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    • Tasmanian Voices
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    • Stories of Tasmania BOFA
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  • The Van Diemen Decameron
 

Pete
Hay

Pete Hay grew up on the north-west Coast of Tasmania, and has worked as schoolteacher, storeman, truckie’s offsider, youth worker and political adviser at both state and federal tiers of government. But it was as an academic in Victoria and Tasmania that he has spent most of his waged life. He retired as Reader in Geography and Environmental Studies at the University of Tasmania at the end of 2008, and turned his focus to creative writing. He has published multiple volumes of poetry and personal essays, and has twice been shortlisted for the Tasmanian Book of the Year. His book of essays, Forgotten Corners: Essays in Search of an Island’s Soul, was named the Small Press Network 2020 Book of the Year.


Pete Hay grew up on the north-west Coast of Tasmania, and has worked as schoolteacher, storeman, truckie’s offsider, youth worker and political adviser at both state and federal tiers of government. But it was as an academic in Victoria and Tasmania that he has spent most of his waged life. He retired as Reader in Geography and Environmental Studies at the University of Tasmania at the end of 2008, and turned his focus to creative writing. He has published multiple volumes of poetry and personal essays, and has twice been shortlisted for the Tasmanian Book of the Year. His book of essays, Forgotten Corners: Essays in Search of an Island’s Soul, was named the Small Press Network 2020 Book of the Year.


Forty South

Lace Coral …

by Pete Hay
22 Jun 2023

Lace coral … is not coral, though coraline ...

Poet's Corner

Placid Venus, Killora Bay

by Pete Hay
17 Jun 2023

These concentric grooves, gene-tooled, precise and rutted deep ...

Poet's Corner

Bushy Park

by Pete Hay
12 Nov 2022

A poem by Pete Hay

TASMANIAN VOICES

Historical amnesia, communal ecology, and my father’s watch

by Pete Hay
11 Oct 2021

On the island of Corfu, technically part of Greece, there is a town called Palaiokastritsa that is the island’s epicentre of wild teenage tourism and tasteless Russian money. It has a monastery built in 1225, and is a beautiful sequence of enclosed bays and lucent blue water – hence all that overfed Russian flesh, and the unrestrained revelry of the beauteous young.

We pay our respects to the Tasmanian Aboriginal people as the traditional and original owners and continuing custodians of lutruwita, and acknowledge elders past and present.

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