Reviews

General Fiction

The Night Always Comes by Willy Vlautin

Reviewed by E. B. Heath This novel is deceptively simple. It begins gradually, without drama or intrigue. You think about making a cup of coffee, unaware that momentum is piling up. Before you know it, you’re sitting on a roller coaster of compassion, caring, really caring, about Lynette. You follow her actions for two days

Read More »
Memoir/Biography

Gun to the Head by Keith Banks

Reviewed by Ian Lipke The title of this book would lead the reader to assume that, given the career of Keith Banks, the reference is to the dangerous work he assumed during his career, that he is referring literally to some gangster holding a gun to his head and threatening to shoot him. There is

Read More »
Psychology

The Devil You Know by Dr Gwen Adshead and Eileen Horne

Reviewed by E.B. Heath “Over the years, I’ve come to think of my patients as survivors of a disaster, where they are the disaster and my colleagues and I are the first responders.” The cover reeks of sensationalism – the title, embossed starkly over the face of a sad little boy, gives the impression of

Read More »
Non-Fiction

Mother of Invention by Katrine Marçal

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Armed with formidable research, which exposes repetitive examples throughout history where society’s attitude to gender roles has shaped or altered the economy, Katrine Marçal has provided fascinating evidence to support her book’s title. Karl Benz’s wife Bertha was the first to demonstrate the potential of her husband’s horseless-carriage. This was the

Read More »
Memoir/Biography

The Countess from Kirribilli by Joyce Morgan

Reviewed by Antonella Townsend Reading The Countess from Kirribilli is akin to falling into a rabbit hole situated within an elegantly landscaped garden, overlooking Sydney Harbour. The ‘fall’, through said rabbit hole, takes the form of a three-month voyage, after which readers and three-year-old Mary Annette Beauchamp step from La Hogue onto English soil in

Read More »
General Fiction

The Other Side of Beautiful by Kim Lock

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve The title alone captures attention. The other side of beautiful could be many things, and in her fourth novel, Kim Lock has suggested some with a deftly assured and sensitive touch. Mercy Blain, a young woman in her thirties, has imprisoned herself in her home for two years, suffering crippling anxiety

Read More »
General Fiction

The Paris Collaborator by A. W. Hammond

Reviewed by Ian Lipke It’s an unusual opening to say the least. Auguste Duchene, former schoolteacher and proud Frenchman, in Paris in 1944, searching for and finding a missing baby, a German baby, offspring of a senior Nazi. It turns out that Duchene has found a means of survival, for he finds both French and

Read More »
Crime/Mystery

The Disappearing Act by Catherine Steadman

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Catherine Steadman’s book has been touted as a psychological thriller of a very scary persuasion. When I began reading, I discovered that I was just plain bored. The story seemed to have no direction, the heroine appeared to me insipid, and a great lot of nothing was supposed to capture and

Read More »
History

Past Mistakes by David Mountain

Reviewed by Richard Tutin The line “History is written by the Victors” is often attributed to Winston Churchill though its origin is unknown. Even so, the reality of its meaning can often be highlighted when events are put under the spotlight of critical evaluation and interpretation. In recent times, the way history has been taught

Read More »
History

The Story of Australia by Don Watson

Reviewed by Gerard Healy Don Watson, of Paul Keating speechwriter fame, has updated his history book for the young (and the curious). By young, we are assuming around 11 to 14 years of age and, by curious, we mean anyone interested in Australian history. Watson published the original text in 1984 and there have been

Read More »
General Fiction

Those Hamilton Sisters by Averil Kenny

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Those Hamilton Sisters is the first novel produced by mother of four, Averil Kenny. Like most successful first writers, she has written about what she knows. This story is created from many of her own experiences of motherhood, love, family bonds and growing up in the lush-enchanted tropics of Australia giving

Read More »
Historical Fiction

A Woman of Intelligence by Karin Tanabe

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve If you can’t afford to live in a New York apartment bordering Central Park, wear couturier gowns, dine in five-star restaurants, but long to savour such a life style, this book is for you. It indulges the dreams of those who regard a life of luxury to be their ideal, a

Read More »
Non-Fiction

Creating God by Robin Derricourt

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Creating God is an attempt to recreate the worlds in which the founders of several major religions lived and laboured. The result is a book rich in detail, consummate in its scholarship, and revelatory in exposing for modern eyes the conditions that allowed religious movements to flourish. Derricourt’s approach is to

Read More »
Memoir/Biography

Ethel Rosenberg – A Cold War Tragedy by Anne Sebba

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Ethel Rosenberg’s tragic life highlights a dark phase in post-war America. Its political and legal world was dominated by bigotry and fear, stoked by McCarthyism and the looming power of Hoover, head of the FBI. The devastation of the atom bomb, the growing threat of Russia, then Mao’s communism gripping China,

Read More »
History

Farmers or Hunter-Gatherers? by Peter Sutton and Keryn Walshe

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Farmers or Hunter-Gatherers is a sophisticated, academic attack on, if not a complete dismantling of, the arguments expressed by Bruce Pascoe in his Dark Emu publication of 2014. Pascoe argued that classical aboriginal society was more sophisticated than present society believed because the evidence showed that they were farming at a

Read More »
Scroll to Top