Women’s Ink SWW: Spring-Summer November 2025. Ruth Park: A steady glow of the heart of Australian literature by Colleen Keating

 

Very excited to have my first piece on  Australian Women Writers  published in  the latest edition of SWW Women’s Ink magazine  Spring- Summer November 2025.

Thankyou Janette Conway for such a richly packed and  enjoyable edition!  A final wonderful edition for our Centenary Year.  

My article  Ruth Park: A steady glow at the heart of Australian literature is the first in a series I am writing on Australian Women Writers and it was very apt to begin with the wonderful Ruth park  who we are proud to call one of our early members of the Society of Women Writers.

Ruth Park:   A steady glow at the heart of Australian literature 

 

“Writing is a passion I have never understood, yet a storyteller is all I have ever wanted to be. 

― Ruth Park

It is a truth universally acknowledged that a good read can change your life. For many of us reading in the 60’s and 70’s in Sydney, the young woman writer, Ruth Park. sparked a lasting literary love affair. 

For me as a teenager, finding her debut novel The Harp in the South and later Poor Man’s Orange was my first encounter with poverty and destitute families. Through the eyes of the young Dolours I learnt of unwanted pregnancy, abortion, sex outside marriage, prostitution, child abuse, topics that were taboo at the time. I was seeing life through Dolours dreamy eyes.  A bright girl, aspiring to get a good education and escape, ‘get out of the hills’ that being the suburb of Surry Hills which was an inner-west slum, resulting from the depression and wars.

Ruth Park,  born in 1917, grew up with a pen in her hand, from when a young girl in Auckland New Zealand. In 1942 she migrated to Australia to marry Australian writer D’Arcy Niland,  (The Shiralee) her long-term trans-Tasman journalistic correspondent, and together they embarked on mutually supportive and successful careers as freelance writers.

 

Historically The Harp in the South won the first Herald Writing Competition and a condition of this award was to be published in instalments in the Sydney Morning Herald.  After reading the synopsis many people wrote to the paper to have it banned due to its candour. The paper was swamped with angry letters calling it a cruel fantasy because as far as they were concerned, there were no slums in Sydney! However the newly married Park and Niland did live for a time in Surry Hills and vouched for the novel’s accuracy.  

Further it was published in book form in 1948 by Angus & Robertson, who baulked at the novel but had to honour a ‘gentleman’s agreement to publish the winner’.It has gone on to become a classic and never out of print.  Park ’s portrayal of an Irish-Australian family living with poverty, ill health, alcoholism was scarifying. We experience the prejudice of religions,  life of the Irish, the Chinese green grocer,  and early European migrants who had come expecting  to find ‘the road cobbled with gold’  only to find it, ‘made of stone harder than an overseer’s heart’.   But always Park shows us the warmth and heart wrenching tolerance of each other. 

     

Next for me rearing my own children with the long time radio serial (3,129 episodes) of a wombat who’s brains “rattled beautifully.” and who said his bike bit him when he hurt himself falling off,  is also thanks to this prolific woman writer.  And how wonderful when with illustrator Noela Young , the characters were brought to life on paper and over a dozen books of the Muddle-Headed Wombat were born.  Like many parents of the  60’s and 70’s I have fond memories of these irresistible characters including with Wombat, a good natured female mouse called Mouse and a vain neurotic cat called Tabby.

Today, however what stands out for many young readers is her children novels Playing Beatie Bow,  set in what is now called the Rocks Area. A story of children playing a scary game and the young protagonist getting caught into the slip of time, finding her self back in the Rocks of 1870 . Here the young girl Abigail meets a family, is tripped up to stay and falls in love.  Abigail, professed to have “the gift” from an old crocheted  collar on her dress, returns to find the parallel world of friendship and love in reality.   

This novel is often on the Primary syllabus and so many children have experienced the Playing Beatie Bow excursion – where they discover the Rocks. Stairs and alleyways and old stone houses are  still there, although today renovated and prime real estate. 

Ruth Park stands as one of the major twentieth-century Australian writers, with a body of work that spans popular, professional, and literary realms. Her writing has opened social  windows onto aspects of early Australian life that were not spoken  about in her time. 

The reception of Park’s work has been shaped by the high/low cultural divide, further reinforced by prejudices that dismissed female writers as sentimental or popular, rather than serious literary figures. Park fixes her sharp, sympathetic eye on those areas of life that male writers tended to treat downplay or disregard: abortion, the exhausting care of children, the difficulties of long marriage, childbirth, and the pleasures of (married) sex. 

