Discussion Group 2012
Transcription
Discussion Group 2012
Book Discussion Group Wednesday Programme 2012 The Manly Library Book Discussion Group meets on the 2nd Wednesday of each month at 6pm in the Manly Library Meeting Room All are welcome - No Bookings Required March 14 Young Writers: Australian Vogel’s literary awards for writers under 35 April 11 War Mongers May 9 Ancient Worlds June 13 Best of British July11 Don’t judge a book by its movie August 8 Dagger Awards from the Crime Writers’ Association September 14 Life Stories October 10 Awesome Adventure November 14 Geek Reads December 12 Summer Reading Each month Library staff prepare a reading list of suggested titles held by Manly Library on the theme for the coming month. The list is distributed at the Book Discussion Group and copies are available on the ground floor of the Library and online. Contact Fran Inkster - Customer Services Librarian 9976 1732 or fran.inkster@manly.nsw.gov.au Book Discussion Group Thursday Programme 2012 The Manly Library Book Discussion Group now meets during the day. Every 2nd Thursday of the month at 10.30am in the Library’s Youth Area. All are welcome - No Bookings Required March 15 Young Writers: Australian Vogel’s literary awards for writers under 35 April 12 War Mongers May 10 Ancient Worlds June 14 Best of British July 12 Don’t judge a book by its movie August 9 Dagger Awards from the Crime Writers’ Association September 15 Life Stories October 11 Awesome Adventure November 15 Geek Reads December 13 Summer Reading Each month Library staff prepare a reading list of suggested titles held by Manly Library on the theme for the coming month. The list is distributed at the Book Discussion Group and copies are available on the ground floor of the Library and online. Contact Fran Inkster - Customer Services Librarian Ph: 9976 1732 Email: fran.inkster@manly.nsw.gov.au MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST Best of 2011 T ou up p nG Grro on ussssiio Diissccu okk D oo Bo hee B off tth ng go meeeettiin neexxtt m hee n Th w daayy 1111 JJaan neessd Weed dn on nW uaarryy aatt 66 p m bee o nu pm wiillll b Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read. ~Attributed to Groucho Marx I find television to be very educating. Every time somebody turns on the set, I go in the other room and read a book. ~Groucho Marx There's nothing to match curling up with a good book when there's a repair job to be done around the house. ~Joe Ryan My test of a good novel is dreading to begin the last chapter. ~Thomas Helm Books had instant replay long before televised sports. ~Bern Williams Reading means borrowing. ~Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, Aphorisms He who lends a book is an idiot. He who returns the book is more of an idiot. ~Arabic Proverb Never lend books, for no one ever returns them; the only books I have in my library are books that other folks have lent me. ~Anatole France Adiga, Aravind. The white tiger. London: Atlantic Books, 2008. F /ADIG Connolly, John, 1968The burning soul. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 2011. F /CONN Archer, Jeffrey. Paths of glory. London: Macmillan, 2009. F /ARCH Connelly, Michael, 1956The Drop. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2011. F /CONN Bainbridge, Beryl, 1933The girl in the polka-dot dress. London: Little, Brown, 2011. F /BAIN Cousins, Ben. Ben Cousin’s autobiography / Ben Cousins with Malcolm Knox. Sydney: Pan Macmillan, 2010. 796.336/COU Barbery, Muriel. The elegance of the hedgehog London: Gallic Books, 2008. F /BARB Barnes, Julian. Pulse London: Jonathan Cape, 2011. F /BARN Barnes, Julian. The sense of an ending. London: Jonathan Cape, 2011. F /BARN Beresford-Kroeger, Diana. The global forest: 40 ways trees can save us. London: Particular Books, 2011. 333.75/BER Brooks, Geraldine, 1955People of the book. New York: Viking, 2008. F /BROO FPB /AUSTRALIAN/B Capuzzo, Mike. The murder room: in which three of the greatest detectives use forensic science to solve the world's most perplexing cold cases. London: Michael Joseph, 2011. 363.25/CAP Catchlove, Robyn. Somewhere down a crazy river Sydney: Macmillan, 2010. 799.1/CAT Coetzee, J. M., 1940Scenes from provincial life North Sydney, N.S.W.: Vintage Books, 2011. F /COET Doidge, Norman. The brain that changes itself: stories of personal triumph from the frontiers of brain science. Carlton North, Vic.: Scribe Publications, 2008. 612.82/DOI Deaver, Jeffery. Carte blanche: a James Bond novel. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2011. F /DEAV Dekker, Ted, 1962Forbidden New York: Center Street, 2011. F /DEKK De Waal, Edmund. The hare with amber eyes: a family's century of art and loss. London: Chatto & Windus, 2010. 920/WAA NFPB/Biography Donoghue, Emma. Room. London: Picador, 2010. F /DONO Elias, Leila Salloum. The sweets of Araby Woodstock, VT: Countryman Press, 2011. 641.59/ELI Ellis, Kate, 1953The jackal man London: Piatkus, 2011. F /ELLI Falconer, Colin. Silk Road. London: Corvus, 2011. F /FALC Ishiguro, Kazuo, 1954Never let me go. London: Faber, 2005. F /ISHI FPB /WORLD/I Fine, Cordelia. Delusions of gender: how our minds, society, and neurosexism create difference. New York: W. W. Norton, 2010. 