September 2022

Crime/Mystery

The Invisible by Peter Papathanasiou

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Burnt-out from policework, Detective Sergeant George Manolis flies from Australia to Greece for a holiday. Recently divorced and mourning the death of his father, who emigrated from the turbulent Prespes region which straddles the borders of Greece, Albania and North Macedonia, Manolis hopes to reconnect with his roots and heritage. However,

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Memoir/Biography

Agatha Christie by Lucy Worsley

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Lucy Worsley has recently produced a biography of the writer, Agatha Christie, in which she shows unequivocally that the world in which her subject was born in 1890 had rules that defined what women could and could not do. Christie’s world, for example, frowned severely on women who had the temerity

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General Fiction

The Night Tide by Di Morrissey

Reviewed by Gail McDonald Di Morrissey is an Australian author who has written many novels centred around various locations in Australia. This book The Night Tide is no different in that it is set in the Pittwater area of Sydney’s northern beaches. Di Morrissey trained as a journalist working in newspapers, magazines, television, film, theatre

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Queensland Literary Awards 2022

The winners of the 2022 Queensland Literary Awards have been announced. The winners in each category are: Queensland Premier’s Award for a Work of State Significance ($25,000) Wounded Country (Quentin Beresford, NewSouth)  Fiction Book Award ($15,000) The Other Half of You (Michael Mohammed Ahmad, Hachette)  Nonfiction Book Award ($15,000) Lies, Damned Lies (Claire G Coleman, Ultimo). The winners,

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General Fiction

The Tap Cats of the Sunshine Coast by Christine Sykes

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve The Tap Cats of the Sunshine Coast initially appears to be a heartwarming tale of tap-dancing friends performing and enjoying life in the idyllic coast north of Brisbane.  What starts as a picture of three friends who have known each other since schooldays, develops into one of conflict, challenge, self-discovery, and

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Fantasy/Science Fiction

Babel by R. F. Kuang

Reviewed by Ian Lipke If you prefer an easy read, I suggest you look elsewhere than R.F. Kuang’s Babel or the Necessity of Violence: an Arcane History of the Oxford Translators’ Revolution. This multi-barreled title is more than sufficient to persuade me to return the book to the shelves. The subtitle offers only confusion, yet

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Booker Prize 2022 – Shortlist

The shortlist for the 2022 Booker Prize has been announced. The six books shortlisted for the £50,000 (A$85,510) prize are: Glory (NoViolet Bulawayo, Viking) The Trees (Percival Everett, Influx) Treacle Walker (Alan Garner, Fourth Estate) The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida (Shehan Karunatilaka, Sort of Books) Small Things Like These (Claire Keegan, Faber) Oh William! (Elizabeth Strout, Viking). The shortlisted titles

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Non-Fiction

Le Fric: Family, Power and Money by Alex Duff

Reviewed by Richard Tutin I don’t think that too many people watching the Tour de France on their electronic devices or are lucky enough to stand roadside on the route of one of the stages give much thought, if any, to the behind-the-scenes makeup of the race itself. They see the riders giving their all

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General Fiction

Here Be Leviathans by Chris Flynn

Reviewed by Rod McLary Someone once said that good book titles should be ‘short, evocative and unique’.  On all three counts, the title of Chris Flynn’s new book succeeds admirably.  The word ‘leviathans’ itself conjures up monsters of the deep or something large and formidable – but it can also mean something unknown or beyond

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General Fiction

The Opal Miner’s Daughter by Fiona McArthur

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke When I first read the title of this book, I envisaged a young girl growing up in the opal fields with her middle-aged father. I couldn’t have been more wrong. The opal miner in Fiona McArthur’s story is a mature woman who, unlike her husband, couldn’t settle for life in retirement

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Young Adult

Something about Alaska by J. A. Cooper

Reviewed by Rod McLary There is something about Young Adult novels which immediately appeals to the discerning reader.  Perhaps the appeal lies in the authenticity of the adolescent voice which hasn’t yet learned to dissemble and obfuscate.  Perhaps it is the lived experience of navigating the no man’s land between childhood and adulthood which we

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