History

Bastard Behind The Lines by Tom Gilling

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Until I read Tom Gilling’s book, I had never heard of a soldier called Jock McLaren, a soldier who seems to have become a casualty of history. Only a very driven man could escape from two Japanese-held prisons during World War 2 and then carry the fight with guerrilla contingents after

Read More »
General Fiction

The Paris Affair by Pip Drysdale

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke The Paris Affair is the third novel by Pip Drysdale. Her two earlier books The Sunday Girl and The Strangers We Know were both best sellers, sold worldwide with the second being developed for television. Her latest contribution, The Paris Affair, is a novel about modern society with much reference to

Read More »
Crime/Mystery

The Imitator by Rebecca Starford

Reviewed by Ian Lipke This is a page turner!  A gentle easing into a complex story, a story of friendship and betrayal, of power misused and innocence scuttled. The ideas on which the story builds are simple but are manipulated so well that the reader is immersed in mystery as dense as a London fog.

Read More »
Memoir/Biography

Kate Kelly by Rebecca Wilson

Reviewed by Ian Lipke I began reading this study with high hopes. What an interesting person Kate was! Her family is comprehensively described in history and, to my mind after numerous assays by various scholars, probably accurately. Soon I discovered, despite the sub-heading emblazoned on the cover viz. The True Story of Ned Kelly’s Little

Read More »
Crime/Mystery

Faithless in Death by J. D. Robb

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Experienced reviewers of the ‘in Death’ series know there will be blood, that Eve Dallas will be up to her elbows in it, that the faithful Peabody will be dancing to keep the blood from her pink boots, that McNab, the electronics wizard will be doing mysterious things, while Roarke will

Read More »
General Fiction

Outlawed by Anna North

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Outlawed is set in 1894 in an unidentified State of the USA. Ada lives under a law that requires young women marry and have children. Failure to produce a child in a reasonable time carries the consequence of divorce and social disfavour. Rumour is sufficient for a charge of practising witchcraft,

Read More »
General Fiction

When the Apricots Bloom by Gina Wilkinson

Reviewed by Norrie Sanders At the height of Saddam Hussein’s sinister rule, three women form an unlikely alliance that is born of deception.  Two of the women are Iraqi from different social classes whose childhood friendship was severed by an act of betrayal and resultant tragedy. Brought together a generation later by a fear of

Read More »
General Fiction

People Like Her by Ellery Lloyd

Reviewed by Rod McLary With a somewhat ambiguous title, People Like Her opens up the world of Instagrammers and sets out what it takes to be a successful one with in excess of one million followers.  Does the ambiguous ‘like’ of the title mean ‘similar to’ or ‘have affection for’?  Well – both actually and

Read More »
Non-Fiction

On Life’s Lottery by Glyn Davis

Reviewed by Gerard Healy An informed look at intergenerational poverty in Australia by Glyn Davis AC, the former Vice-Chancellor of Melbourne University. It is both an easy read and a hard-to-read text, the former because it is only 70 odd pages long but the latter because it asks us what we are doing to solve

Read More »
History

Land by Simon Winchester

Reviewed by Patricia Simms-Reeve English/American author, Simon Winchester has written many fine non-fiction books, amongst them The Map that Changed the World and The Surgeon of Crowthorne. He presents facts and information in a way that engages readers and otherwise dry subjects are so discussed that his books are a pleasure to read. In a

Read More »
Crime/Mystery

The Spiral by Iain Ryan

Reviewed by Rod McLary The Spiral is a very appropriate title for this book given the word’s association with vortexes and whirlpools and the sense of being drawn down into the unknown.  Beginning this book is very much like embarking on a journey into the deep recesses of the mind where – to continue the

Read More »
Crime/Mystery

Crackenback by Lee Christine

Reviewed by Wendy Lipke For those readers who enjoy the intricacies of solving a crime, Lee Christine’s latest book, Crackenback, is a puzzle worth investigating. The author has followed police procedures and investigative knowledge to gather information from a diverse range of places and situations. Each new piece of relevance is revealed until the reader

Read More »
Memoir/Biography

With My Little Eye by Sandra Hogan

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Strange and unusual stories have been a feature of Australian life since colonisation. As we all become more familiar with new cultures our collection of unusuality is expected to expand. We’ll hear other strange, and perhaps unexplainable incidents. There is a rich harvest to emerge as yet from indigenous and Asian

Read More »
Crime/Mystery

The Last Thing To Burn by Will Dean

Reviewed by Ian Lipke Hannah Kent, author of Burial Rites gave her readers a bleak, contrasty, horror-filled tale set in an unforgiving Arctic landscape, peopled by men and women as unbending as a frosty mountain spur. Now Will Dean, who lives in Sweden, has written a tale in the same vein, but set this time

Read More »
General Fiction

Memorial by Bryan Washington

Reviewed by Rod McLary Michael and Benson are two young men in Houston Texas and are struggling still to understand their relationship.  Are they a couple?  Should they even be together?  Mike and Ben don’t know the answers to these questions but before they can work them out, their world is turned upside down.  Mike

Read More »
Scroll to Top