612.82/FIN Jones, Lloyd, 1955Hand me down world. Melbourne: Text Publishing, 2010. F /JONE Golding, Judy The children of lovers: a memoir of William Golding by his daughter. London : Faber, 2011. 823.914/GOL Goodheart, Adam. 1861: the Civil War awakening. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2011. 973.711/GOO Gordon, Audrey. Audrey Gordon's Tuscan summer: recipes and recollections from the heart of Italy Prahran, Vic.: Hardie Grant Books, 2010. 641.59455/GOR Gross, Gwendolen. The orphan sister: a novel New York: Gallery Books, 2011. F /GROSS Hemingway, Ernest, 1899-1961. A moveable feast. London: Jonathan Cape, 2010. 813.52/HEM Hennessey, Patrick. The junior officers' reading club: killing time and fighting wars. London: Allen Lane, 2009. 355.009/HEN Knox, Malcolm. The life: a novel Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2011. F /KNOX Larson, Erik. In the garden of beasts: love, terror, and an American family in Hitler's Berlin Carlton North, Vic.: Scribe Publications, 2011. 943.086/LAR Levy, Andrea. The long song. London: Headline Review, 2010. F /LEVY McCall Smith, Alexander, 1948The forgotten affairs of youth. London: Little, Brown, 2011. F /MACC McDermott, Kirstyn. Madigan mine. Sydney: Pan Macmillan, 2010. F /MACD Mandanna, Sarita. Tiger hills London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2010. F /MAND Manfredi, Valerio Massimo. The Ides of March London: Macmillan, 2009. F /MANF Hillary, Eve, 1952Sarah's last wish: a chilling glimpse into forced Mankell, Henning. medicine The troubled man Chittaway, N.S.W.: E. Hillary, 2010. New York: Knopf, 2011. 362.1989/WES F /MANK Hollinghurst, Alan. Micallef, Shaun. The stranger's child. Preincarnate: a novella London: Picador, 2011. Prahran, Vic.: Hardie Grant, 2010. F /HOLL F /MICA Moriarty, Liane. The hypnotist's love story. Sydney: Macmillan, 2011. XX(846816.2) Silva, Daniel. The Rembrandt affair. New York: G.P. Putnam, 2010. F /SILV FPB /THRILLER Morrissey, Di. The opal desert Sydney, N.S.W.: Macmillan, 2011. F /MORR Silvey, Craig, 1982Jasper Jones Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2009. F /SILV O'Flynn, Catherine. The news where you are. Camberwell, Vic.: Viking, 2010. F /OFLY Simon, Rachel, 1959The story of beautiful girl. New York: Grand Central Pub., 2011. F /SIMO Ogawa, Yoko. The housekeeper and the professor New York: Picador, 2009. F /OGAW FPB /WORLD/O Skloot, Rebecca. The immortal life of Henrietta Lacks. New York: Crown Publishers, 2009. 616/LAC Perlman, Elliot, 1964The street sweeper Sydney: Vintage/Random House Aust., 2011. F /PERL Smith, Patti. Just kids New York: Ecco, 2010. 780.42/SMI Phillips, Marie. Gods behaving badly. London: Jonathan Cape, 2007. F /PHIL Solnit, Rebecca. Infinite city: a San Francisco atlas. Berkeley, Calif.; London: University of California Press, 2010. 912.7946/SOL Picoult, Jodi, 1966Nineteen minutes. New York: Atria Books, 2007. F /PICO Rachman, Tom. The imperfectionists Melbourne: Text, 2010. F /RACH Rankin, Ian, 1960The impossible dead London: Orion, 2011. F /RANK Robotham, Michael. Bleed for me. London: Sphere, 2010 F /ROBO Sanderson, Catherine, 1972Petite Anglaise. London: Michael Joseph, 2008. 920/SAN Squires, Constance. Along the watchtower New York: Riverhead Books, 2011. F /SQUI Strout, Elizabeth. Abide with me. New York: Random House, 2006. F /STRO Toole, John Kennedy, 1937-1969. A confederacy of dunces. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State Uni, 1980. FPB /CLASSIC/T Wallace, David Foster. The pale king: an unfinished novel Camberwell, Vic.: Penguin, 2011. F /WALL Wilkerson, Isabel. The warmth of other suns: the epic story of America's great migration. New York: Random House, 2010. 304.873/WIL MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST Relationships T p ou up Grro on nG ussssiio Diissccu oo okk D Bo hee B off tth ng go meeeettiin neexxtt m hee n Th w wiillll b bee o nu pm on uaarryy aatt 66 p m nW Weed dn neessd daayy 1111 JJaan Sister is probably the most competitive relationship within the family, but once the sisters are grown, it becomes the strongest relationship. Margaret Mead Seduce my mind and you can have my body, find my soul and I'm yours forever. Unknown The most important thing in a relationship between a man and a woman is that one of them must be good at taking orders. Linda Festa Mars and Venus? Nope. The only problem between the genders is that we each have the others needs and wants backwards. Men want to be needed, and women need to be wanted. Not the other way around. It's that simple! Unknown Abramson, Neil, 1964Unsaid New York: Center Street, 2011. F /ABRA Ahern, Cecelia. The time of my life. London: HarperCollins, 2011. F /AHER Allen, Jeff. Get laid or die trying: the field reports. New York: Gallery Books, 2011. 306.81/ALL Beckett, Bernard, 1968August Melbourne: Text, 2011. F /BECK Blair, Jessica, 1923-. Secrets of a Whitby girl London: Piatkus, c2011. F /BLAI Brady, Sally Ryder. A box of darkness: the story of a marriage. