Reviews

Young Adult

The Rider on the Bridge by Scott Pearce

Reviewed by Rod McLary This engaging novel, The Rider on the Bridge, opens with the narrator re-telling a story told to him of a young boy riding his bike – for a fee – blindfolded across a bridge.  The narrator informs the reader that ‘the absence of truth does not diminish the story’ [8]; the

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Children

The World’s Worst Pets by David Walliams

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve David Walliams never fails to strike an irresistible and funny chord with young children. His latest series of books, including The World’s Worst Parents, The World’s Worst Teachers and The World’s Worst Children, have sold millions of copies and establishes him as one of the most successful children’s writers of all

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science

Of Marsupials and Men by Alistair Paton

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Imagine a nineteenth-century artist whose pet wombat slept on his dinner table or a twentieth-century scientist tasked with a top-secret mission to deliver a platypus to Winston Churchill at the height of World War II. Unusual, fascinating, inspiring and mostly unknown anecdotes from the story of the Australian bush fill much

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General Fiction

Galatea by Madeline Miller

Reviewed by Rod McLary Madeline Miller’s Galatea is a re-telling of the Greek myth in which the king Pygmalion has fallen in love with a statue he made with his own hands.  In answer to his prayers, the goddess Aphrodite brought the statue Galatea to life and she and Pygmalion married.  Subsequently, they have a

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Crime/Mystery

A Spoonful of Murder by J. M. Hall

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Milk, two sugars and a dead body… A Spoonful of Murder is the first novel by primary school deputy head, J. M. Hall. He had previously written plays for theatre and radio across the UK. His full-time job, no doubt, gave him many models on whom to base his three retired

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General Fiction

Random Acts of Unkindness by Anna Mandoki

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Melbourne in 2030 has changed into a city which many had predicted earlier in the century. Climate extremes, war, poverty and loneliness bring intense heat, frequent torrential rain, abandoned buildings; and, to the north, Indonesia in the grip of civil war. No longer does it qualify as “the world’s most liveable

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History

Three Sheets to the Wind by Adam Courtenay

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Delving into Adam Courtenay’s latest book, which explores aspects of the life in the fledgling colony at Sydney Cove, poses a fascinating question. How did a society that at almost all levels was “three sheets to the wind” form the foundation to the thriving nation of today, which seriously takes part

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Non-Fiction

For the Good of the World by A. C. Grayling

Reviewed by E.B. Heath The linguistic agility of some writers has the effect of organising the mind – much like a librarian applying the Dewey Decimal system to a pile of dusty books – Professor Grayling is one such writer. He makes light work for the reader despite the dense subject matter concerning significant threats

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General Fiction

Things We Bury by Matthew Ryan Davies

Reviewed by Rod McLary It is a common trope in stories about families that the matriarch or patriarch is on his/her death bed and the family gathers around and all the unresolved tensions and undisclosed secrets are exposed for good or bad.  Think of Patrick White’s The Eye of the Storm and what flows from

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Crime/Mystery

The 6:20 Man by David Baldacci

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Travis Devine is identified in David Baldacci’s latest thriller as The 6:20 Man for the simple reason that each morning he catches the 6:20 train to work. The service is a popular one, not least for men who are treated each morning to the sight of a beautiful young woman in

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Historical Fiction

Painting the Light by Ned Manning

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Ned Manning is a writer, actor and teacher. He is well known for his teaching memoir, Playground Duty which has become required reading for anyone interested in the real world of teaching. He has written over twenty plays many of which have been performed in schools around Australia. Painting the Light

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History

Up from the Depths by Aaron Sachs

Reviewed by Ian Lipke This is a most unusual book. It investigates the lives of two influential American writers, Herman Melville and Lewis Mumford, within a specific context. In effect, it purports to become a double portrait of two of America’s most influential writers that reveals the surprising connections between them—and their uncanny relevance to

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General Fiction

The Little Wartime Library by Kate Thompson

Reviewed by Richard Tutin Books about war tend to focus on battles and those who were in the thick of fighting them. Kate Thompson’s novel The Little Wartime Library is therefore refreshing because it focuses on those who are left at home trying to live their lives as best they can. In this case, it

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Memoir/Biography

The Fourth Man by Robert Baer

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Comparisons drawn between John le Carre’s Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and The Fourth Man are to be expected but have little substance. The books belong to different genres and were written for two very different audiences. However, this rarely stops exciting comparisons being made, because here in real life is the

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