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Trick of the Light (Laura Elvery, UQP) 

Thursday, 25 January 2018
The 24 stories in Brisbane writer Laura Elvery’s debut collection Trick of the Light span countries and centuries, ranging stylistically from stark realism to light speculative fiction. Some are vignettes,...

The Ruin (Dervla McTiernan, HarperCollins) 

Thursday, 25 January 2018
The Ruin is as much a morality tale as it is an incendiary page-turner. This superior, haunting novel of murder, deception and ethical dilemma is set in Galway, on Ireland’s...

Little Gods (Jenny Ackland, A&U) 

Thursday, 25 January 2018
Jenny Ackland’s second novel, Little Gods, couldn’t be mistaken for anything but an Australian book. The Mallee countryside leaps off the page with its great hulking peppercorns and flattened brown-farmland....

Deadly Woman Blues (Clinton Walker, NewSouth) 

Thursday, 25 January 2018
Spanning over 150 years and featuring more than 100 artists, Clinton Walker's Deadly Woman Blues explores how the intricacies of gender, race and genre shaped a musical history in Australia...

Write on: 2018 nonfiction preview 

Thursday, 26 October 2017
Andrea Hanke reports on Australian publishers’ local nonfiction highlights for 2018. Click here for the full preview. Recently retired Western Bulldogs captain Bob Murphy will release his memoir with Black...

Write on: 2018 fiction preview 

Thursday, 26 October 2017
New books by Ceridwen Dovey, Kristina Olsson, Melissa Lucashenko, Lloyd Jones and Gerald Murnane, and a number of highly anticipated debuts, are among Australian publishers’ local highlights for 2018, reports...

Before I Let You Go (Kelly Rimmer, Hachette) 

Monday, 23 October 2017
Successful physician Lexie receives a frantic call in the middle of the night—her younger sister Annie is addicted to heroin and heavily pregnant. Lexie rushes Annie to hospital, but the...

The Cage (Lloyd Jones, Text) 

Monday, 23 October 2017
Two strangers appear in a generic town, both claiming to have survived a catastrophe. They are unable to explain what happened, where it happened or even who they are. They...

Cake at Midnight (Jessie L Star, S&S) 

Monday, 23 October 2017
Gio (the baker), Declan (the brains) and Zoe (the beauty) have always been a trio, but a few thoughtless words from Declan force Gio to face the truth: he’ll never...

Dyschronia (Jennifer Mills, Picador) 

Monday, 23 October 2017
In a remote, single-industry Australian town, a young girl, Sam, starts to suffer from migraines. The sharp pain is accompanied by visions of the future, which her sceptical mother warns...

The Everlasting Sunday (Robert Lukins, UQP) 

Monday, 23 October 2017
Coming-of-age boarding school stories have a special place in the literary world; the teenage experiences of angst, confusion and ambition, combined with the greater potential for violence in an all-male...

Hangman (Jack Heath, A&U) 

Monday, 23 October 2017
In the age of the anti-hero, morally ambiguous characters compel readers to empathise with and root for them, despite their troubled natures and character flaws. Enter Timothy Blake, the Hangman,...

The Lebs (Michael Mohammed Ahmad, Hachette)

Monday, 23 October 2017
Punchbowl Boys High, often dubbed ‘NSW’s most troubled school’, was the subject of a 2016 autobiographical essay by Michael Mohammed Ahmad. Now, that reminiscence of his alma mater has become...

The Lucky Galah (Tracy Sorensen, Picador) 

Monday, 23 October 2017
It is testament to debut author Tracy Sorensen’s talent that, against all odds, choosing to have a galah narrate her novel never becomes gimmicky. Somehow the reader suspends disbelief and...

The Naturalist’s Daughter (Tea Cooper, HQ) 

Monday, 23 October 2017
At the heart of Tea Cooper’s The Naturalist’s Daughter are the stories of two bold, inspirational women connected across history by a great scientific controversy—the classification of the platypus. This...

The Tattooist of Auschwitz (Heather Morris, Echo) 

Monday, 23 October 2017
This novel is based on an incredible true story of resilience, loss and survival—the result of years of interviews between Heather Morris and Holocaust survivor Ludwig (Lale) Sokolov. The Tattooist...

Border Districts (Gerald Murnane, Giramondo) 

Thursday, 28 September 2017
In Border Districts, which is conceived as Gerald Murnane’s last work of fiction, the narrator has moved to a remote town, near the border of a neighbouring state, so that he...

Dissent (Sally Percival Wood, Scribe) 

Wednesday, 27 September 2017
Sally Percival Wood’s Dissent is a lively and accessible slice of Australian cultural history. Percival Wood revisits the tumultuous 1960s and reveals the extent to which an unlikely and often-forgotten...

Into the World (Stephanie Parkyn, A&U) 

Wednesday, 27 September 2017
Inspired by true events in the 18th century, Into the World is the story of Marie-Louise Girardin, an unwed woman who must escape revolutionary France to save the life of...

Tracker (Alexis Wright, Giramondo)

Cover of 'Tracker' Wednesday, 27 September 2017
A biography can be written in a standard form: subject born, raised, educated, worked and died. And that will be fine for most people. But not Tracker Tilmouth. He was a polarising, intelligent, charismatic...