It ought to be impossible to talk about literary Adelaide without due mention of Geoffrey Dutton (1922–98). As a prime mover of Writers’ Week and the Adelaide Festival of Arts, and founding co-editor of Australian Letters (1957–68) and Australian Book Review (1961-), both magazines based in Adelaide, Dutton was central to the city's post-war cultural initiatives. He was associated with the University of Adelaide, where he studied for a year before enlisting (another magazine, Angry Penguins, appeared controversially there that same year, 1940) and later taught. He was one of the English Department's lively cohort of writers and scholars who were enthusiastic about Australian and other ‘new’ literatures. From Adelaide, Dutton played importan...