Category: Book Reviews

The Wife and the Widow, Christian White, Australia, 2020

The Wife and the Widow, Christian White, Australia, 2020

This tale of intrigue, lies and murder is a good lightweight read, a book to pick up in between more serious books, or a book to read when entertainment is looked for more than reality. Reality is definitely not one of the book’s main priorities. Not wanting to ruin the story, I will skip the …

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The Humans, Matt Haig, UK, 2013

The Humans, Matt Haig, UK, 2013

‘… it takes time to understand humans because they don’t understand themselves. They have been wearing clothes for so long. Metaphorical clothes. (…) That was the price of human civilisation – to create it they had to close the door on their true selves.’ (Page 130). The ‘I’ of the book is an alien. He …

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The Martian by Andy Weir, USA, 2014

The Martian by Andy Weir, USA, 2014

This is a fictional account of an astronaut’s fight for survival after being caught up in a powerful dust storm on Mars. The crew of the Ares 3 mission, believing him to be dead and having no other option, is forced to leave Mars without him. Of course he does not die (otherwise there would …

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Year of Wonders, Geraldine Brooks, UK, 2001

Year of Wonders, Geraldine Brooks, UK, 2001

I was given this book to read by a friend, and I opened it not having the slightest idea what it was about. I was pleasantly surprised. They say that there are ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ times to do certain things; I also feel that there are probably ‘right’ and ‘less right’ times to read certain …

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Phosphorescence, Julia Baird, Australia, 2020

Phosphorescence, Julia Baird, Australia, 2020

This is a beautiful book that should make any reader stop for a moment and think about what life really is: a collection of wonder. At the beginning of the book, Julia asks the question: ‘… how do we survive, stay alive or even bloom when the world goes dark, when we are, for instance, …

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A Room Made of Leaves, Kate Grenville, Australia, 2020

A Room Made of Leaves, Kate Grenville, Australia, 2020

Kate Grenville’s latest book can best be described as fictional history. It follows the life of Elizabeth (Veale) Macarthur from her life as a more-or-less orphaned child in Devon to her life in Sydney and Parramatta as the wife of the insensitive, brutish and unpredictable John Macarthur. Macarthur’s name is now firmly connected to the …

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Be Happy, Always, Xandria Ooi, USA, 2019

Be Happy, Always, Xandria Ooi, USA, 2019

This is a delightful book about living life in ways that will engender, not destroy, happiness. Some of it is obvious, but much of it presents things we thought we knew but from other perspectives. It is a book that can be read cover-to-cover or that can be delved into in small bits. I read …

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Where the Crawdads Sing, Delia Owens, USA, 2018

Where the Crawdads Sing, Delia Owens, USA, 2018

On one level, I enjoyed what this book was trying to say; on another level, I found it extremely disappointing. I experienced it as two separate stories, one focused on the information about the North Carolina marsh and the creatures that live there; the other, a fairy story that quite often descends into ‘chick lit’, …

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Any Ordinary Day by Leigh Sales, Australia, 2018

Any Ordinary Day by Leigh Sales, Australia, 2018

In this thought-provoking book, journalist and television commentator Leigh Sales interviews a number of people, each of whom has experienced a life-changing event – often a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time – in an effort to find out whether it is possible to move on after experiencing such trauma. …

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Dark Emu, Bruce Pascoe, Australia, 2014

Dark Emu, Bruce Pascoe, Australia, 2014

Like Pemulwuy: The Rainbow Warrior by Eric Willmot, Dark Emu should be compulsory reading for all Australians. While Pemulwuy looks at the first years of European colonization and the dreadful impact it had on the Indigenous people, Dark Emu examines the theory that the Aboriginal people were not primitive hunters and gatherers (as we have …

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