September 2021

2021 Queensland Literary Awards – winners

The State Library has announced the 2021 winners of the literary awards. Queensland Premier’s Award for a work of State Significance Biting the Clouds by Fiona Foley University of Queensland Press The University of Queensland Fiction Book Award Song of the Crocodile by Nardi Simpson Hachette Australia. For the full list of all the winners,

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2021 National Biography Award

The winner of the Award for 2021 is Truganini by Cassandra Pybus. The story of Truganini, a Nuenonne woman from Bruny Island off Tasmania, is shrouded in myth for almost two centuries. In this clear-eyed work, Pybus charts the ‘agonising accretion of unspeakable loss’ endured by Truganini, her people and other clans in 1800s colonial

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General Fiction

Apples Never Fall by Liane Moriarty

Reviewed by E.B. Heath Even some of the best crime authors are so plot oriented that, in the telling, prose styles become formulaic, train tracks for speedy storylines. And the crime stands alone, left unconnected to broader community issues, like a cryptic crossword writ large and woven into a simulated time and place.  None of

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History

Tongerlongeter by Henry Reynolds and Nicholas Clements

Reviewed by Ian Lipke How easy it is to remain in ignorance or completely forget important events, incidents that happened in history that should never have been allowed to recede from our memories? Who can admit to knowing the details of the Black War of the late 1820s that scourged the southeast of Tasmania? I

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History

French Connection by Alexis Bergantz

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke When I first saw the cover of this book, I had no idea as to the narrative that would be revealed. The cover depicts the painting Down on his Luck by Australian artist Fredrick McCubbin which has superimposed on it, Jean-Honore Fragonard’s The Swing, one of the best-known pieces of what

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General Fiction/Poetry

GriffithReview73: Hey, Utopia! by Ashley Hay [editor]

Review by Richard Tutin This edition of Griffith Review explores the concept of utopia. Since Sir Thomas More published his work on the ideal nature of a utopian society in 1516, many writers have added their thoughts on this topic raising questions about its nature and asking if a perfect society can exist. For More,

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Crime/Mystery

Damned Murder? by Burt Surmon

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve The vineyards and townships of South Australia’s Clare Valley are the delightful backdrop to this light-hearted romp with a dash of a possible murder mystery. It offers vicarious pleasures of gourmet meals, tantalising wine tastings, even pottery making and glass blowing. The characters are all ageing, nudging their sixties, but are

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Memoir/Biography

The Brumby Wars by Anthony Sharwood

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Down around the Snowy ‘where the pine-clad ridges raise/ their torn and rugged battlements on high’ there’s a barney going on, and it’s a beauty. No confinement to angry words but rather ‘a fisticuffs at dawn’ sort of brawling. And the reason for all this ill-will remains blithely ignorant of all

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Children

Cranky Chicken by Katherine Battersby

Reviewed by Rod McLary If you ever have a young friend or relative who is feeling cranky with the world or – perhaps closer to home – a sibling, this may well be an excellent book to bring out and, in a comfortable place, read it aloud to them. The subtitle to this charming and

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Health/Wellbeing

Secrets of Women’s Healthy Ageing by Cassandra Szoeke

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke In Secrets of Women’s Healthy Ageing, Professor Cassandra Szoeke shares the wisdom revealed by a comprehensive study into women’s health as they age. Originally it was planned as a ‘longitudinal prospective’ investigation into health over the menopausal transition encompassing a period of five years. The study has extended over three decades and

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