Reviews

History

Riots by Fiona Skyring

Reviewed by Norrie Sanders The cover and title give little away – police armed with bayonets facing men in civilian clothes with sticks and swords, all under an Australian Flag. But Riots is a very specific story about civil unrest that centred on soldiers freshly returned from supporting the British empire in World War 1.

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Thriller

Cape Fever by Nadia Davids

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Cape Fever is the Australian debut novel for internationally celebrated playwright and novelist, Nadia Davids. Born in South Africa she now lives in California. The story is set in the 1920s. One assumes the location is South Africa as information throughout the book about specific districts fits the makeup of this

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Art/Architecture

Hans Heysen Was Here by Barbara Cameron-Smith

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Barbara Cameron-Smith has a work history spanning over 40 years, researching and delivering natural and cultural heritage interpretation projects for the public and private sectors. In this publication she set out to discover artist Hans Heysen’s relationship with the landform he often painted which he called “Old Pat”. In the process

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Art/Architecture

Versailles Mirrored by Robert Wellington

Reviewed by Ian Lipke It would be a rare tourist who, on visiting France, chooses to decide not to include a visit to the Palace of Versailles, the construction that is ‘the defining symbol of hedonistic opulence in 17th century France.’ The palace is widely held as symbolic of the divine right of kings, that

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General Fiction

The Heir Apparent by Rebecca Armitage

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Lexi Villiers was enjoying her medical residency in Hobart and hanging out with close friends when she was whisked away by private helicopter and flown back to England. Lexi was Princess Alexandrina, the spare to the British throne.  She was filled with dread as, even as she “flew closer to London,

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Children

Super Great Kids’ Stories by Kim Normanton

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve This collection of stories, some with the familiar theme of the wicked stepmother and others with a fresh idea of a spider that makes hot pepper soup and resorts to trickery, is quite different from the Grimm and Hans Anderson tales which were frequently cruel and harrowing. Many of these are

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Travel

On the Wrong Side of the Road by Roger Zubrinich

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Travel appeals to millions as tourism invades even far reaches of the planet. Backpackers follow the cheaper path to adventure; the older battalions tend to choose the organised tour or the more relaxed cruise. The thought of an enterprising couple hiring a car in Paris and regularly setting off to explore

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General Fiction

The Endless Sky by Di Morrissey

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Most people when setting out on a writing career are told to write about what they know and this is certainly true for Di Morrissey AM especially in her latest book, The Endless Sky. Having had her own morning TV show and appeared in several episodes of the CBS TV series

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Poetry

Poems & Prayers by Matthew McConaughey

Reviewed by Ian Hamilton As a public figure Matthew McConaughey will be known to many readers. In this anthology the reader is taken into his interior world, apparently a long way from his persona as film star. The poems have a broad range of topic and structure, although several themes and modes recur. One area

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Non-Fiction

Dirty Politics by Macquarie Dictionary

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Should one feel jaded or disillusioned about the state of Australian politics, the writer – rather the collector – of Dirty Politics claims to have the answer. As with everything political, readers really should accompany the contents with a pinch of NaCl. While being assured by the Macquarie National Dictionary team

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Crime/Mystery

My Grandfather – The Master Detective by Masateru Konishi

Reviewed by Ian Lipke I wonder how frequently a member of a young generation is so moved by their grandfather’s apparent abilities as to cast him into something extraordinary. At least it can be invigorating to find one example. The author, Masateru Konishi, is sufficiently experienced to pen a story that is believable, a story

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Non-Fiction

Great Sporting Sites: Australia edited by Glen Humphries

Reviewed by Richard Tutin Sport is an integral part of Australian life. Everywhere you look some form of sport at whatever level you enjoy the most is being carried out on just about any day of the week. Sports require appropriate venues so that games can be conducted and both participants and audiences can be

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Historical Fiction

Pilbara by Judy Nunn

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke For many older readers the name, Judy Nunn, will bring back memories of TV shows such as The Box, Sons and Daughters and Home and Away. Since those days Judy Nunn has become a prolific writer of historically based novels which foreground strong women. She was awarded the Order of Australia

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Historical Fiction

Itinerant Soul by Don Alcock

Reviewed by Rod McLary How do you effectively write a history of your family when the written records of the time in which they lived [the nineteenth century] are so limited?  The answer is a simple one – you take the official records [births, deaths and marriages and so on] and construct a narrative around

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Poetry

The Dingo’s Noctuary by Judith Nangala Crispin

Reviewed by Ian Lipke  ‘The Dingo’s Noctuary’ is an extended illustrated verse novel set in the remote Tanami Desert, addressing themes of cultural alienation, the post-colonial landscape, death and transcendence. While it is an account of personal relationships, its broader ontologies draw from a cultural horizon that predates her relationship with the aboriginal people. ‘The

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