Editorial
Lost Homes
CLARISSA CABELLO
Welcome to our 21st Issue of The Quarry, ‘Lost Homes’.
This year has been tough on the world, on the places people call home and for this Earth which is everyone's home. A home is a sacred place, whether real or imagined, literal or metaphorical. Regardless whether a home is bounded by mind or mortar, feeling like you have lost your home is heartbreaking. We have seen how war can destroy lives and forced displacement can sabotage culture and community.
When I think of home, I think of love. Of care and nourishment. Our stories show how home or lack thereof can build us up or destroy us. A girl asks herself if she should buy "A Train Ride or A Roast Dinner", wanting to start all over again in Sarah Petchell’s fiction. A space explorer realises that he can never return to Earth in a poem by Ben Sanday, “Lost Home.” A woman who inherits her late grandmother's house is still haunted by her “Memory”, in a short story by Isabella Griffith. “A Gardener” cherishes his garden and vows to endlessly love her in a poem by Analise Barreto. The cohort took the theme and ran with it, and as you read, I'm sure you can see how vastly inspired we all were. But there was one question that united our work. As the saying goes, "home is where the heart is," so when writing, we asked ourselves: “Where does my heart lie?”
Thank you to Dr Michelle Hamadache for being the journal’s paladin and for fostering our creativity and our individuality. Thank you, Dr Jimmy Van, for your work on this beautiful website The Quarry calls home. Thank you, Michelle Council, David Clark, and Tiana Campbell for helping organize our launch party. Thank you, David Clark, for the brilliant idea to produce a print version of this issue so we can have a keepsake. Thank you to everyone who volunteered their time, energy, and artistic flare this semester. Thank you to Adrian Walthew for our lovely cover page of the "Floating House", and thank you to everyone else who submitted their artwork.
We hope these stories inspire you, make your stomach lurch and your heart pitter patter, and most importantly, remind you to nurture yourself, cherish your home, protect our Earth, and be kind to others.
Table of Contents
JAY ARMSTRONG-BUNKER | It Has Character
MICHELINE CHEN | Chasing Shadows
QUINN DIBBEN | Tears of The Sky
CATHERINE FAILLA | Cubby House
COB FARR | Where I Have Left My Heart
TULLY GILLAM | A Colourful Awakening
TULLY GILLAM | The End of a Rainbow
TULLY GILLAM | Remnants of a Dream
Prose
RAY O’BRIEN | The Longest Way Home
WILLIAM IAN PAGENT | Old Janissary
SOPHIE POREDOS | The Forgotten Woman of Brez DuŠa
ANGELA SENIOR | Beyond Ink and Shadow
DAVEY L. STEPHENS | Fresh Start?
STEZZA | A Train Ride or a Roast Dinner
ALEIDA TOPRAK | Glitter On Glue Like Girls On Poles And Other Stories
or
Filter by genre
- Absurdist Fiction 1
- Adventure 1
- Apocalyptic Fiction 1
- Australia 1
- Colonisation 1
- Coming of Age 3
- Contemporary Fiction 2
- Crime 1
- Depression 1
- Divorce 1
- Domestic Fiction 1
- Drama 1
- Dreams 1
- Eco-Fiction 1
- Existentialist Fiction 1
- Family 1
- Fantasy 5
- Fiction 10
- Fishing 1
- Grief 1
- Historical Fiction 2
- Home 1
- Horror 2
- Invasion 1
- Literary Fiction 1
- Loss 2
- Magical Realism 3
- Micro Fiction 1
- Non-Fiction 1
- Philosophical Fiction 1
- Poetry 3
- Psychological Thriller 1
- Reminising 1
- Romance 2
- Satire 1
- Science Fiction 5
- Social Realism 1
- Speculative Fiction 5
- Supernatural 2
- Surrealist Fiction 2
- Trauma Literature 2
- Unfulfilled Dreams 1
- Wangal People 1
- War 1
A Train Ride or a Roast Dinner
Navigating life in Sydney, a young girl finds herself at a crossroads between the familiar warmth of home and what life has become in the face of a worn-away innocence. Follow her journey as she wrestles with a life-altering decision that threatens to shatter her world, testing her resilience and her inner strength and the enduring power of hope in the face of adversity.