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2011. 813.54/BRA Breslin, Ed. Drinking with Miss Dutchie: a memoir. New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2011. 070.5/BRE Cockburn, Patrick, 1950Henry's demons: living with schizophrenia, a father and son's story. New York: Scribner, 2011. 616.898/COC Cole, Kresley. Dreams of a dark warrior London: Simon & Schuster, 2011. F /COLE FPB /ROMANCE Delaney, Frank. The matchmaker of Kenmare: a novel of Ireland New York: Random House, c2011. F /DELA Edwards, Kim, 1958The lake of dreams. Camberwell, Vic.: Penguin, 2011. F /EDWA Enright, Anne, 1962The forgotten waltz. London: Jonathan Cape, 2011. F /ENRI Ferreira, Adrienne. Watercolours Sydney: HarperCollins, 2011. F /FERR Fforde, Katie. Summer of love London: Century, 2011. F /FFOR Fowler, Therese. Exposure New York: Ballantine Books, 2011. F /FOWL Gabrielsson, Eva. Stieg & me Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2011. 839.738/GAB Gíslason, Kári The promise of Iceland. St Lucia, Qld: Univ. of Queensland Pr, 2011. 920/GIS Glattauer, Daniel. Love virtually London: MacLehose, 2011. F /GLAT Dave, Laura. The first husband. New York: Viking, 2011. F /DAVE Goldberg, Carey. Three wishes: an ext[r]aordinary true story of good friends on their journey to motherhood. London: Piatkus, 2011. 920/GOL Dawson, Lucy. The one that got away London: Piatkus, 2011. F /DAWS Griffin, Ella. Postcards from the heart. London rion, 2011. F /GRIF Groeschel, Craig. Weird: because normal isn't working Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan, 2011. F /GROE Grey, Amelia. Fall in love like a romance writer. Deerfield Beach, FL : Health Com. 2011. 305.3/GRE Hale, Benjamin. The evolution of Bruno Littlemore New York: Twelve, 2011. F /HALE Herron, Rachael. Lucy's kiss Sydney: Random House Australia, 2011. F /HERR Harris, Rosie, 1925A brighter dawn London: Arrow, 2011. F /HARR Harrison, Kate. The secret shopper affair. London: Orion, 2011. F /HARR Harte, Sarah. The better half Dublin: Penguin, 2011. F /HART Hein, Cathryn. Promises Camberwell, Vic: Michael Joseph, 2011. F /HEIN Hill, Melissa. Something from Tiffany's London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2011. F /HILL Hilton, David E. Kings of Colorado. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011. F /HILT Hogan, Linda. Wrestling the Hulk: my life against the ropes. New York: William Morrow, 2011. 796.812/HOG Hunter, Humfrey. The men files: what men really think about life, love, dating and a whole lot more. London: Headline, 2011. 305/HUN Itzkoff, Dave. Cocaine's son: a memoir. New York: Villard, 2011. 362.29/ITZ Jeffries, Sabrina. How to woo a reluctant lady New York: Pocket Star Books, 2011. FPB /ROMANCE Kultgen, Chad. Men, women & children: a novel New York: Harper Perennial, 2011. F /KULT Laurens, Stephanie. Tangled reins Sutton, England: Seven House, 2011, c1992. F /LAUR Lawrenson, Deborah. The lantern New York: Harper, c2011. F /LAWR Live and let love: notes from extraordinary women on the layers, the laughter, and the litter of love New York: Gallery Books, 2011. 306.7/LIV Mansell, Jill. To the moon and back. London: Headline Review, 2011. F /MANS Meaney, Roisin. The things we do for love. Dublin: Hachette Books Ireland, 2011. F /MEAN Moore, Meg Mitchell. The arrivals Sydney: HarperCollins, 2011. F /MOOR Moorhouse, Frank, 1938Cold light Sydney: Random House Australia, 2011. F /MOOR Murakami, Haruki, 19491Q84 London: Harvill Secker, 2011. F /MURA Sands, Lynsay. The heiress New York: Avon; c2011. FPB /ROMANCE Murray, Jenni, 1950My boy Butch: the heart-warming true story of a little dog who made life worth living again. London: HarperCollins, 2011. 636.76/MUR Sherborne, Craig. The amateur science of love Melbourne: Text, 2011. F /SHER Oates, Joyce Carol, 1938A widow's story: a memoir London: Fourth Estate, 2011. 813.54/OAT 920/OAT O'Flanagan, Sheila. All for you. London: Headline, 2011. F /OFLA Picoult, Jodi, 1966Sing you home. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2011. F /PICO Precious, Dana. Born under a lucky moon. New York: Morrow, 2011. FPB /CHICK-LIT/P Quinn, Anthony, 1964Half of the human race London: Jonathan Cape, 2011. F /QUIN Richards, Denise, 1972The real girl next door New York: Gallery Books, 2011. 791.43/RIC Robards, Karen. Justice London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2011. F /ROBA Roberts, Nora. The next always. New York: Berkley Books, 2011. F /ROBE Roffey, Monique. With the kisses of his mouth: a memoir. London: Simon & Schuster, 2011. 823.92/ROF Stuart, Anne. Reckless Chatswood, N.S.W.: Mira, 2011, ©2010. F /STUA FPB /ROMANCE Taylor, Cory, 1955Me and Mr Booker Melbourne, Vic.: Text Pub., 2011. F /TAYL Trout, Nick. Ever by my side: a memoir of in eight pets. New York: Broadway Books, 2011. 