My book of the year If anyones written more beautifully and modestly about this country and its people Im not aware of it. I think its a treasure.
-- Tim Winton * The Age Best Books of 2016 *
Position Doubtful leaps straight onto the shelf occupied by the great accounts of inland Australia. Theatrical, confessional, masterly descriptive, it is hard to find one word to sum up the achievement. Possibly it lies in the word character: in the brave character of the author herself, and in the spacious, beautiful, and unforgiving character of the Australian landscape and the people who dramatically take on its shape in these pages.
-- Roger McDonald, author of
Australias Wild Places,
When Colts Ran,
Mr Darwins Shooter,
The Ballad of Desmond KaleThere is something profound about the directness and clarity with which Kim Mahood writes about her art, and her life, in particular her relationship with the land she grew up in and on, and her relationship to the indigenous people who have lived on that land much longer than she. As Mahood writes of quite literally building a map that is both geographic, social and cultural, you feel that she has, ever so gently, shifted your view of the world. Position Doubtful is a remarkable, intelligent and mature work. I really loved it.
-- Sophie Cunningham, author of
Warning: the story of Cyclone Tracy,
Geography and
BirdKim Mahood is an astonishing treasure: an accomplished artist and writer who is equally well-equipped to navigate both Aboriginal and settler Australia. Her lyrical yet unsentimental memoir is a story of honouring the knowledge that two cultures have mapped upon each other, a lesson the entire globe needs to learn.
-- William L. Fox
[Mahood] is a talented writer whose mastery of the language is absolute. The combination of an artists eye, a mapmakers precision, and a wordsmiths playfulness makes for a work of captivating beauty a significant and timely work.
* Weekend Australian *
Mahood is a writer of country. Her chapters unfurl like the ribbons of red dunes. She says this is a kind of love story, and so it is, a love of land, not purchased acreages, but country, birth country. Apart from family and close friends, she says, there has been no other love in my life as sustained as the one I felt for a remote pocket of inland Australia.
Country can get its fingers around your entrails, particularly if it owns them. That grip makes your movements cautious with the knowledge that, while you might move away for a time, the elasticity of your own gut drags you back.
Mahood is dragged back. It can be excruciating reading the words of a non-Aboriginal person recording their impressions of a brief visit to Aboriginal community, but Mahood belongs to country and it blesses her with that most refined human sensitivity, doubt. She is not tempted to improve or judge the communities of her country because she prefers to love them; the whole buckled, lovely and jumbled chaos of the land.
The rich pulse of country makes the heart quake with recognition. Position Doubtful has the scale and delicacy of desert and records genuine Aboriginal voice and emotion. Its breadth means that it is frequently visited by death but Mahood records those deaths with solemn grace while continuing to rejoice in the vibrance of the land with a calm and dignified joy.
A book for people who love this country as if it were their mother.
-- Bruce Pascoe, author of
Dark Emu,
Fog a Dox,
Convincing GroundPosition Doubtful attests to an eye that is unfailing and a lifetime of looking She sees what she sees, and comes to her own conclusions Powerful.
* Australian Book Review *