Crime/Mystery

Canticle Creek by Adrian Hyland

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Jesse Redpath is a policewoman in a small Northern Territory town that services a vast, geographical district. She knows her people, their strengths and weaknesses. When she hears that a former member of her town Adam Lawson has murdered Daisy Baker and then killed himself in a car crash on a

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Health/Medicine

Plagues Upon the Earth by Kyle Harper

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Kyle Harper has written a history, a most unusual history. He does not tell of events that occurred at some specific date but chooses to write in a grand sweep that places events in non-specific contexts such as ‘Mammals in a Microbe’s World’, or he stirs readers’ imaginations in defining the

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Children

Fantastically Great Women by Kate Pankhurst

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke For most of her life, children’s author and illustrator Kate Pankhurst had no idea she was distantly related to Emmeline Pankhurst, and a cousin of the suffragette’s direct descendants. It seems that she, like her forebear, has the drive and determination to record the contribution women have made in game-changing discoveries and

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Latest Award Winners

The Prime Minister’s Literary Awards  Fiction: The Labyrinth (Amanda Lohrey, Text) Poetry: The Strangest Place: New and selected poems (Stephen Edgar, Black Pepper) Nonfiction: The Stranger Artist: Life at the edge of Kimberley painting (Quentin Sprague, Hardie Grant) Australian history: People of the River: Lost worlds of early Australia (Grace Karskens, A&U) YA literature: Metal Fish, Falling Snow (Cath Moore,

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General Fiction/Poetry

GriffithReview 74: Escape Routes by Ashley Hay [ed]

Review by Richard Tutin How often have we thought about escaping from our current life situation? It may be getting a new job, moving to a new town or just having a different style of life from the one we are currently locked into. This edition of the Griffith Review has contributions from writers who

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General Fiction

The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller

Reviewed by Rod McLary Most readers would be familiar with the abduction of Helen of Sparta [perhaps better known later as Helen of Troy] which led to the Trojan War – and with Achilles the hero of the war and the greatest of all the Greek warriors.  Achilles was the son of Peleus, King of

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Children

Christmas Always Comes by Jackie French

Reviewed by Gerard Healy A delightful children’s story by Jackie French, with illustrations by Bruce Whatley. Here we have a family droving cattle along the dusty back-blocks of Australia on Christmas Eve, 1932. Young Joey, the son, wonders if Santa will find them, while his older sister Ellie knows that it could be difficult this

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2022 Indie Book Awards – longlists

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

These Precious Days by Ann Patchett

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve It is no wonder that this latest book by Ann Patchett has inspired unanimous praise and enthusiastic responses from those who have read this as a ‘hugely enjoyable conversation with a particularly brilliant friend.’  She is one of the current 250 members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and

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General Fiction

Nightmare Alley by William Lindsay Gresham

Reviewed by Rod McLary The title of this fine example of American noir is evocative to say the least.  Its meaning is brought to life by the protagonist Stanton Carlisle when he says: ‘this [the alley] was all there was any time, anywhere, just an alley and a light and the footsteps spanging on the

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History

The Ottomans: Khans, Caesars and Caliphs by Marc David Baer

Reviewed by Norrie Sanders What did the Ottomans ever do for us? Best known for harems, sieges of Vienna and Armenian genocide, their history has largely come to us through a European lens. A lens that has often reduced the Ottoman Empire to a series of clichés and myths that fail to acknowledge the intricacies

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Children

What Do You Do To Celebrate? by Ashleigh Barton

Reviewed by Gerard Healy Another delightful children’s book from Ashleigh Barton and Martina Heiduczek, who previously collaborated on What Do You Call Your Grandpa? (2020) and What Do You Call Your Grandma? (2021). This latest book follows the same pattern, with a double-page spread for each topic, that is made up of a clever rhyming

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General Fiction

The Long Weekend by Fiona Palmer

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke Many writers use the framework of several complete strangers coming together in a particular location for their stories. During their stay the reader becomes privy to some of their innermost fears and incidents which have been weighing them down. In her latest book, The Long Weekend, Fiona Palmer chooses to use

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Crime/Mystery

Kill Your Brother by Jack Heath

Reviewed by Rod McLary Jack Heath’s first crime novel for adults and the first of three featuring Timothy Blake – Hangman – was published in 2018.  Timothy was engaged as a consultant for the FBI in Texas.  He has acute skills for ‘reading’ a crime scene and observing what other investigators had missed or overlooked. 

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An Interview with Jack Heath – author of Kill Your Brother

Jack Heath is the award-winning author of more than thirty thrillers for children and adults. He was born in Sydney in 1986 and has lived in Canberra since 1996. He wrote his first novel in high school and sold it to a publisher at age 18. In 2018 his first crime novel for adults, Hangman, was

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