636.089/TRO Veronesi, Sandro, 1959Quiet chaos: a novel New York: Ecco, 2011. F /VERO FPB /WORLD/V Winston, Hilary. My boyfriend wrote a book about me: and other stories I shouldn't share with acquaintances, co-workers, taxi drivers, assistants, job interviewers, bikini waxers and ex/current/future boyfriends but have. New York: Sterling, 2011. 306.73/WIN Wolitzer, Meg. The Uncoupling. New York: Riverhead, 2011. F /WOLI Wood, Charlotte, 1965Animal people. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2011. F /WOOD Yoshimoto, Banana. The lake Brooklyn: Melville House, c2011. F /YOSH Zeaman, John. Dog walks man: a six-legged odyssey. London: Hamlyn, 2011. 636.7/ZEA MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST The Australian/Vogel’s Literary Awards The next meeting of the Book Discussion Group will be on Wednesday 14 March at 6 pm The Australian/Vogel's Literary Award is one of Australia's richest and the most prestigious award for an unpublished manuscript by a writer under the age of thirty-five. Offering publication by Allen & Unwin and prize money totalling $20,000, The Australian/Vogel's Literary Award has launched the careers of some of Australia's most successful writers, including Tim Winton, Kate Grenville, Gillian Mears, Brian Castro, Mandy Sayer and Andrew McGahan. The Australian/Vogel's Literary Award-winning authors have gone on to win or be shortlisted for other major awards, such as the Miles Franklin Award, the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and the Booker Prize. HISTORY: The Australian/Vogel's Literary Award began its remarkable life in early 1980 when Niels Stevns, the owner of Vogel bread in Australia, approached the literary editor of The Australian, Peter Ward, about collaborating on a cultural prize. As a young man in his early twenties, Niels Stevns had come to Australia from Denmark. He had been in his new country for several years when he decided to accompany a sick relative to Switzerland to meet the renowned Swiss naturopath Dr Vogel. This significant meeting led to the establishment of Vogels bread in Australia and to Stevns' successful and rewarding career. His approach to The Australian in 1980 was inspired by gratitude to his adopted land—he wanted to give something back to the nation which had made possible his flourishing business. Literature and classical music were his two great passions, and after much discussion he decided on a literary award, with the emphasis on providing an opportunity for young writers. Following Stevns' call, Peter Ward rang Patrick Gallagher, Allen & Unwin's Managing Director, which led to the successful collaboration between Vogel's, The Australian and Allen & Unwin - and to the birth of The Australian/Vogel's Literary Award, with a prize of $10,000 provided by Vogels for the best manuscript submitted by an author under 30. The Australian undertook to promote the award and Allen & Unwin guaranteed to publish the winning manuscript. In 1982 the age limit of the Award was increased to 35 and the prize money was subsequently increased to $15,000. In 1998 the prize money was further increased to $18,000, in 1999 it increased to $19,000, and it is currently $20,000. In 1997 the traditional number of three judges was increased to four, in response to the ever-growing number of manuscripts submitted to the Award. The judges, who generally serve a three-year term, are selected from among prominent academics, critics and writers and have included Nancy Keesing, Robert Drewe, Helen Garner, Tom Keneally, Marele Day, Andrea Stretton, Barry Oakley, Geoffrey Dutton, Andrew Reimer, Jill Kitson, Alex Buzo, Cate Kennedy and Geordie Williamson. Alan Stevns, Niel's son, is now the steward of The Australian/Vogel's Literary Award, which he sees as a lasting memorial to his father. 2011 The Roving Party by Rohan Wilson F/WILS A surprisingly beautiful evocation of horror and brutality, The Roving Party is a meditation on the intricacies of human nature at its most raw. Description: 1829, Tasmania - John Batman, ruthless, singleminded; four convicts, the youngest still only a stripling; Gould, a downtrodden farmhand; two free black trackers; and powerful, educated Black Bill, brought up from childhood as a white man. This is the roving party and their purpose is massacre. With promises of freedom, land grants and money, each is willing to risk his life for the prize. Passing over many miles of tortured country, the roving party searches for Aborigines, taking few prisoners and killing freely, Batman never abandoning the visceral intensity of his hunt. And all the while, Black Bill pursues his personal quarry, the much-feared warrior, Manalargena. 