Reviews

General Fiction

The Blue Gum Camp by Léonie Kelsall

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke I love Léonie Kelsall’s writing style. She provides a very human narrative while at the same time highlights the beauty of the flora and fauna of her beloved South Australia. Through her tales the reader becomes privy to historical and geological facts that blend naturally into the flow of the story.

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General Fiction

The Porcelain Maker by Sarah Freethy

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Sarah Freethy worked as a television producer, script consultant and screenwriter before turning her hand to fiction with her first novel, The Porcelain Maker. Although this work is a story of fiction, many of the things written about did really happen and have been well documented. The Allach Porcelain and the

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Children

Rainbow Saurus by Steve Antony

Reviewed by Antonella Townsend When writing for very small children colour is a vital component, worldly logic need not be applied to the narrative. Those enviable little people are free spirits, living in a universe of possibility, no suspension of disbelief needed. Rainbow Saurus by Steve Antony is full of colour and movement as he

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Non-Fiction

The Power Code by Katty Kay and Claire Shipman

Reviewed by E. B. Heath The Power Code by Katty Kay and Claire Shipman provides readers with a well-researched survey regarding social power.  Shipman and Kay define social power as being similar to scientific power – that of energy transferred with effect of making things move.  Social power is generally understood as the power to

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Crime/Mystery

The Dinner Party by Rebecca Heath

Reviewed by Rod McLary Parents at a dinner party, their children left at home alone: what could go wrong?  Well, almost everything. One evening in December 1979, four couples in a brand-new suburb gather together for their weekly dinner party.  Those who have children are comfortable with leaving them at home as the neighbourhood is

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Crime/Mystery

The Leftover Woman by Jean Kwok

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Jean Kwok is an award-winning, New York Times and international bestselling Chinese American author. She immigrated from Hong Kong to Brooklyn when she was very young and worked in a Chinatown clothing factory for much of her childhood while living in very impoverished conditions. Because of this, she is well positioned

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Memoir/Biography

A Memoir of My Former Self by Hilary Mantel

Reviewed by E. B. Heath The glacier knocks in the cupboard, The desert sighs in the bed, And the crack in the teacup opens A lane to the land of the dead.  W.H.Auden Famous for her historical novels, one can only assume that Hilary Mantel has a cupboard full of cracked teacups.  But, as this

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Crime/Mystery

The Professor by Lauren Nossett

Reviewed by Rod McLary Readers familiar with the author’s first novel – The Resemblance ­– will immediately recognise Marlitt Kaplan who was the protagonist in that novel.  Marlitt appears in the author’s latest book although she is no longer a police officer with the Athens PD.  At the end of the first book, Marlitt was

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Non-Fiction

The Fires Next Time by Peter Christoff [ed]

Reviewed by Norrie Sanders The fires of Australia’s black summer of 2019/20 were amongst the largest ever recorded in human history. Burning 24 million hectares, they eclipsed any of the infamous Australian bushfires of the last 100 years (Ash Wednesday, Black Saturday, for example). The fact that they were named for a whole season rather

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General Fiction

For Once in My Life by Karly Lane

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Romance stories in the 2020s depict society as it is in the present, and so boy-meets-girl-and-they-live-happily-ever-after tales are no longer the dominant storylines. With more first marriages failing and the advent of online dating platforms, modern society’s love stories are no longer just the domain of the young. In Karly Lane’s

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General Fiction

Leave the World Behind by Rumaan Alam

Reviewed by Rod McLary Apocalyptic stories – a sub-genre of science fiction – have been written since 1500 BCE when the Ancient Mesopotamians collected tales such as the Sumerian creation myth and the Epic of Gilgamesh.  Apocalyptic novels gained considerable popularity after World War II during the Cold War era when the threat of global

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Crime/Mystery

Paradise by Patricia Wolf

Reviewed by Rod McLary There are many crime novel series – some now classics of the genre – in which there is a continuing protagonist and the reader can enjoy reading about his or her exploits from one book to the next.  The protagonist may be a detective like Commander Adam Dalgleish, a forensic pathologist

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Crime/Mystery

Kill Your Husbands by Jack Heath

Reviewed by Rod McLary Jack Heath is the author of the Hangman series of crime thrillers featuring Timothy Blake – a protagonist with a very unusual secret which is progressively disclosed through the four books.  Each of these books is a tense and exciting thriller.  Now the author has begun a new series with each

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General Fiction

The Fiction Writer by Jillian Cantor

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Olivia, a writer longing to produce a novel that will be more successful than her book Becky, is made a seductive offer to reconstruct the life of the dead grandmother of a famous billionaire Henry Asherwood the Third, known as Ash, famous as being ‘the sexiest man alive’.  He has a

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Non-Fiction

Why We Sing by Julia Hollander

Reviewed by Richard Tutin How many times have we heard people say that they “could not sing for peanuts”? When it comes to using the musical instrument called our voice the outcomes are mixed. Some people can hold a note beautifully while others can’t seem to hit any note let alone the right one. Yet,

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