Reviews

Children

Pancakes for Plum by Rae Tan

Reviewed by Gail McDonald This is an interesting story about Plum who is a panda trying to find something that she is good at, just like her brothers. She tried tree climbing and, oh no, she fell out of the tree. She tried painting but ended up getting paint all over herself. And then one

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Crime/Mystery

All You Took From Me by Lisa Kenway

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Lisa Kenway’s debut thriller is a worthy addition to the genre. She is an anaesthetist so has studied the brain, consciousness and memory as part of her qualification.  Her depth of knowledge in this area gives a vivid authenticity to the behaviour of the chief character in her novel. Dr. Clare

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General Fiction

Elizabeth of East Hampton by Audrey Bellezza and Emily Harding

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke This novel by Audrey Bellezza and Emily Harding is set in the Hamptons in the United States.  This setting is important as it describes the changing face and expectations of people now flocking to this area especially for the holiday season. Though enjoying the benefits these new people bring, the locals

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Non-Fiction

The Shortest History of Music by Andrew Ford

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Archeologists have unearthed ancient bone flutes, their exact age impossible to determine. Drums made with wood and skin, too, would have been played for millennia but their materials could not endure as have the primitive bone flutes. This is evidence that music in its many forms has been a part of

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Non-Fiction

Leadership at 43000 Feet by Chris Smith

  Reviewed by Norrie Sanders Any new book on how to be a leader enters a crowded space. There are reputed to be more than 50,000 books on Amazon alone, with “Leadership” in the title. In recent years, self-publishing has added substantial numbers and diversity to the topic. Former airline pilot, Chris Smith has taken

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General Fiction

The Youngest Son by John Byrnes

Reviewed by Rod McLary The Youngest Son tells the story of the three Leach siblings – John, Maureen and Bob [the titular youngest son] – and the lives they make for themselves.  In a sprawling tale spanning fifteen years [1929 to 1944] and the Great Depression and a World War, the action takes place on

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General Fiction

The Homestead in the Eucalypts by Léonie Kelsall

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Readers of books by Australian author Léonie Kelsall will already be familiar with the fictional town of Settlers Bridge and the businesses Ploughs and Pies and Tractors and Tarts. What they may not know is that her latest book, The Homestead in the Eucalypts, was in fact the first book set

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Non-Fiction

Wetlands in a Dry Land by Emily O’Gorman

Reviewed by Norrie Sanders Books about wetlands are usually the province of photographers or aquatic scientists and richly illustrated with plants, animals and landscapes that display a natural beauty. But what environmental historian Emily O’Gorman has written in her latest book demonstrates that many wetlands have been profoundly changed by people, and as a society,

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Crime/Mystery

17 Years Later by J. P. Pomare

Reviewed by Rod McLary I have read and reviewed each of J. P. Pomare’s six previous novels beginning with his debut Call Me Evie in 2018; and now his seventh novel has been published.  A number of the author’s books has won awards including the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best First Novel for Call Me

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Crime/Mystery

The Hitchhiker by Gabriel Bergmoser

Reviewed by Rod McLary This book has an interesting history.  It began its life as an audiobook published in 2022 and was a #1 best seller; it is now published in print for the first time. The author – Gabriel Bergmoser – has established a reputation for tense and tight thrillers as he demonstrated successfully

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Crime/Mystery

Fire and Bones by Kathy Reichs

Reviewed by Rod McLary Kathy Reichs has now written twenty-three novels featuring forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan.  Aficionados of the Brennan novels would be very familiar with Temperance, her daughter Katy and her long-standing lover Andrew Ryan Lieutentant-détective, Section de Crimes contra la Personne, Súreté du Québec.  Retraité [or retired].  It is a pleasure to again

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Memoir/Biography

The Secret Life of Flying by Captain Jeremy Burfoot

Reviewed by Richard Tutin It has been said that the mystique of flying disappeared years ago yet there is still the thought, as we take our seats for a flight to somewhere, that vestiges of it still exist. Captain Jeremy Burfoot, a pilot of more than thirty-five years’ experience, lays bare some of that ongoing

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General Fiction

Back to Birdsville by Fiona McArthur

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke When reading this latest book by Fiona McArthur, I was reminded of segments from Macca’s Sunday programs and his book, Why I Live Where I Live: Australia All Over by Ian McNamara. Back to Birdsville certainly shows how this isolated location in outback Queensland, where the state abuts both the Northern

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General Fiction

Highway 13 by Fiona McFarlane

Reviewed by Rod McLary Serial killers are not common in Australia with the exception of two infamous examples who won’t be named here.  So when crimes of this nature occur, perhaps more attention is given to them than would be in [say] the United States.  The heinous crimes affect many people – the friends and

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General Fiction

The Radio Hour by Victoria Purman

Reviewed by Richard Tutin When Australian radio was in its “Golden Age” during the 1940s and 50s, one of the mainstays of programming were drama plays and serials. People gathered around the sets of the day to listen to their favourite shows. They were keen to find out more about the fortunes of their favourite

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