2009 Night Street by Kristel Thornell FPB/AUSTRALIAN/T An intensely satisfying novel that celebrates the short richly lived life of Australian artist, Clarice Beckett. Description: Night Street is the passionate story of a young painter, Clarice Beckett, who defies society's strict conventions and indifferent art critics alike and leads an intense private and professional life. With her extraordinary talent for making simple city and seascapes haunting and mysteriously revelatory, Clarice paints prolifically and lives largely, overcoming the seemingly confined existence as the spinster daughter in the parental home. Night Street began with Thornell's first encounter with the paintings of Melbourne artist Clarice Beckett (1887-1935) at the Art Gallery of South Australia. The subtle power of Clarice's highly atmospheric, enigmatic landscapes enabled her to imagine Clarice's inner life and shape an extraordinary novel. And Utopian Man by Lisa Lang FPB/AUSTRALIAN/L An exquisite historical novel about a remarkable man who chose his own path, charming and scandalising others in equal measure. Description: It's the 1880s and Marvellous Melbourne is a lavish and raucous city where anything could happen. Eccentric entrepreneur Edward William Cole is building the sprawling Cole's Book Arcade and filling it with whatever amuses him, or supports his favourite causes: a giant squid, a brass band, monkeys, a black man whose skin has turned white, a Chinese tea salon, and of course, hundreds of thousands of books. When Edward decides to marry he advertises for a wife in the newspaper, shocking and titillating the whole town. To everyone's surprise he marries his broadsheet bride and the Arcade grows into a monumental success. But the 1890s depression hits Melbourne - and Edward - hard, and the death of one of his children leaves him reeling. Grief, corruption and a beautiful, unscrupulous widow all threaten to derail his singular vision. But it's not until he visits Chinatown one night - and his own deeply suppressed past - that the idealist faces his toughest challenge. Utopian Man is the story of a man who lives life on his own terms, and leaves behind a remarkable legacy. 2008 Document Z by Andrew Croome F/CROO A masterful, taut and atmospheric novel of political espionage and intrigue, telling the story of the Petrov defection during the Cold War of the 1950s. Description: Canberra, 1951. The Cold War is at its height. Into an atmosphere of paranoia, rumour and suspicion, Vladimir and Evdokia Petrov are among a group of new arrivals at the Soviet Embassy in Canberra. Both are party loyalists, working for the MVD, Moscow intelligence. Yet all is not well in the new city of Canberra. The atmosphere in the Embassy is tense and suspicious; the Ambassador resents their presence, and is secretly working to have Vladimir disgraced and recalled. In the meantime, ASIO are determined to discover who in this new group works for the MVD. Only three short years later, Vladimir has defected and his wife Evdokia is held prisoner at the Soviet Embassy, waiting to be transported back to Russia to face punishment or death for his crime. How did it come to this? A tightly told story of secrets, lies, deception and betrayal - both personal and political - a taut and atmospheric novel of political espionage and intrigue which brings our recent history vividly and immediately to life. 2007 I Dream of Magda by Stefan Laszczuk 2006 The River Baptists by Belinda Castles FPB/AUSTRALIAN/L Genuinely engaging, funny and utterly surprising, a novel of brothers, family and loss. Description: 'Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.' Tolstoy wasn't thinking specifically of the Harrison family when he wrote those words, but maybe he should have been. George Harrison is twenty-eight and afraid of the dark. His father is dead and his mother lives in la-la land. Reeling from a broken heart, and still coping with the trauma of a childhood home invasion, George works in a dead-end job in a bowling alley and finds rare solace in the giant painting of an alien that sits outside his room. His brother Matthew isn't much better off. After losing the love of his life in a traumatic car accident, he's retreated into a private world of sleep where he dreams about falling in love with comedienne Magda Szubanski. Matthew and George are each stuck in their own little messed-up world, with no idea how to get out, and neither of them is sure whether their unhappy family will ever finally pull together, or simply just fall apart. This is a quirky, left-field, yet deeply felt and wholly engaging story of families, love, loss and grieving. FPB/AUSTRALIAN/C A subtle, evocative and engrossing story of secrets, lies and the weight of living with the past. Description: An engrossing novel of secrets, small communities and the consequences of living with the past. Set in a small riverside community, The River Baptists tells the story of Rose, bunkered down in a borrowed house overlooking the river, grieving for her dead father and waiting for her baby to be born. It is also the story of Danny, another refugee from life elsewhere, hiding out from his violent father and dreaming of owning a block of land on the river. Then there are the river old-timers, who miss nothing and forget less, and a newcomer who cares nothing for the locals, or the secrets of the past. Set over the course of a long hot tense summer, when sparks constantly threaten to ignite bushfires, the tight-knit riverside community is set alight by confidences betrayed and a renewed age-old grudge. And through it all flows the mysterious pulse of the river, indifferent, deep and calm, offering the possibility of life and death, renewal and rebirth. 