Park’s focus on the lives of the most marginalised groups, including working-class men and women, Indigenous peoples and immigrants, shows her as a woman before her time  who spoke truth and didn’t allow custom to get in her way.  Her lasting impact I believe, is due to the enduring quality of her storytelling and the power of her imaginative vision – her own unique ‘window of life’.

Ruth Cracknell exclaimed her to be  “A steady glow at the heart of Australian literature”  and  in this Centenary Year we are proud to call Ruth Park an early member of our Society of Women Writers.

 

Vanessa Proctor: On Wonder review by Colleen Keating

I feel very proud to have two reviews  in the latest edition of  SWW Women’s Ink Magazine,  Spring- Summer November 2025.

Thank you Janette Conway for your very professional edition of our Women’s Ink.

Jan does it all joyfully and with comfort and ease.  It shows that  it is a labour of love
but it still is very demanding on time and energy and I appreciate this.

 A final wonderful edition for our Centenary Year.  

___________________________________________________

   On Wonder 

   Vanessa Proctor

    reviewed by Colleen Keating

This striking new book is filled with wonder, a delight to read either from cover to cover
or to dip into poem by poem. Full of original images it begins with family, unfolds from autobiographical
to the rich cacophony of visual arts, music, architecture, many as ekphrastic poems
and others using the powerful technique of taking on the persona such as a medieval gargoyle
in the poem Le Stryge .

I believe awe and wonder can sustain us; how taking time for awareness of the beauty
around us helps us and especially our children to grow in spirit.
At this time of increasing conflict and fraught demands on our attention, how uplifting it is to read
this collection of contemplative poetry.

On Wonder, a first collection of free verse from Vanessa Proctor, was published by Walleah Press
in late December 2024.
Vanessa is an award–winning Sydney poet and is highly acclaimed as a haikuist with three haiku
publications and co-editor of  under the same moon, Fourth Australian Haiku Anthology .

Vanessa Proctor’s poetry “encompasses an intimacy of living with minutely observed details of nature and time”.
These affirming words by Marcelle Freiman, on the back cover,  come from an appreciation of the rich use of imagery
and memory where time is all present.

Each poem is a bead of beauty, of lightness, of memory as in the wistful Cicada shells, their song,

thick with promise
of long afternoons
and lingering summers/which inevitability end
far too soon.

Vanessa writes gently of tragedy, a friend dying, a shipwreck, the desperation in Budapest 1944
where the pen is power. 

Memory as a way of living with the present and the telling of stories is succinctly expressed in Vanessa’s early poems;
sharing a bowl of steaming pho with her son, times with her father as a young girl , with her mother in Weberg 1980
and its hint of unease, with her sister

in a carefree summer spilling over
with sunshine and salt spray;

with her daughter,a poem any of us who have had a teenaged daughter will identify with.

One of my favourites is the poignant poem, Emergence about a new baby in the special care nursery,

Soon I’ll take you home
hold you,
get to know you,
from the outside in. 

Vanessa writes of an experience in an English cathedral, with the singing of a Hildegard of Bingen song,
O Quam Mirabilis Est 
(How Wondrous it is) we are touched with an abundance of spirit, carried across nine centuries
in praise of the beauty of creation,

the transformation of breath
into the energy of sound,
one expansive voice rising up,
visionary and numinous.

We were privileged to hear Vanessa talk about her new book at our SWW August meeting
and I hope this review encourages you to enjoy On Wonder. As in her poem Dragonfly,
may your reading her poetry,

“become a stillness
that dissolves into the morning

  
       

DECEMBER 14: OUR MONTH TO BE AT PEACE WITH THE WORLD by Colleen Keating

Wednesday 14th December

A year older today . Happy birthday to me. Above is  Michaels gift  –

A new White Peace Lily 

Day 14

It is not enough to have peace. We are meant to extend it to others,
to increase the amount of it in the world,
to be signs of the quietude it brings to those who spread it.

And from Mary Oliver something I often share with others
just the perfect poem for a birthday
it is not too much
not too little
it is the goldilocks birthday poem  . . .  just right.

Birthday

I wish I was twenty and in love with life
and still full of beans.
Onward, old legs!
There are the long, pale dunes; on the other side
the roses are blooming and finding their labor
no adversity to the spirit.

Upward, old legs! There are the fo and there is the sea
shining like a song, like a body
I want to touch
though I’m not twenty
and won’t be again, but ah!  in my seventies  And still
in love with life, And still
full of beans.

