Released June 2014
At a crossroads with her job, her boyfriend and city life generally, Claire Dunn signs up for a year in the Australian bush. She learns wilderness survival skills, builds her...
Read moreReleased June 2014
Before he even graduated high school, Liam Pieper was the unlikely kingpin of a cottage drug racket, pushing all the pot, pills and powder he could get his hands on...
Read moreReleased June 2014
Irish-born Australian novelist Chris Flynn delights in playing with vernacular and dialect; it’s a conceit he used to great effect in his debut, A Tiger in Eden, and something he...
Read moreReleased June 2014
From the winner of the Ned Kelly Awards in 2011 and 2013 for best crime fiction comes the third Charlie Berlin novel by Geoffrey McGeachin. Set in Melbourne against a...
Read moreReleased June 2014
Michaela McGuire was an uninspired writer spending time overseas when she came across the death of Crown Casino patron Anthony Dunning in the news. Fascinated by the alleged role of...
Read moreReleased June 2014
Arthur Phillip is best known to Australians as the first governor of New South Wales, a post he held for five years. History records him as progressive, inspired by Enlightenment...
Read moreReleased June 2014
Michael Ardenne is a desperate man. A former Booker Prize-winner, he took the literary world by storm with his debut novel Ephesus, which in his words was ‘a deeply moving...
Read moreReleased June 2014
Journalist and former ABC broadcaster Sian Prior has been writing opinion pieces on the topic of shyness for many years. Her memoir Shy crystallises her years of analysis into a...
Read moreReleased June 2014
Singer-songwriter, comedian and writer Justin Heazlewood—AKA The Bedroom Philosopher—has written a hybrid memoir-guidebook for anyone interested in working in the creative arts in Australia. Funemployed recounts Heazlewood’s career of highlights...
Read moreReleased May 2014
From a young age, children are exposed to poetry in its many forms. Nursery rhymes bring delight, especially if there are actions to go with them. But does poetry become...
Read moreReleased May 2014
No Stars to Wish On is about seven-year-old Jack, who is taken away from his messy but loving family and placed in a cold, harsh orphanage. Despite what the nuns...
Read moreReleased May 2014
Perinatal depression is a widespread problem experienced by parents of new babies. In Australia, it affects one in seven new mothers and one in ten new fathers. I approached this...
Read moreReleased May 2014
Kel Richards has adapted many stories with a uniquely Australian flavour, such as The Lamington Man, The Three Kangaroos Gruff, Goldilocks and The Three Koalas. His latest book Little Red...
Read moreReleased May 2014
If Margaret Wild retired from writing tomorrow she would, in my opinion, have made her mark as Australia’s greatest storyteller. She once said: ‘I don’t want to write safe, bland...
Read moreReleased May 2014
A Most Peculiar Act is a novel set in Darwin during World War II, and describes the collision between the pompous white bureaucrats of Darwin and the Aboriginal people the...
Read moreReleased January 1970
Eva Slonim was a 13-year-old girl when Nazis invaded her home in Bratislava in 1939 and tore apart her happy family and her life. Now, at the age of 83,...
Read moreReleased May 2014
In her first book of fiction, writer and literary journalist Angela Meyer demonstrates her gift for painting vivid pictures with a few adroit, restrained brush strokes. ‘Few’ being the operative word here—with...
Read moreReleased May 2014
Outlets for new short stories seem to dwindle every year, which makes the Margaret River Short Story Competition a welcome proposition. The fruits of a partnership between the Margaret River Readers...
Read moreReleased May 2014
A War of Words delves into the military history of Asia in the early 20th century through the life story of Charles Bavier. A man of astonishing military and diplomatic...
Read moreReleased April 2014
Matthew Ricketson (Writing Feature Stories, 2004) is professor of journalism at the University of Canberra and has worked as a journalist at the Age, the Australian and Time Australia. Writing...
Read more