg Narvania® From Tranza-Pharm / Matt Bliss 

Rob the Bank, Butter the Kitchen / Susann Cokal 

Ten Thousand Years Walking the Godsroad / Arthur H. Manners 

Prize Exhibit / James Rogers

Perfect Gift / Gustavo Bondoni

Me and Mine / Vincent H. O’Neil 

A Gentleman Explorer’s Perambulation of Wooly Acres via Linear Traverse of Nonrelative Time by Means of a Bicycle, a Saysquack and a Cuckoo Clock, a New Mode of Distanceless Travel / Justin Teerlinck 

Always Let Your Dragon Fly First Class / Wendy Nikel 

Veracity’s Find / Stewart C Baker 

Post-Apocalypse Prix Fixe / Emily Gennis

The Brown Legacy / Kris Ashton 

Seaside / Mia Dalia 

The View from Erebus / Michael P. Boettcher Jr. 

My Best Friend’s Destination Wedding is Taking Things Way Too Far! / Robert Dawson 

The Santa Shank / Terryl M. Asla and Jessica Augustsson 

By Glen Abtor / Eric Del Carlo 

Home Away From Home / Coira MacHaffie 

The Astronaut / Glenn Dungan 

The Price of Success / Jeff Pepper 

The Abandoned Planets of Aediama / Miah O’Malley 

Hot Potato / Liam Hogan 

Jettisoned / Kevin Holochwost and Anna Varlese 

Crossing / Anthony Panegyres 

Confessions of a Space Tourist / Jesse Rowell

Previous Anthology Buddies

I am an unashamed nerd by nature and keep track of previous anthology buddies. Robert Dawson tops the list this time around with homes in the anthologies The Apparatus Almanac and Masque & Maelström: The Reluctant Exhumation of Edgar Allan Poe. I also shared a home with Mike Adamson, Matt Bliss, Gustav Bodoni in The Apparatus Almanac and another home with Steward C Baker, Liam Hogan and Kevin Holochwost in Masque & Maelström: The Reluctant Exhumation of Edgar Allan Poe. 

Meanjin's Closure

Meanjin Quarterly has been a major stalwart on the Australian literary scene for an age. So, the news of its closure saddened me. I had a story in Meanjin Quarterly in 2013. I also wrote a review of Swamplandia! by Karen Russell, back when Meanjin were quite interactive online with blogs and they also posted interviews from writers on what they were reading or recommending to read. It was especially nice to see Isobelle Carmody wax lyrical about Dreaming of Djinn Ed. Liz Grzyb in one of those reading posts. 

Meanjin paid well and was a professional unit. In the edition I had a story in, there was an essay that I loved and read over and again, called 'Speed and Politics' by Waleed Aly, and there was also a part of a witty essay by Estelle Tang, which managed at the end to tie in Margo Lanagan's brilliant Sea Hearts, a novel, which incidentally and somewhat ironically won Meanjin's playful 'tournament of books', edging out Tim Winton's Breath in a sea-themed grand finale. In the issue with my own story, my fellow fiction mates were Jane Jervis-Read, Craig Billingham and Angelina Mirabito.           

                                

Towards the end, Meanjin was hamstrung. The journal only had two staff, who I believe had part time roles. In the current climate, it's an impossibility to manage a journal of Meanjin's magnitude —especially when you see the work put into other professional journals in Australia like Overland, Island Magazine and Griffith Review— with such a small team. The editor, Esther Anatolitis and production editor, Eli McLean, did all they could, but their roles were of a Sysiphus rock-rolling nature. Due to the staffing issue, the journal also disappeared in a relative sense as a web and digital presence, which, whether someone likes it or not, seems integral to gain reading traction in this era. Meanjin, despite the toil and professionalism of its staffers, limped along, albeit proudly, until Melbourne University's sent in the scythe-wielding Grim Reaper 

Part of me does wonder if Meanjin, which once had a reputation for balancing the humorous with the serious (which I'm passionate about in terms of writing and also reading), leant a little too much to the graver side of literature over the last decade or so.

Ulitmately though, the lack of support for staff along with a lack of promotion, signalled a limited approach to what university education and meaning stand for. The closing of Meanjin was a measure judged by the dollar alone, yet with a bit of support and promotion and people power, I'm sure that Meanjin could have reinvigorated itself and become cultural powerhouses like Overland, Island and Griffith Review are today.  

There is hope. Part of me can't help but think this is the perfect opportunity for Meanjin's rebirth sometime in the future. We've seen this done with plenty of American journals, and, who knows, a university, who believes in thoughtful inventive essays and commentary, along with stories and how they can encourage us to think, feel and entertain simultaneously, could champion Meanjin in a renaissance of sorts. A literary institution that's been celebrated for 85 years deserves better treatment. The closure, to use a term coined by a Meanjin contributor Arthur Phillips in 1950, has given me the cultural cringe. 

Darkest Day in Australian History During my Lifetime

Utterly disgusted by the recent shooting in Bondi. 

As a nation, although relatively fortunate, we have had some dark days on Australian soil in my lifetime, At the forefront of my mind, come the Tasmanian shooting and the bushfires, but the key difference to those disasters is that the Bondi shooting was fuelled by hatred rather than a deranged mind or Mother Nature

Much of the Bondi shooting will become politicised when strong bipartisan leadership is what is actually required at present. Our gun laws, which are tight on a global level, will be rightfully tightened further. You only have to look at the US with their slack gun laws and the number of shootings  to see the correlation. But this is about more than simply access to guns. Racism and bigotry have fuelled this, along with misplaced extremist ideologies that have no place here. Australian Jewry has a long and proud history, which makes this all the more awful. The fact that some equate Israeli government policy in Gaza to assign global blame to Jews is heinously wrong. People have a right to be proud of their culture and faith, but not at the expense of breeding hatred and violence against others.  

Hope you're all outraged – let's not allow this vile behaviour any chance of becoming normalised.