'Creative Manoeuvres' authority comes from its refusal to limit itself to only one research approach or to submit to a research hierarchy where orthodox forms of methodology and inquiry dominate. It spans broad topics and explores both the act of (creative) writing and research into the (creative) writing process. It critiques the traditional view of writing as a purely cognitive process, critiques nonfiction writing, poetry, and the ethics of practice and research, discusses the issue of creative pedagogy, investigates how practice and lived experience effect both writing and research, and it explores the gaps between writer and subject. As a living document it is retrospective and thoughtful, contemporary and extant, but it's not a set of answers – nor does it claim to be. It is part of an accumulating body of literature that is forming the framework for argument, discussion and future CW research. It is a text to keep coming back to.'Craig GarrettAuthor, editor, journalist and communications consultantTEXT Journal, 18: 2 (2014)'A book that reaches beyond its origins while wonderfully building on them, offers many ideas but also stimulates them, asks for critical attention but equally encourages creative action. This is a fascinating, spirited, thought-provoking exploration.' Graeme HarperDean of The Honors College, Oakland University.'This book sheds light on the perplexing question of human creativity in the current zeitgeist. It is multi-disciplinary, inter-discursive, and cross-cultural in its approach to art-making and knowledge-production. It engages in serious play and lively research, probing the depths of the human heart and mind in ways that are, paradoxically, often political. As such, it is a creative work in its own right.'Dominique HecqResearch and Discipline Leader in Writing, Swinburne University of Technology.'Read this book if you want to have your eyes opened like never before on diverse subjects like orality and creative writing, phenomenology, feminisim and conceptual writing and so much more. Read this book if you want to know why Australasia is at the forefront of the nexus between art, creative writing and culture in the twenty-first century. Shane Strange, Paul Hetherington and Jen Webb have their fingers on the pulse of the cutting edge of creative writing practice and writing theory. If you want to get excited about the future and the untold possibilities of writing and art, I cannot urge you strongly enough: Read. This. Book.'Stephanie VandersliceProfessor and Director of the Arkansas Writer's MFA Workshop, University of Central Arkansas