Reviews

The Sex of the Angels, the Saints in their Heaven by Raoul Schrott

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Raoul Schrott’s book, translated from the German, is a deeply philosophical story of the yearning of one for another. I refrained from saying ‘person’ because there is no clue relating the narrator to any life form. The book would make a great conversation piece but given that no reviews can be

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Cardinal – The Rise and Fall of George Pell by Louise Milligan

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Every person interested in writing, every reader searching for a primer in analysis, every lawyer wanting to find a way through a morass of conflicting ideas, opinions and judgments would do well to read Cardinal several times, not because of the subject matter, but for the absolute pleasure of watching a

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The Yogic Kitchen by Jody Vassallo

Reviewed by E.B. Heath Yoga is the journey of the self through the self to the self. The Bhagavad Gita The Yogic Kitchen is a colourful, 25.5 x 21 cm, 255-page book holding a lot of information. I adopted the tactic of learning about the ancient Indian practice of Ayurvedic that informs The Yogic Kitchen,

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Painting in the Shadows by Katherine Kovacic

Reviewed by EB Heath The second novel in the Alex Clayton art mystery series is advertised as ‘A captivating story of murder, intrigue and a mysterious painting’. And it is. But what is not said about Painting in the Shadows is that it is funny. A most amusing book to enjoy after a week’s work.

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Stranger Country by Monica Tan

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Stranger Country documents a 30,000-kilometre, solo road trip around Australia in 2016. The author, Monica Tan, born in Australia to Chinese Malaysian parents, was working in Sydney as a reporter and cultural editor for the Guardian. Although well-educated and well-travelled she was faced with the dilemma of whether it was worse

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Stone Country by Nicole Alexander

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke This novel, set in the early twentieth century, turns a light on the big property owners in South Australia and the Northern Territory. These were the families with money who had come from countries overseas and strove to set up dynasties in Australia. But things don’t always work out as people

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Lillian Armfield by By Leigh Straw

Reviewed by Anna Bober Lillian Armfield: How Australia’s First Female Detective Took on Tilly Devine and the Razor Gangs and Changed the Face of the Force is the title of Leigh Straw’s latest foray into the Sydney’s criminal world of the 1920s and ‘30s. As an avid reader of crime, and as someone who is

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Hunter by Jack Heath

Reviewed by Rod McLary Hunter is Jack Heath’s second adult book. Prior to his first adult book – Hangman published in early 2018 – he was a successful author of children’s and young adults’ books. In reviewing Hangman in these pages in January 2018, I wrote [f]or a young writer who has just written his

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