The Trapeze Act (Libby Angel, Text)
Tuesday, 27 September 2016
The Trapeze Act is a beautifully lyrical novel about the search for meaning and identity in 1970s Australia. This is quite a task for Loretta—daughter of a loose-cannon ex-carnie mother...
The Unfortunate Victim (Greg Pyers, Scribe)
Tuesday, 27 September 2016
The first book in a new crime series, The Unfortunate Victim follows Prussian detective Otto Berliner as he solves the murder of 17-year-old Maggie Stuart in 1860s Daylesford. This book...
The Waterfowl Are Drunk! (Kate Liston-Mills, Spineless Wonders)
Tuesday, 27 September 2016
Kate Liston-Mills’ debut collection of fiction is an astute, often moving study of three generations of a small-town family. Set in the author’s native Pambula in regional NSW, it captures...
Wedding Bush Road (David Francis, Brio)
Tuesday, 27 September 2016
Daniel, a 35-year-old Australian lawyer, leaves his LA base and girlfriend behind to return home upon hearing of the ill health of his mother Ruth. Upon arrival to the horse...
Wild Gestures (Lucy Durneen, MidnightSun)
Tuesday, 27 September 2016
This is an intriguing collection of short stories where things are seldom what they seem and characters are preoccupied by their past actions. Shaped less by plot than by precise...
The End of Patriarchy: Radical Feminism for Men (Robert Jensen, Spinifex Press)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
The End of Patriarchy by US academic Robert Jensen is a summary explanation of how radical feminism informs politics, written for an audience of men. Readers should bring an entry-level...
Extinctions (Josephine Wilson, UWA Publishing)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
Josephine Wilson was named the recipient of the inaugural Dorothy Hewett Award for her manuscript ‘Extinctions’. Chosen unanimously by the judges, that manuscript is now published by UWA Publishing as...
Victoria the Queen: The Woman Who Made the Modern World (Julia Baird, HarperCollins)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
Julia Baird’s excellent and sadly out-of-print first book, Media Tarts: How the Australian Press Frames Female Politicians, was an engrossing dissection of gender, politics and power with the pace and...
All is Given: A Memoir in Songs (Linda Neil, UQP)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
Linda Neil’s beguiling memoir All is Given deserves to be read by anyone with an ounce of adventure or romance in their soul, albeit with a touch of caution. As...
The Good People (Hannah Kent, Picador)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
Nóra Leahy has suffered great misfortune. It is 1825 in the far west of Ireland, and her beloved husband has just died, most ominously, at a crossroads, only a few...
Murder at Myall Creek: The Trial That Defined a Nation (Mark Tedeschi, S&S)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
Massacres of Indigenous Australians were not unusual during the early colonial history of Australia. What sets the 1838 mass murder at Myall Creek in central New South Wales apart was...
Cynthia Nolan: A Biography (M E McGuire, Melbourne Books)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
While many biographies have explored the story of Heide and its art community, M E McGuire takes a fresh look at that world and early 20th-century society through the eyes...
Grog: A Bottled History of Australia’s First 30 Years (Tom Gilling, Hachette)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
Colonial Australia was born with a drinking problem. Like a lot of the infant colony’s problems, alcohol addiction was inherited from the mother country. Many historical narratives of Australia, most...
Kiffy Rubbo: Curating the 1970s (ed by Janine Burke & Helen Hughes, Scribe)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
Sometimes studying the micro gives us the best view of the macro. Reading the essay collection Kiffy Rubbo is one of those experiences. Art curator Kiffy Rubbo provided space and...
The Answer (Allan & Barbara Pease, Harlequin)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
Body language and relationship experts Allan and Barbara Pease have sold over 20 million copies worldwide of their previous titles Why Men Don’t Listen and Woman Can’t Read Road Maps...
The Art of Keeping Secrets (Rachael Johns, Harlequin)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
The Australian book industry voted Rachael Johns’ The Patterson Girls its 2015 General Fiction Book of the Year. Her new novel will also appeal to mainstream women’s fiction readers, as...
Poum and Alexandre: A Paris Memoir (Catherine de Saint Phalle, Transit Lounge)
Thursday, 25 August 2016
Catherine de Saint Phalle’s first work of nonfiction, Poum and Alexandre: A Paris Memoir, is an intricately woven narrative that centres on the author’s eccentric and charmingly flawed parents. Her...
Anything is Possible (Cosentino, HarperCollins)
Monday, 8 August 2016
Paul Cosentino was a 12-year-old boy with reading difficulties when he discovered a book on magic in his local library. With the support of his family, Paul’s fascination with magic...
Family Skeleton (Carmel Bird, UWA Publishing)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
Carmel Bird is an incredibly distinctive writer who has earned a loyal following of fans in the literary community. In Family Skeleton, she mixes acidic authorial asides with an intimate...
The Fence (Meredith Jaffé, Macmillan)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
Septuagenarian Gwen and husband Eric are long-term residents of Green Valley Avenue, a quiet leafy corner in Sydney. When her beloved friend next-door dies, and her house is put on...
The Locksmith’s Daughter (Karen Brooks, Harlequin)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
Meticulously researched and historically compelling, Karen Brooks’ The Locksmith’s Daughter transports the reader to 16th-century London, at the height of Queen Elizabeth’s reign, and into the tumultuous world of Mallory...
On the Blue Train (Kristel Thornell, A&U)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
In December 1926, Agatha Christie, already a well-known novelist, starred in her own mystery when she ‘disappeared’ for 11 days without a word to her husband or six-year-old daughter. The...
The Science of Appearances (Jacinta Halloran, Scribe)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
A trained GP, Jacinta Halloran continues to draw on her medical knowledge in her third novel, The Science of Appearances, exploring genetics—and its controversial twin eugenics. The novel opens with...
1787: The Lost Chapters of Australia’s Beginnings (Nick Brodie, Hardie Grant)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
Australia’s documented history is ‘like a manuscript with the opening pages torn off,’ writes Nick Brodie in the opening of his latest book, 1787: The Lost Chapters of Australia’s Beginnings....
Bob Ellis: In His Own Words (Bob Ellis, Black Inc.)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
Bob Ellis was an Australian journalist, writer, filmmaker, and political observer, and this latest posthumous collection of his writing, In His Own Words, is a selection of his work chosen...
The Death of Holden: The End of an Australian Dream (Royce Kurmelovs, Hachette)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
According to the dominant narrative, the demise of Australia’s car industry is easy to explain: we just couldn’t compete with competitors in Asia. The imminent closure of the car factories...
Fight Like a Girl (Clementine Ford, A&U)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
In her engaging debut, Fairfax columnist and feminist Clementine Ford surveys what it means to be a girl in the world today, covering topics from eating disorders and abortion, to...
Pitched Battle: In the Frontline of the 1971 Springbok Tour of Australia (Larry Writer, Scribe)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
In 1971, South Africa under apartheid sent its last sporting team to Australia. It caused an intense polarisation of opinion, demonstrations at matches and even riots in the streets. Opposition...
Shine: The Making of the Australian Netball Diamonds (Jenny Sinclair & Megan Maurice, Finch)
Thursday, 28 July 2016
Women’s team sport is frequently overlooked when it comes to mainstream media, so it may come as a surprise then to find out that the Australian Diamonds Netball team are...
The Boy behind the Curtain (Tim Winton, Bolinda)
Friday, 8 July 2016
Tim Winton’s The Boy behind the Curtain is a collection of essays and reminiscences, some of it new and some previously published. Readers of Winton’s novels and stories will be...




