Inside the Australian and New Zealand book industry

Image. Advertisement:

Review search

 

No Neat Endings: Stories (Dominic Carew, MidnightSun)

Released February 2020

Dominic Carew sketches masculinity faltering or in crisis in his short story collection No Neat Endings. In these snapshots of manhood, Carew depicts male kinship and identity fraught with the... Read more

Shark Arm: A shark, a tattooed arm and two unsolved murders (Phillip Roope & Kevin Meagher, A&U)

Released January 2020

Shark Arm is an offbeat true crime book that begins with a shark throwing up a man’s tattooed arm in front of onlookers at a Coogee aquarium in 1935. The... Read more

A Couple of Things Before the End: Stories (Sean O’Beirne, Black Inc.)

Released February 2020

The stories in this debut collection from Melbourne writer Sean O’Beirne are written as fictional, often funny monologues, letters, speeches, interviews, texts and emails, diary entries, official reports and online... Read more

Jane in Love (Rachel Givney, Michael Joseph)

Released February 2020

It is a truth universally acknowledged that Jane Austen re-imaginings are an uneven offering. Some are brilliant; some less so. The fundamental challenges of this niche, however, remain constant: that... Read more

Maggie’s Going Nowhere (Rose Hartley, Michael Joseph)

Released January 2020

The eponymous character in Rose Hartley’s debut is introduced in the blurb as thoroughly relatable and a counterpart to Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s Fleabag. While the comparison feels true on the surface—both... Read more

Blueberries (Ellena Savage, Text)

Released March 2020

Ellena Savage’s debut collection of essays, Blueberries, is a breathtaking interrogation of the self in the world; the self within structures of power and oppression. Each essay examines a memory,... Read more

The Medicine: A doctor’s notes (Karen Hitchcock, Black Inc.)

Released February 2020

When discussing modern medicine there is a lot to consider. There are the complexities of the doctor/patient relationship. The wellbeing of doctors. How responsible treatment and the law sometimes intersect... Read more

Ten Doors Down: The story of an extraordinary adoption reunion (Robert Tickner, Scribe)

Released February 2020

As the rolling apologies for forced adoptions swept Australia in 2012 and 2013, it was too late for Robert Tickner’s mother—she had died, taking her secrets to the grave. But... Read more

Contest for the Indo-Pacific: Why China won’t map the future (Rory Medcalf, La Trobe University Press)

Released March 2020

How does the world balance China’s emergence as a global superpower? What are the risks ahead? How do nation states dilute China’s hegemony and avoid capitulation to its interests? These... Read more

Shirl (Wayne Marshall, Affirm)

Released February 2020

Wayne Marshall’s Shirl is a collection of bizarre, consistently funny stories that delights in dismantling the tropes of Australiana. From the adventures of a bereaved yowie at a Desperate and... Read more

Cherry Beach (Laura McPhee-Browne, Text)

Released February 2020

When best friends Ness and Hetty move to Canada together, it seems as though a new phase of their lives is beginning—but their shared past won’t relinquish its grip so... Read more

Return Ticket (Jon Doust, Fremantle Press)

Released March 2020

Jon Doust has now devoted three books to wilful, semi-autobiographical protagonist Jack Muir. While 2009’s Boy on a Wire and 2012’s To the Highlands saw Jack fumbling towards manhood, Return... Read more

Bird (Adam Morris, Puncher & Wattmann)

Released March 2020

A novel told from multiple viewpoints, Bird examines the Western Australian prison system via the cultural and social constructs that prop it up, while also exploring Indigenous and non-Indigenous identity.... Read more

In the Clearing (J P Pomare, Hachette)

Released February 2020

If J P Pomare’s Call Me Evie was a slow-burner of a psychological thriller, his follow-up, In the Clearing, is a pared-back firecracker where the danger is clear and present—even... Read more

Fauna (Donna Mazza, A&U)

Released February 2020

Donna Mazza’s Fauna is set in a near-future Western Australia, recognisable but markedly bleaker. Stacey and her family have signed up to an experimental research procedure in which Stacey’s embryo’s... Read more

The Wonderful Wisdom of Ants (Philip Bunting, Scholastic)

Released February 2020

Ants. What exactly do these tiny, easily overlooked creatures have to teach us? Quite a bit, according to Philip Bunting, whose picture book is funny and informative as he goes... Read more

Extraordinary! (Penny Harrison, illus by Katie Wilson, New Frontier)

Released February 2020

What a magical book this is! In Extraordinary! Penny Harrison, author of Emily Green’s Garden and Dance With Me, and New Zealand-based illustrator Katie Wilson take the reader on a... Read more

The Threads of Magic (Alison Croggon, Walker)

Released March 2020

This first foray by Alison Croggon—best known for her ‘Pellinor’ fantasy series—into middle-grade is a sophisticated story of power, friendship and magic. The city of Clavel is in a medieval-style... Read more

Ready, Set, Code! (Heather Catchpole & Nicola O’Brien, CSIRO Publishing)

Released February 2020

Ready, Set, Code! teaches computer programming skills to kids aged 8–12 using the open source Scratch language created by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. This book presents introductory programming concepts... Read more

The Secrets of Magnolia Moon (Edwina Wyatt, illus by Katherine Quinn, Walker)

Released November 2019

The Secrets of Magnolia Moon is the first middle-grade novel from Edwina Wyatt, who has been twice listed as a CBCA notable author for her work in picture books. Magnolia... Read more