Crime/Mystery

The Dry by Jane Harper

In October 2016, The Dry was first reviewed in these pages. Since then, the author Jane Harper has published two further books as equally acclaimed as this one was. QRC now offers a second review by a different reviewer. Reviewed by Gerard Healy This is a great debut crime/ mystery novel from Jane Harper. It

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General Fiction

The Long Road Home by Fiona McCallum

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke As scientists across the globe race against the clock to find a coronavirus vaccine, here’s hoping they also discover a cure for narcissism while they’re at it. This was the first paragraph in an article by Lucy Carne in the Sunday Mail, March 29th, 2020. Narcissism is also an issue highlighted

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General Fiction

The Glass Hotel by Emily St. John Mandel

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Emily St John Mandel’s latest novel, “The Glass Hotel”, is staggering in its scope with myriad characters and a cleverly devised plot. The backgrounds are seductive. It begins in a 5-star hotel set in a tiny remote settlement on the west coast of Canada. Then the New York scene, both shadowy

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Memoir/Biography

The Lost Boy by Ayik Chut Deng [with Craig Henderson]

Reviewed by Ian Lipke From Vintage Books, an arm of Penguin Random House Australia, comes the story of a Sudanese man Ayik Chut Deng, a former child soldier, who found his way to Australia and settled in Toowoomba, Queensland. Bearing resemblances to Songs of a War Boy by Deng Thiak Adut (Hachette Australia, 2016), that

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General Fiction

Amnesty by Aravind Adiga

Reviewed by Rod McLary Danny is a Tamil from Sri Lanka and now living in Sydney Australia as an ‘illegal’.  Initially, he came to Sydney on a student visa but, after failing to be granted refugee status, he abandoned his studies and became an ‘illegal’. Danny is the protagonist of this latest novel by the

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General Fiction

Red Dirt Country by Fleur McDonald

Reviewed by Ian Lipke When Fleur McDonald publishes a book, readers can be confident that it will be worth reading. With her third rural crime story on the shelves now, I have no doubt that she has become established as the standard in this form of fiction against which other writers are measured. Red Dirt

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General Fiction

The Numbers Game by Danielle Steel

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke The Numbers Game is the latest offering of the prolific writer, Danielle Steel who was born in 1947. She now has 179 books to her credit over a five-decade career and has been referred to as the bestselling author alive and the fourth bestselling fiction author of all time. For her

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General Fiction

The Deceptions by Suzanne Leal

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Suzanne Leal’s earlier book The Teacher’s Secret dealt with the search for dignity amid rumour, scandal and other forces generated by a specific individual. In The Deceptions Leal is back with a similar book on the theme of deceit, this time at both individual and collective levels. She has used her

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Crime/Mystery

Rules for Perfect Murders by Peter Swanson

Reviewed by Ian Lipke A very clever idea guides the momentum of Peter Swanson’s Rules for Perfect Murders. Create a series of unsolved murders that share an eerie resemblance to crimes that have appeared in well-regarded mystery novels. Toss in FBI agent Gwen Mulvey who shares a resemblance to Clarice M. Starling, a fictional character

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Crime/Mystery

Walk the Wire by David Baldacci

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Reviews of David Baldacci’s novels are usually positive, almost exclusively American, and often focus on the story details that Baldacci produces in large numbers. Reviews that analyse the success or otherwise of this author’s books in terms of defined criteria are rare. When I reviewed One Minute to Midnight in November

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General Fiction

Call of the Raven by Wilbur Smith with Corban Addison

Reviewed by Ian Lipke The Call of the Raven tells the story of a wicked neighbour cheating a man, named Mungo St John, out of his property, and in so doing, taking away his birthright, thereby rendering him moneyless. Now without the money he was expecting, and finding in addition that his childhood sweetheart has

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Non-Fiction

Budgerigar by Sarah Harris and Don Baker

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Loved by the Queen, Winston Churchill and millions of others, and key to Richard Branson’s first money making venture, the little Australian native bird’s story is a tapestry of historical and social detail as well as a celebration of the value of the budgerigar as a pet. Highly entertaining, unexpectedly full

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Non-Fiction

The Ghost and the Bounty Hunter by Adam Courtenay

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve Early colonial history is rich in stories that are as varied as they are fascinating. The people from the 18th/19th century, who arrived from Britain to begin their lives anew in this foreign land, provide countless stories of what it took to survive. Many left the poverty of Industrial England but

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General Fiction

A Thousand Moons by Sebastian Barry

Reviewed by Rod McLary A sequel to the critically-acclaimed Days Without End, this novel continues the story of Winona – a Lakota survivor of the Indian wars in Tennessee in the 1860s and 1870s.  Winona was adopted by two soldiers – Thomas McNulty and John Cole – as their mode of reparation for the killings

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Crime/Mystery

Stop at Nothing by Michael Ledwidge

Reviewed by Gerard Healy This thriller by Michael Ledwidge is a great holiday read, perhaps best done at the beach. It’s fast-paced, full of action and has the obligatory nasty baddies and a one-man-army hero to boot. Character development is not its forte, but most readers of this genre are probably not concerned about this.

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