2005 Tuvalu by Andrew O'Connor FPB/WORLD/O A pitch perfect, intriguing, artful novel about exile and apathy, attraction and isolation. Description: A love story of sorts, Tuvalu tells the story of Noah Tuttle, who is glumly and aimlessly living a half kind of life in a cheap rundown hostel in the seamier margins of Tokyo, a place overrun with feral cats and cockroaches. He teaches mediocre English to disinterested students, sleeps with his girlfriend, Tilly, when she's around, drinks beer when he can afford it, and generally avoids other people and their expectations. Nothing much happens to him - until, that is, he meets the wealthy, captivating and completely self-absorbed Mami Kaketa, a supremely selfish creature who leaves people like so much litter in her wake, so brazen and capricious she should come with a health warning. A blackly funny, inconclusive and strangely beguiling story of ennui, escape, exile and dreams. 2004 Road Story by Julienne van Loon FPB/AUSTRALIAN/V A gritty, sun drenched novel about friendship, loneliness and addiction. Description: Diana Kooper runs from a car crash in the heart of Sydney, scarcely looking back, leaving her best friend, Nicole, slumped and bloody in the damaged vehicle. After hitching a ride to the far west of New South Wales, Diana takes a job as a kitchenhand at Bob's, an isolated truck-stop. At first she thinks she can predict the sort of rhythm her life will follow in this dusty, diesel-driven, lonely stop but soon a series of unsettling events disturb the order of things. A dog is brutally stabbed to death and left as a warning beside one of the petrol bowsers. And when Bob rolls his ute in suspicious circumstances, Diana is left to look after the roadhouse kitchen on her own. As every-day life becomes increasingly challenging, Diana struggles with her past and with the ghosts that haunt her present. Road Story is a remarkable novel that reveals the tenuousness of love between friends and the dark pervasiveness of addiction. 2003 2002 2001 Drown Them in the Sea by Nicholas Angel FPB/AUSTRALIAN/A An evocative story about the dreams and desperate realities of life on the land in the Australian outback. With spare, intense language, Nicholas Angel writes of this arid country and the people who struggle to work it. Description: With dreams of moving to a house by the sea haunting their every day, Millvan and his wife, Michelle, owners of a riverside property in a small outback farming community, struggle with drought, friends, adversaries and the wrenchingly familiar rural cycle of hope and despair. Drown them in the Sea tells a compellingly honest story of the challenges and hardships of farming life in Australia. In vivid, vital language, Nicholas Angel captures both devastated landscape and human desire in this powerfully authentic evocation of life on the land. The Alphabet of Light and Dark by Danielle Wood FPB/AUSTRALIAN/W Melding personal, family and colonial history, Wood's evocative and lyrical prose explores the past and place, searching and belonging, love, loss and grief. The Alphabet of Light and Dark is more than an historical novel; it's a novel about history. Description: A tiny coin found inside a Cloudy Bay oyster, a postcard of a white-haired child leaning against a beached dinghy and a coconut peeled and carved once upon a time on the Batavian coast. These trinkets, found in a sea chest, and the fragmented memories of her grandfather's tall tales are all Essie Lewis has left of her family history. After her grandfather's death, Essie returns to Bruny Island, Tasmania and to the lighthouse where her great-great-grandfather kept watch for nearly 40 years. Beneath the lighthouse, she begins to write the stories of her ancestors. But the island is also home to Pete Shelverton, a sculptor who hunts feral cats to make his own peace with the past. And as Essie writes, she finds that Pete is a part of the history she can never escape. Skins by Sarah Hay FPB/AUSTRALIAN/H A compelling, wild novel based on the true story of a young English woman who survives a shipwreck off the coast of Western Australia in 1835. Description: Shipwrecked off the coast of Western Australia in 1835, Dorothea Newell is marooned on Middle Island with other survivors. Stranded, they seek shelter in a sealers' camp. The desolate environment of the island camp is a place where men from all corners of the globe struggle to trade seal skins, and the appearance of women-rare commodities in that place and time-opens a further form of trade. As a desperate means of survival, Dorothea is forced into an alliance with the camp's fierce leader, John Anderson. Skins is the compelling story of Dorothea's emotional and physical journey back to civilisation. Featuring an immense, wild landscape of ocean and islands untainted by human existence, Sarah Hay writes a remarkable tale of people who have fallen through the gaps of recorded history. Shortlisted: Sibyl's Cave by Catherine Padmore FPB/AUSTRALIAN/P 2000 The Artist is a Thief by Stephen Gray (winner) is held at Mosman and Chatswood Attempts to Draw Jesus Stephen Orr (runner-up) is on order and also held at Lane Cove 1999 Love and Vertigo by Hsu-Ming Teo – (winner) is on order and also held at Lane Cove, Mosman, Stanton and Chatswood. The Water Underneath by Kate Lyons- (runner up) is held at Lane Cove 1998 Pegasus in the Suburbs by Jennifer Kremmer is held at Lance Cove and Chatswood. 