General Fiction

A Universe of Sufficient Size by Miriam Sved

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve The impressive title, A Universe of Sufficient Size, promises themes that are far from trivial.  The reader is not disappointed with this brilliant novel.  It gives a fine portrait of genius in the character Pali Kalmar who is based on the mathematician Paul Erdos – a Hungarian. Pali is unprepossessing in

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Children

Oi Puppies! by Kes Gray and Jim Field

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Many parents and teachers who value literacy and wish to make the acquisition of reading skills an exciting and effective activity, would find Oi Puppies! to be a terrific aid. Experts in the field agree that the earlier books and stories are introduced to a child, the easier it is for

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General Fiction

Lanny by Max Porter

Reviewed by Rod McLary Lanny is a book of the imagination and the reader who most enjoys it will have an imagination to match.  Lanny – the eponymous hero – is a young boy living with his parents in a village outside London.  His mother, Jolie, is an emerging crime writer and his father, Robert,

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Crime/Mystery

Fair Warning by Michael Connelly

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Michael Connelly has a name among writers for producing crime fiction in a style that is balanced, thorough, and exciting. Reviewers who are prone to analysing his stories soon discover that a Connelly story could realistically happen in the way that he says has happened. Being factually accurate and written in

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Non-Fiction

The Wisdom of Tea by Noriko Morishita

Reviewed by Gerard Healy This is a challenging read for a gaijin. The traditional conventions of the Japanese Tea Ceremony, as explained by Noriko Morishita, are a world away from most Westerners. Nevertheless, it is an intriguing world of ritual and ancient practices from which Miss Morishita has taken some valuable life lessons. She has

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Non-Fiction

How to Think like Shakespeare by Scott Newstok

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Scott Newstok’s How to Think like Shakespeare: Lessons from a Renaissance Education really is a feel good book. A thick lather of the author’s enthusiasm, a comprehensive coverage of his subject matter, and the common sense inherent in his value judgments, work together to whip up a likeminded enthusiasm in his

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General Fiction

The Year of the Farmer by Rosalie Ham

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke When I first read the title of this book, I imagined the storyline would be something that highlighted the dedication of this group of people who provide us with the sustenance to survive. I was wrong in my assumption. This story does have a farmer at its centre. Mitch Bishop is

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Fantasy/Science Fiction

Providence by Max Barry

Reviewed by Antonella Townsend Six-legged bear-sized aliens living and procreating like bees in enormous hives that float in deep space; a state-of-the-art weaponized space ship; a volatile crew of four; and, artificial intelligence (AI) so evolved that humans are superfluous. Such are the elements of Max Barry’s latest speculative novel – Providence. This is a

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Crime/Mystery

The Satapur Moonstone by Sujata Massey

Reviewed by Rod McLary Perveen Mistry is a lawyer – in fact, she is the first and so far the only female lawyer in Bombay – and in The Satapur Moonstone she is called on to resolve a dispute over the education of a young crown prince.  The prince’s father and older brother have died

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General Fiction

The Switch by Beth O’Leary

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve As a charming distraction from the Covid19 world, The Switch has all the winning ingredients, especially for the female reader. There is a clever, beautiful thirty-something heroine; a feisty adventurous seventy-year-old, her grandmother; a handsome, near perfect hero and a host of diverse minor characters. There is even a lively Labrador

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General Fiction

The Lost Jewels by Kirsty Manning

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke The Lost Jewels by Kirsty Manning is a work of fiction woven around the mysterious Cheapside Hoard dug up in 1912.  This was a cache of jewels from the late 16th and early 17th centuries unearthed by workmen using pickaxes when excavating a cellar in London. It is said to have

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General Fiction

Seven Lies by Elizabeth Kay

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke With the words Seven Lies emblazoned across a fan folded red backdrop, one gets the impression that this book will not be a relaxing ‘feel good’ read. This feeling is further increased when learning that it has gained much attention in the literary world and garnered a flurry of 18 international

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Crime/Mystery

The Shifting Landscape by Katherine Kovacic

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke The latest fictional account of her hero private detective, Alex Clayton, appears in Katherine Kovacic’s The Shifting Landscape. The story of a bickering family, located on a sheep station in western Victoria, is interesting enough. It would not carry the Kovacic stamp if it were not heavily laden with reference after

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