Mary Oliver from Red Bird

This day, my birthday was set down as the last SWW meeting with a workshop with Jan Cornell, and a Book selling market . I took 3/4 books of the two verse novels and only sold 3 books all up as there was as many sellers as buyers. At least it was great to see all the books we as a group have written.

Pip at our selling table                    Jan Cornell giving the key note address

BIRTHDAY EVENING SEA FOOD DINNER AT THE DOLPHIN HOUSE

Olive Muriel Pink by Colleen Keating, runner up and Highly Commended in SWW competition

At the SWW Gala Luncheon  on Wednesday I was  thrilled to receive two highly commended awards.

The first for my book Olive Muriel Pink, awarded the Highly Commended in the Society of Women Writers Poetry Award 2022

The second is a Highly Commended Award for my poem in the National Womens Writers Competition for Poetry. Giving Women Writers a Voice

 

 

 

After so much research, reflection, writing, editing and critiquing with my poetry groups and later with the publisher Ginninderra Press to bring my epic poem Olive Muriel Pink to the world it has finally been given the Highly Commended Award in the Society of Women Writers Poetry Award: a prestigious award and no small feat as it was up against many deserving books Short Listed.

Congratulations to all who made the short list , and especially big congratulations to the winner, my poet friend Pip Griffin for her well deserved book, The Secret Diaries . Virginia and Katherine.

It is a long lonely journey to get a literary work to this point and everyone deserves the recognition that comes their way this day at this rewarding and affirming Gala Luncheon

A great turnout of many amazing fellow female writers for the Gala Luncheon with the key note address given by researcher and writer Anne Summers. A sobering address in which Anne gave us much of the detail of a recent research paper she has researched and written on  Domestic Violence titled,

≠ Violence or Poverty;

The dire choice faced by nearly half a million women

   

 

JUDGES REPORT 

The  Society of Women Writers NSW   Biennial Poetry Book Awards 2022 

 Highly Commended

Colleen Keating’s Olive Muriel Pink: her radical and Idealistic life.

A poetic journey transforms meticulous research into vivid images 

and crisp, engaging writing, bring to light an extraordinary pioneering 

Australian woman’s life and achievements in this substantial 

biographical poem. 

Colleen Keating’s biographical poem brings to fresh attention, and in a new form the life and work of an extraordinary Australian, an anthropologist, committed to working with and bringing to the awareness of colonial Australia, the deep knowledge and connection to the land of the Warlpiri & Arrernte peoples. During her life, Olive Oink worked to disturb the ‘Great Australian Silence’ about the Aboriginal people and Keating’s engaging work restates and re-envisage this important work for modern day Australians.

This biographical poem is a sustained accomplishment. It is a complete narrative, rich in detail and authenticity that captures not only the board and more nuanced details of Olive Pink’s life, but also the landscapes and people in which /with whom she moved. In addition, the poem is a skilful evocation of the times (including both world wars), of loss, of prejudice, of misogyny, of dedication to a cause /a belief. Always lucid in detail, at times the blank verse lines are like sketches and paintings that Pink loved – accurate, but sparse like the arid desert in which she moved – and imbued with the vivacity and splashes of colour that characterise Australia’s land/outback.

Thank you, Colleen, for the opportunity thread your poetry .It was a privilege. Best wishes with your work in the future.

Dr. Carmel Bendon

Dr. Carmel Bendon is a writer and presenter  on  “all things medieval, “ lives in sydney, Australia. She has a 
phD in MedievalLiterature and lectures in English  literature, Medieval Studies and Spiritual. She is ye author of Mysticism and Space , Grasping at Water and more recently  The Mystics Who Came to Dinner.

 

 

Society of Women Writers April Meeting

A fresh Autumn morning . I set out by train for the city to attend the monthly gathering of the Society of Women Writers. ( SWW)

Each month it is held at the State Library of NSW over in  the  Dixson Room in the original Mitchell Library. And being a Friend of the Library I enjoy a coffee and some quiet space in  the Friends room before hand

This month  Pattie Miller lead the workshop .

and luncheon with the key note spesker as Pattie again on the topic of

and a very interest talk with Libby Hathorn and the first release of her new children’s book Miss Franklin .

It was a very pleasant gathering  and Pattie as always very informative

One of the exciting unfolding pieces of information Pattie Miller  held up the  new Stella Award book  An Erratic life by Vickie Laveau-Harvie            . Pattie was excited as Vicki had been on e of her students . I was excited firstly for Vicky winning such a prestigious prize but that I had spent the week at Varuna