1997 Hiam by Eva Sallis FPB/WORLD/S Hiam is the story of a journey through both a psychic and geographic landscape, a journey through disintegration and loss. Hiam, an Arab migrant woman, abandons Adelaide to unravel her life and memories on the road North after her family and identity have been destroyed. In the course of the novel she weaves an identity out of past, present, stories, dreams and the Australian landscape with which she engages for the first time. 1996 The Blindman's Hat by Bernard Cohen not held in Shorelink Libraries 1995 Kindling Does For Firewood by Richard King (winner) not held Eleven Months In Bunbury by James Ricks (runner up) not held 1994 Swimming In Silk by Darren Williams (winner) held at Lane Cove Crew by Tony McGowan (highly commended) not held Bombora by Tegan Bennett (short-listed) is on order 1993 The Hand That Signed The Paper by Helen Darville (originally published under the pseudonym Demidenko) is on order 1992 The Mule's Foal by Fotini Epanomitis is held at Chatswood 1991 Praise by Andrew McGahan is on order 1990 The Mint Lawn by Gillian Mears is on order 1989 Mood Indigo by Mandy Sayer is on order 1988 Oceana Fine by Tom Flood is held at Chatswood 1987 Ilias by Jim Sakkas is held at Lane Cove 1986 Glace Fruits by Robin Walton is not held 1985 No prize awarded 1984 Lilian's Story by Kate Grenville is on order 1983 Shields Of Trell by Jenny Summerville is not held 1982 Birds of Passage by Brian Castro (joint winner) is held at Lane Cove, Mosman and Stanton Matilda, My Darling by Nigel Krauth (joint winner) is held at Lane Cove and Chatswood 1981 Al Jazzar by Chris Matthews (joint winner) is not held An Open Swimmer by Tim Winton (joint winner) FPB/AUSTRALIAN/W 1980 The Day Of The Dog by Archie Weller (shortlisted) FPB/W Jack Rivers and Me by Paul Radley. The winner was disqualified when the author revealed that it was actually written by his uncle. Many of the early award winners are now out of print and may not be available from some libraries. You may find like to read some later works by the same author. A BLOG OF BOOK REVIEWS AND SUGGESTIONS FROM STAFF, LIBRARY NEWS, RECOMMENDED WEBSITES AND MORE. http://novelideasmanly.blogspot.com.au/ MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST War Mongers The next meeting of the Book Discussion Group will be on Wednesday 11 April at 6 pm War may sometimes be a necessary evil. But no matter how necessary, it is always an evil, never a good. We will not learn how to live together in peace by killing each other's children. Jimmy Carter, Nobel Lecture, Dec. 10, 2002 All war represents a failure of diplomacy. Tony Benn, speech, Feb. 28, 1991 There never was a good war, or a bad peace. Benjamin Franklin, Poor Richard's Almanac War makes rattling good history; but Peace is poor reading. Thomas Hardy, The Dynasts In time of war, when truth is so precious, it must be attended by a bodyguard of lies. Winston Churchill In war, truth is the first casualty. Aeschylus After a long, hopeless war, people will settle for peace, at almost any price. Salman Rushdie, preface, The Jaguar Smile Fiction: Bishop, Patrick (Patrick Joseph) Follow me home London: Hodder, 2011. F /BISH Boyne, John, 1971The Absolutist. London: Doubleday, 2011. F /BOYN Dekker, Ted, 1962Forbidden New York: Center Street, 2011. F /DEKK Deutermann, Peter T. Pacific glory: a novel New York: St. Martin's Press, 2011. F /DEUT Dinsdale, Robert. Three miles London: Faber & Faber, 2011. F /DINS Docker, Peter, 1964The waterboys. Fremantle, W.A.: Fremantle Press, 2011. F /DOCK Endicott, Marina. The little shadows. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2012. F /ENDI Felice, Simone, 1976Black Jesus Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2011. F /FELI McEuen, Paul. Spiral. London: Headline, 2011. F /MACE Mason, Bobbie Ann. The girl in the blue beret. New York: Random House, 2011. F /MASO Mazzantini, Margaret. Twice born New York: Viking, 2011. F /MAZZ Otsuka, Julie, 1962The Buddha in the attic New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2011. F /OTSU Pick, Alison. Far to go London: Headline Review, 2011. F /PICK Rayne, Sarah. What lies beneath London: Simon & Schuster, 2011. F /RAYN Rosenheim, Andrew. Fear itself. London: Hutchinson, 2011. F /ROSE Sayles, John, 1950A moment in the sun: a novel San Francisco: McSweeney's Books, c2011. F /SAYL Jenoff, Pam. The things we cherished. New York: Doubleday, 2011. F /JENO Schlesak, Dieter. The druggist of Auschwitz: a documentary novel New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011. F /SCHL Keilson, Hans. The death of the adversary London: Vintage, 2011. F /KEIL Sem-Sandberg, Steve, 1958The emperor of lies London: Faber & Faber, 2011. F /SEMS Low, Robert. The lion wakes. London: HarperCollins, 2011. F /LOW Shaara, Jeff. The final storm. New York: Ballantine, 2011. F /SHAA Simons, Jake Wallis. The English German girl. Edinburgh: Polygon, 2011. F /SIMO Squires, Constance. Along the watchtower New York: Riverhead Books, 2011. F /SQUI Young, Louisa. My dear I wanted to tell you. London: HarperCollins, 2011. F /YOUN Non-fiction: Avey, Denis. The man who broke into Auschwitz London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2011. 