General Fiction

Sweeney and the Bicycles by Philip Salom

Reviewed by E. B. Heath The world lives in small rooms. Salom p.365 More than once during the first seventy odd pages I wondered if I cared enough to continue. But then … characters gained traction, subject matter became both real and interesting, the narrative and dialogue authentic, empathy was building and I started to

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Literature

What Writers Read edited by Pandora Sykes

Reviewed by Clare Brook Anyone who loves reading, or writing, will really appreciate this little book of essays from a selection of authors discussing their most memorable book. It provides a double pleasure: readers get an inner glimpse into the minds and lives of successful authors, why they loved a book so much, how it

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Historical Fiction

A Man of Honour by Simon Smith

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Simon Smith’s interest lies in human beings and what causes them to carry out actions that, at first sight, seem bizarre. Why would a well-setup Irishman determine to attack the British Royal family at a time when his victims were  perceived to be worthy and respectable citizens? One might well ask

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Fantasy/Science Fiction

Grey Nomad by Alison Ferguson

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Alison Ferguson must have had a lot of fun writing Grey Nomad. Obviously, no reader is supposed to take seriously the story of a seventy-year-old woman mixing on equal terms with an intergalactic crew who have problems of their own. The story is meant to ‘take the mickey’ out of us

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Historical Fiction

The Keepsake by Julie Brooks

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke According to the author of this book, the writer and reader go on a journey together where the writer plants the clues, and the reader finds them. Maybe they’ll guess the answer then a later clue will leave them doubting that guess, often several times over. It’s the twists that matter.

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Non-Fiction

Wildlife in the Balance by Simon Mustoe

Reviewed by E. B. Heath Animals aren’t commodities; they are the sole mechanism that delivers human life support.  Conservation can’t succeed until we’ve had this conversation, until everyone learns this. In The Foreword to Wildlife in the Balance, Ian Redmond OBE, Ambassador to the UN Convention on Conservation, writes:  Wildlife in the Balance is perhaps

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Crime/Mystery

Encore in Death by J. D. Robb

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Fitzhugh is dead, poisoned. The Hollywood socialite who, with his wife Eliza Lane, has been hosting a party in Uptown Hollywood. They were true A-listers, the most glamorous of society’s darlings. The crowd had gathered to hear Eliza sing, Brant had proposed a toast to his wife, and dropped in his

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Crime/Mystery

Taken by Dinuka McKenzie

Reviewed by Rod McLary The title and cover of this second book by Dinuka McKenzie provides a strong clue to its story – the book’s title is superimposed on an image of a cot empty apart from an abandoned toy bear.  What else can be meant but a stolen baby.  However, this is not just

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Travel

Himālaya by John Keay

Reviewd by Norrie Sanders When a titanic chunk of land the size of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh ploughs into the planet’s largest continent, something has to give.  The result is a crash site that rises 8km above the earth’s surface. The word Himālaya conjures images of improbably high peaks, huge glaciated valleys and deep river

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Historical Fiction

Dawnlands by Philippa Gregory

Reviewed by Ian Lipke The year 1685 is not a happy time in England. Disputes within families vie with enmities likely to lead to civil war. Sir James Avery tolerates the almost sisterly relationship that exists between his wife and the queen. However, he trusts neither of them. There is palace intrigue, political upheaval, and

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History

Papyrus by Irene Vallejo

Reviewed by Richard Tutin The lure of owning and reading books is still alive and well despite the growth of eBooks and their accompanying readers and apps. The desire to hold and physically look through a volume, no matter the size, is as strong as it has ever been if the number of book shops,

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Crime/Mystery

The House in the Pines by Ana Reyes

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke This book is the first to be published by Ana Reyes and has developed from the thesis for her M.F.A. program at Louisiana State University. The book became Reese Witherspoon’s Book Club January 2023 choice. An industry review says that this book is ‘powerfully eerie and atmospheric. A compelling mix of

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Children

Found in Sydney by Joanne O’Callaghan

Reviewed by Gail McDonald What a great counting book this is. There are many aspects of the book which are really fresh and educational for young children starting with the Acknowledgement of Country at the front of the book written in Dharug language with the English meaning below. This introduces young people to the fact

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Shortlists for Indie Book Awards 2023

Established in 2008, the Indie Book Awards celebrate the best Australian writing; and who better to nominate and judge the best-of-the-best than indie booksellers! What makes indie booksellers uniquely placed to judge and recommend the best Aussie books of the past year, is their incredible passion and knowledge, their contribution to the cultural diversity of

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Memoir/Biography

Kennan by Frank Costigliola

Reviewed by Ian Lipke To write a biography of any person is a major undertaking; to write a biography of such an important figure as George Kennan who led much of the thinking about the Cold War and played a major role in containing the influence of the Soviet Union and its allies after World

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