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Emergence (John Birmingham, Pan Macmillan)

Released January 2015

John Birmingham is back in his favourite ‘splosions and gore’ mode with Emergence, the first book in a trilogy that features Dave Hooper. Dave starts out as a pretty ordinary... Read more

The Secrets of Midwives (Sally Hepworth, Macmillan)

Released February 2015

Three generations of midwives, each with distinct philosophies and personalities, are at the heart of this novel. Floss, the eldest, has kept a dark secret for decades, which begins to... Read more

Whale in the Bath (Kylie Westaway, illus by Tom Jellett, A&U)

Released October 2014

Bruno is a boy with a problem. His mother has told him it’s bath time and insists he must have a bath before going to bed. Bruno then discovers a... Read more

Race to the End of the World: The Mapmaker Chronicles (A L Tait, Hachette)

Released October 2014

In a world believed to be flat, King Orel is determined to learn what lies beyond the horizon. Is it true that a ship will fall off the edge and... Read more

Withering-by-Sea: A Stella Montgomery Intrigue (Judith Rossell, ABC Books)

Released November 2014

Set in a glum Victorian seaside town, Judith Rossell has written an engaging and evocative mystery-adventure story. Eleven-year-old Stella Montgomery lives a dreary life with her three horrible aunts in... Read more

Speed of Light (Joy Cowley, Gecko Press)

Released October 2014

Jeff’s family life is less than ideal. His brother is in a Thai prison, his sister has a secret she won’t reveal, his mother is unhappy and his father is... Read more

Once Upon a Timeless Tale: The Three Billy Goats Gruff (Margrete Lamond, illus by Gaye Chapman, Little Hare)

Released October 2014

Fairytales have been around forever. Many of us will have grown up with stories by Hans Christian Andersen, Charles Perrault and the Brothers Grimm. However, the availability of fairytales has... Read more

Bibliodiversity: A Manifesto for Independent Publishing (Susan Hawthorne, Spinifex Press)

Released October 2014

In 2002 I attended the launch of Susan Hawthorne’s Wild Politics: Feminism, Globalisation and Bio/diversity and later used it as an economics text. In that book Hawthorne put the case... Read more

Peacemongers (Barry Hill, UQP)

Released November 2014

This is an immense book in length, content and quality, and a journey well worth taking. Barry Hill has combined a travel narrative with a meditation on history and peace.... Read more

Kerry Stokes (Andrew Rule, HarperCollins)

Released November 2014

The cards have always been stacked against Kerry Stokes. Born John Patrick Alford, his mother gave him up for adoption. His name was scratched out by a judge’s pen on... Read more

Nightingale (Fiona McIntosh, Michael Joseph)

Released November 2014

This novel shares many features with the recent ABC TV series ‘Anzac Girls’; both narratives feature tales of nurses working in Egypt and on the hospital ships off Gallipoli during... Read more

Australia on Horseback: The Story of the Horse and the Making of a Nation (Cameron Forbes, Pan Macmillan)

Released November 2014

Cameron Forbes is an award-winning journalist and the author of Hellfire, about Australian POWs in Asia in World War II, and The Korean War, about Australia’s involvement in that conflict.... Read more

Something Quite Peculiar (Steve Kilbey, Hardie Grant)

Released November 2014

This memoir from one of Australia’s most gifted songwriters is a lively, anecdotal account of 40-plus years of musicianship. As the frontman of The Church—one of this country’s great rock... Read more

Nona & Me (Clare Atkins, Black Inc.)

Released October 2014

Nona & Me is one of those wonderful books that takes you deeply into a rarely seen world and brings it vibrantly to life. Set in a remote part of... Read more

Amnesia (Peter Carey, Hamish Hamilton)

Released October 2014

After recent novels set in England and Germany (The Chemistry of Tears) and the US (Parrot and Olivier in America), Peter Carey returns to Australia for the first time since... Read more

The Snow Kimono (Mark Henshaw, Text)

Released September 2014

Mystery and deception pervade Mark Henshaw’s first novel for many years, The Snow Kimono. The narrative crosses several continents—from France to Algeria and Japan—and connects characters from three generations. Auguste Jovert,... Read more

Acute Misfortune: The Life and Death of Adam Cullen (Erik Jensen, Black Inc.)

Released October 2014

When the Archibald Prize-winning artist Adam Cullen died in 2012 at the age of 46, the Australian art world was unsure who it had lost: a vulgar, naïf enfant terrible,... Read more

Killing Adonis (J M Donellan, Pantera Press)

Released October 2014

Freya’s lifelong dream of working in a Timorese hospital is put on hold when she is shaken by personal tragedy. Instead, she opts for life experience and adventure, and takes... Read more

The Brewer’s Tale (Karen Brooks, Harlequin)

Released October 2014

Karen Brooks moves away from young-adult fantasy and into commercial historical fiction with her new book, The Brewer’s Tale. Faced with a bleak future after her father’s death, Anneke Sheldrake... Read more

Dreamer’s Pool: Blackthorn and Grim Book One (Juliet Marillier, Pan Macmillan)

Released October 2014

Blackthorn has spent a year imprisoned for no crime of her own; the only thing left in her heart is a thirst to repay the man responsible for her imprisonment.... Read more