Powerful First Nations Stories: Read an Extract from This All Come Back Now, Edited by Mykaela Saunders

Powerful First Nations Stories: Read an Extract from This All Come Back Now, Edited by Mykaela Saunders

There were only a few ways to find new music when I was a teenager, growing up in a small town in a pre-internet world. I found old music easily enough, flipping through the old girl’s records and listening to them with headphones plugged in to the speakers in the lounge room, studying the cover art and liner notes and lyrics as I sang along. But finding new music was a different, more difficult quest. There were not yet any music blogs to scour or YouTube rabbit holes to get lost in. Radio sucked, even the few alternative stations that we picked up in Tweed. I was too poor to just go out and buy albums whenever I wanted, and CDs were pretty hard to flog, so if I wanted an album I had to be sure I loved it, to justify spending my meagre, illegal wages I earnt cooking brekky at the local markets.

And so mixtapes and compilation CDs were my gateways to finding new music that excited and moved me. I loved receiving the gift of a mixtape made by someone whose taste I relied on to open up my world. I could count how many of these people I absolutely trusted on one hand: mostly older, cooler mates, and my older brother. I loved making my own mixtapes too: the craft of taping songs off other songs, nailing the precise timing of starting and pausing, and carefully transcribing the song list – sometimes whiting-out an old tape sleeve that had already been whited-out and written on dozens of times over.

I found real joy and pride in making a mixtape that was coveted by people I respected. I loved the ritual of swapping mixtapes with others, always hoping to hell that you all recorded the song names and artists accurately, and wrote them down in the correct order of their position on the playlist, lest you begin telling people how much you love the wrong band.

There was no greater shame than in being a poser…

Continue reading the extract here…

Buy a copy of This All Come Back Now.

Acknowledgment of Cultural Fund support

Better Reading acknowledges the support provided by Copyright Agency for us to promote This All Come Back Now.

Reviews

Your Preview Verdict: This All Come Back Now edited by Mykaela Saunders

Review | Preview

6 July 2022

Your Preview Verdict: This All Come Back Now edited by Mykaela Saunders

    Incredible Speculative Fiction: Read Our Review of This All Come Back Now, Edited by Mykaela Saunders

    Review | Our Review

    23 May 2022

    Incredible Speculative Fiction: Read Our Review of This All Come Back Now, Edited by Mykaela Saunders

      Related Articles

      Podcast: Mykaela Saunders on First Nations Speculative Fiction

      Podcast

      19 July 2022

      Podcast: Mykaela Saunders on First Nations Speculative Fiction

        Publisher details

        This All Come Back Now
        Author
        Mykaela Saunders
        Publisher
        UQP
        Genre
        Fiction
        Released
        03 May, 2022
        ISBN
        9780702265662

        Synopsis

        The first-ever anthology of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander speculative fiction – written, curated, edited and designed by blackfellas, for blackfellas and about blackfellas. In these stories, ‘this all come back’: all those things that have been taken from us, that we collectively mourn the loss of, or attempt to recover and revive, as well as those that we thought we’d gotten rid of, that are always returning to haunt and hound us.

        Some writers summon ancestral spirits from the past, while others look straight down the barrel of potential futures, which always end up curving back around to hold us from behind. Dazzling, imaginative and unsettling, This All Come Back Now centres and celebrates communities and culture. It’s a love letter to kin and country, to memory and future-thinking.

        Mykaela Saunders
        About the author

        Mykaela Saunders

        Mykaela Saunders is a Koori and Lebanese writer, teacher, community researcher and the editor of This All Come Back Now, the world’s first anthology of blackfella speculative fiction. Mykaela is a 2021 Next Chapter recipient, and has won the Elizabeth Jolley Short Story Prize, the National Indigenous Story Award, the Oodgeroo Noonuccal Indigenous Poetry Prize, the Grace Marion Wilson Emerging Writers Prize for Nonfiction and the University of Sydney's Sister Alison Bush Graduate Medal for Indigenous research. Of Dharug descent, and working-class and queer, Mykaela belongs to the Tweed Goori community.

        Books by Mykaela Saunders

        COMMENTS

        Leave a Reply

        Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *