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Best Books – 2024 lists

As summer holidays approach in Australia, dedicated readers look forward to giving and receiving books for Christmas and to holidays filled with reading pleasure. This is also a time for the publication of lists of the best books. I’d like to share with you some of those lists, sourced from the Sydney Morning Herald and […]

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Storm Child by Michael Robotham

Storm Child is the fourth book in a thriller series by Australian author, Michael Robotham. All four involve forensic psychologist Cyrus Haven and Evie Cormac, a traumatised young woman aged twenty-two in Storm Child. Both Cyrus and Evie have been psychologically damaged. As a boy, Cyrus returned from football practice to discover the bodies of

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Highway 13 by Fiona McFarlane

  In Highway 13, Fiona McFarlane has written a series of linked short stories, all of which are captivating. The stories all refer in some way to a well-known serial killer in Australia who is named in this book as Paul Biga. He picked up hitchhikers south of Sydney and killed them. Many of the

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Old God’s Time by Sebastian Barry

Sebastian Barry’s novel, Old God’s Time, was on the longlist for the Booker Prize for 2023 along with several other works by Irish writers, including the winner, Prophet Song by Paul Lynch. Last month I wrote about the magnificent novel, The Bee Sting by Paul Murray and I have just finished Colm Toibin’s latest work,

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The Bee Sting

Shortlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize, Paul Murray’s novel, The Bee Sting, is 643 pages of pure reading pleasure. It tells the story of the Barnes, a modern-day Irish family whose luck has turned. For teenage daughter Cass, the decline began with the closing of her father’s car showroom. For PJ, the younger child, it

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Days of Innocence and Wonder

Days of Innocence and Wonder is Lucy Treloar’s third novel. Her voice is strong and assured. She proceeds at her own pace in this novel which builds slowly to its frightening climax. The protagonist, Till, is a Melbourne woman in her twenties. She carries with her the memory of an incident in her childhood that

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The Axeman’s Carnival

The Axeman’s Carnival by New Zealand author, Catherine Chidgey contains a novel twist to the trope of a stranger entering a family’s life and acting as a catalyst for change. The stranger in The Axeman’s Carnival is a magpie who is also the first-person narrator of the story. The first sentence of the book put

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Prima Facie

Last week I read the novel Prima Facie by Suzie Miller and had the privilege of attending RBG: Of Many, One written by the same author. Performed at the Drama Theatre of the Sydney Opera House by the extraordinarily talented actor Heather Mitchell, RBG: Of Many, One is a one-woman play about Ruth Bader Ginsberg

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