There’s a moment in ‘Civility Place’, the fourth short story in Julie Koh’s Portable Curiosities, that I had to put the book down and laugh until I burped. In ‘Civility Place’, the young corporate lawyer works in a building with the fastest glass lifts in the country, where fresh flowers decorate the foyer every morning, and the law firm has a multimillion dollar art collection rotating on its walls. I know that law firm, or at least, I’m pretty sure I know its real life equivalent, just as I’m sure I know the ice-cream store in ‘The Cream Reaper’, and weddings with UN-variety guest lists in ‘Slow Death in Cat Cafe’.
I definitely know the flame-haired woman in ‘The Three-Dimensional Yellow Man’.
Portable Curiosities (2016) is written by Julie Koh, a Chinese-Malaysian Sydneysider and former corporate lawyer, a bio which the moment I read I knew meant I was in for a treat. It’s not that one has to be Asian-Australian or know corporate Sydney to enjoy this little jewelry box of very clever stories, but being familiar with both of those worlds there were times I found myself inserted into her stories, wholly and completely, until I wondered why I wasn’t sitting and spinning in a starfish-footed desk chair as I laughed.
And there’s so much to laugh or cry at. There’s a pair of Fantastic Breasts (capital F, capital B) on legs that can save the world but not themselves, in a tale of objectification taken to extremes. ‘Sight’ has a family living with ghostly lizard boy after a miscarriage. An orchestra fights a guerilla war in forest like something out of Monty Python. ‘The Fat Girl in History’ calculates paunch to penis ratios on a Sydney gay nudist beach that I’ve never visited but now feel I have. And I particularly commend ‘The Three-Dimensional Yellow Man’, where a two-dimensional yellow character literally climbs out of a film-screen into a real world that can only deal with stereotypes, and in which Julie captures so much of my own feelings towards Asian racism and representation in Australia.
All of these and more are told in sharp, clean prose where no word is wasted making for stories that, despite their shortness, contain a hell of a punch. Like all the best satire Julie’s punches are aimed at consumerism, racism, sexism, self-image or just the absurdity of modern society, and well worth your time. And now I can never eat another Gelato Messina ice-cream without wondering if it’s going to kill me.
Portable Curiosities is published by University of Queensland Press.

