Children

Wurrtoo by Tylissa Elisara

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke This is the first novel by Tylissa Elisara, a children’s social worker. Her aboriginal and Irish heritage has given her a long legacy of storytelling. This hard covered 20 x 13cm book has been described as an indigenous Blinky Bill meets Winnie the Pooh. In her adventure story Wurrtoo the author

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Indie Book Awards 2024

Indie Book Awards 2024 Australian independent booksellers have announced Killing for Country: A Family Story by David Marr (Black Inc) as the best book from the last year, and the winner of the Indie Book Awards 2024 Book of the Year. The individual category winners in Fiction, Debut Fiction, Non-Fiction, Illustrated Non-Fiction, Children’s and Young

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Historical Fiction

The Winter Palace by Paul Morgan

Reviewed by Rod McLary The Winter Palace is a fine example of historical fiction.  Based on meticulous research, the book explores the reality of what is commonly called the ‘Polish abduction’ from the beginning of World War Two and personalises the experiences of many thousands of Polish people by telling the story of two in

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History

The Soviet Century by Karl Schlögel

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Readers of Karl Schlögel’s books could be forgiven for measuring them on an avoirdupois scale. The latest The Soviet Century: Archaeology of a Lost World is over 900 pages in length and deliberately draws the readers’ attention to spatial concepts with its strange title. Its saving grace rests with the author’s

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History

Emperor of Rome by Mary Beard

Reviewed by Richard Tutin There is the thought that not much more can be said about the history of the Roman Empire. Mary Beard though breaks through this thought and has dug a little deeper to reveal more about the Emperors between Julius Caesar (assassinated 44 BCE) and Alexander Severus (assassinated 235 CE). Beard though

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History

The Menzies Watershed edited by Zachary Gorman

Reviewed by Ian Lipke The second volume of Zachary Gorman’s work is called The Menzies Watershed, a singularly appropriate title for the second of a research study which will eventually cover four volumes. Volume No. 1 focussed on Menzies’ career in 1884 – 1942 and covered the journey of a politician in his earliest years.

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ABIA Awards 2024

ABIA Awards 2024 The Australian Publishers Association (APA) has announced the shortlists for the 2024 Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIAs). Two of the shortlists are below. General fiction book of the year The Bookbinder of Jericho (Pip Williams, Affirm) Dark Mode (Ashley Kalagian-Blunt, Ultimo) Everyone on This Train Is a Suspect (Benjamin Stevenson, Michael Joseph) Green Dot (Madeleine Gray,

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2023 Aurealis Awards

The shortlists for the 2023 Aurealis Awards, presented for science fiction, fantasy and horror writing in Australia, have been announced. Included in the works selected for the shortlists for this year’s awards are: Best young adult novel Borderland (Graham Akhurst, UWA Publishing) Best horror novel Borderland (Graham Akhurst, UWA Publishing) Best science fiction novel Minds of Sand

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History

Heroes, Rebels and Radicals of Convict Australia by Jim Haynes

Reviewed by Richard Tutin History can be interesting when the right book comes along. All too often we are offered books that contain good facts but whose prose can be very dry and droll. We feel the need for a good story or two to liven things up. This is where Jim Haynes’ latest book

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General Fiction

The Rewilding by Donna M Cameron

Reviewed by Rod McLary The Rewilding is an intriguing and engaging novel – part romance, part thriller and part polemic – with two attractive protagonists who at least initially are at loggerheads with each other. Jagger [named by his mother after the lead singer of the Rolling Stones] Eckerman and Nia [meaning ‘resolve’ or ‘brilliance’

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Young Adult

Gus and the Missing Boy by Troy Hunter

Reviewed by Rod McLary Gus and the Missing Boy successfully blends the features of a detective story with the tropes of a YA novel.  Through the course of this novel, the author canvasses the existential issues facing thirteen-year-old Gus as he struggles with caring for his seriously injured mother, the vicissitudes of being gay and

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Stella Prize 2024

The longlist for the $60,000 Stella Prize for women and non-binary writers has been announced. The Stella Prize is awarded annually to one outstanding book by an Australian woman or non-binary writer, which is deemed to be ‘original, excellent, and engaging’. Six shortlisted titles will be announced on 4 April and the winner will be

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Crime/Mystery

The Accident by Fiona Lowe

Reviewed by Rod McLary The Accident begins with a car crash – and the effects of which reverberate through the subsequent events in the novel.  Jamie McMaster – fiancé to Hannah Simmons – is killed while driving on an unsurfaced country road in a red Porsche.  When the initial shock of his death fades a

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Historical Fiction

Testament by Wilbur Smith

Reviewed by Richard Tutin I need to state from the outset that I am a long-time fan of Wilbur Smith’s Ancient Egyptian Adventures series. It probably stems from my great interest in things historical especially the empires of Egypt and Rome. The key character in the series is Taita who though a slave has managed

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