Reviews

Crime/Mystery

High Rise by Gabriel Bergmoser

Reviewed by Rod McLary In his Acknowledgments [p308] the author thanks everyone ‘who helped create the blend of pain and fractured humanity that I could draw on to make this novel more than just a lengthy fight scene’.  And it is exactly this which turns what is essentially an adrenaline rush for those readers who

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Crime/Mystery

Stillwater by Tanya Scott

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Readers will have no difficulty in getting caught up in this novel by Tanya Scott. That it is her first novel is remarkable. The author impresses not only because of her first-novel status but for a host of other reasons. She makes the very serious stakes of Jack’s dilemmas palpable. She

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Crime/Mystery

Nemesis by Patricia Wolf

Reviewed by Rod McLary Nemesis is the fourth book in a series featuring DS Lucas Walker from the Australian Federal Police.  Although all the books in the series are stand-alone, this one has links back to the first one Outback and the events which took place ten years previously.  DS Walker was then on compassionate

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General Fiction

Love Overdue by Ali Berg and Michelle Kalus

Reviewed by Antonella Townsend This is not the time to be reading dystopian novels, too close to reality.  Best to choose a romantic romp, a roller coaster full of guilt, grief, loads of self-doubt, dream relationships found, lost, and found again. And Love Overdue, written by Ali Berg and Michelle Kalus, fits the profile perfectly.

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History

The Shortest History of Turkey by Benjamin C. Fortna

Reviewed by Norrie Sanders The area occupied by Turkey (Türkiye since 2022) has a very long human history. Palaeolithic cave dwellers were succeeded by settlements that are some of the oldest in the world – around 12,000 years.   As part of the ancient fertile crescent, the area gave rise to a succession of great civilisations

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Children

Frog by Isabel Thomas and Daniel Egnéus

Reviewed by Antonella Townsend Isabel Thomas, with artist Daniel Egnéus, take young children on a journey back to the beginning of time and it all begins with a frog.  Frog: A Story of Life on Earth is a lovely 250 x 250 mm hard cover colourful book for young audiences, and I think it makes

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Non-Fiction

The Big Fix by Albert Palazzo

Reviewed by Norrie Sanders Most Australians agree that national security is high priority. And most agree that politicians aren’t trustworthy. So why do we entrust our most expensive budget item to a governments who won’t tell us how or why they are spending it? Even the AUKUS deal, which seems to be endlessly discussed, is

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Crime/Mystery

Broke Road by Matthew Spencer

Reviewed by Ian Hamilton I suspect that Broke Road will sell well. The primary reason for this view is that  whodunits are enduringly popular with a wide range of readers and Broke Road is a very well-crafted example of the genre. Matthew Spencer employs his journalistic skills to devise a clear and engaging plot. The

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General Fiction

Our Beautiful Boys by Sameer Pandya

Reviewed by Rod McLary There is sometimes a moment in our lives when unexpectedly the world shifts; when the wind changes, and then suddenly nothing is the same again. Our Beautiful Boys chronicles one such moment in the lives of sixteen-year-olds Vikram, Diego and MJ – all celebrating their team’s victory in a high school

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Crime/Mystery

the wrong daughter by Dandy Smith

Reviewed by Ian Hamilton This novel has the feel of a current day tale, the style and vocabulary are twenty-first century in tone, as is the role of a psychiatric therapist (which proves to be crucial to the plot). It is only revealed at the end of the novel that the second narrative sections are,

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Crime/Mystery

The Palazzo by Kayte Nunn

Reviewed by Ian Lipke When a book is released bearing the name Kayte Nunn I anticipated an interesting read. I had absorbed several of this writer’s works and was prepared to be thoroughly entertained. What a disaster unfolds within the first fifty to sixty pages of this book. If a book, written for entertainment purposes,

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Memoir/Biography

Looking for Elizabeth by Helen Trinca

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Helen Trinca’s powerful novel binds the reader’s attention to the page with arms of steel. While novels of this sort often hold attention readily enough, Trinca’s text never lets go. She holds until readers realize that s/he has no wish to see the book abandoned. Rather she has become fully involved

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General Fiction

The Path Through the Coojong Trees by Léonie Kelsall

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke On reading this latest novel by Léonie Kelsall, I was once again drawn back to the small country town called Settlers Bridge located in South Australia where I found characters I have met before. For those readers who are unfamiliar with this author’s work, all the information needed for this particular

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General Fiction

Ruins by Amy Taylor

Reviewed by Ian Lipke I’m sure that a reviewer somewhere has applied the phrase “a Greek tragedy” to this beautifully written book. It is not so much the story which sweeps us away as it is the writing itself. The feeling of great competence as the writer manipulates her words and images to best tell

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Children

The Emperor’s Egg by Rae Tan

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke As the name of the book and author might suggest the illustrations in this hard covered children’s picture book have an Asian focus. The story it contains is a reimagining of an ancient Chinese folk tale about integrity, courage and patience. To choose his heir the ageing emperor, who has no

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