940.5472/AVE Barcott, Rye. It happened on the way to war: a marine's path to peace. London: Bloomsbury, 2011. 362.556/BAR Bergen, Peter L. A longest war: the enduring conflict between America and al-Qaeda. New York: Free Press, 2011. 909.831/BER Boat people: personal stories from the Vietnamese exodus 1975 – 1992 Cloverdale, W.A.: Carina Hoang Communications, 2010. 325.94/BOA Bradley, Rusty. Lions of Kandahar: the story of a fight against all odds New York: Bantam Books, 2011. 958.104/BRA Carter, Stephen L., 1954The violence of peace: America's wars in the age of Obama New York: Beast Books, 2011. 973.932/OBA Collie, Craig. Nagasaki: the massacre of the innocent and unknowing. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2011. 940.5425/COL Cull, W. Ambrose (William Ambrose) Both sides of the wire: the memoir of an Aust. officer captured during the great war. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2011. 940.472/CUL Dallaire, Romeo. They fight like soldiers, they die like children. London: Hutchinson, 2010. 967.571/DAL Dando-Collins, Stephen. Crack hardy: from Gallipoli to Flanders to the Somme, the true story of 3 brothers at war. North Sydney, N.S.W.: Random House, 2011. 940.48/SEA De Soyza, Niromi. Tamil tigress: my story as a child soldier in Sri Lanka's bloody civil war. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2011. 322.42/DES El Baradei, Mohamed. The age of deception: nuclear diplomacy in treacherous times London: Bloomsbury, 2011. 327.1747/ELB Hastings, Max. All hell let loose: the world at war 1939-45. London: HarperPress, 2011. 940.53/HAS Hillenbrand, Laura. Unbroken: a World War II story of survival, resilience, and redemption. London: Fourth Estate, 2011. 940.5472/ZAM Hoffman, David E. (David Emanuel), 1953The dead hand: Reagan, Gorbachev and the untold story of the Cold War arms race London: Icon, 2011. 909.82/HOF James, Andrew. Kokoda wallaby: Stan Bisset: the rugby international who became a Kokoda hero. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2011. 796.333/JAM Jewell, Matina Caught in the crossfire: an Australian peacekeeper beyond the frontline Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin, 2011. 355.357/JEW Jordan, Jonathan W. Brothers, rivals, victors: Eisenhower, Patton, Bradley, and the partnership that drove the Allied conquest in Europe. New York: NAL Caliber, 2011. 940.54/JOR Sadeed, Suraya Forbidden lessons in a Kabul guesthouse: the true story of a woman who risked everything to bring hope to Afghanistan London: Virago, 2011. 958.1047/SAD Kempe, Frederick. Berlin 1961: Kennedy, Khrushchev, and the most dangerous place on earth. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 2011. and government--1945-1990. 943.155/KEM Sorley, Lewis. Westmoreland: the general who lost Vietnam. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011. 959.7043/WES Lifton, Robert Jay, 1926Witness to an extreme century: a memoir New York: Free Press, 2011. 973.92/LIF Stearns, Jason K. Dancing in the glory of monsters: the collapse of the Congo and the great war of Africa. New York: PublicAffairs, 2011. 967.51/STE Milton, Giles, 1966Wolfram: the boy who went to war London: Sceptre, 2011. 940.5413/AIC Thomas, Louisa. Conscience: two soldiers, two pacifists, one family - a test of will and faith in World War I. New York: Penguin Press, 2011. 940.316/THO Moorehead, Caroline. A train in winter: a story of resistance, friendship and survival. London: Chatto & Windus, 2011. 940.547/MOO Thomson, Jimmy. Tunnel rats: the larrikin Aussie legends who discovered the Vietcong's secret weapon. Crows Nest, N.S.W: Allen & Unwin, 2011. 959.7/THO Ngugi wa Thiong'o, 1938Dreams in a time of war: a childhood memoir. New York: Anchor Books, 2010. 828.914/NGU Van Buren, Peter. We meant well: how I helped lose the war for the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people. New York: Metropolitan Books, 2011. 956.7044/VAN Nichols, David. Eisenhower 1956: the president's year of crisis: Suez and the brink of war New York: Simon & Schuster, c2011. 973.921/EIS Plokhy, Serhii. Yalta: the price of peace New York: Viking, 2010. 940.5314/PLO Reid, Atka. Goodbye Sarajevo: a true story of courage, love and survival London: Bloomsbury, 2011. 949.742/REI Rosenbaum, Ron. How the end begins: the road to a nuclear World War III. London: Simon & Schuster, 2011. 355.0215/ROS Von Tunzelmann, Alex, 1977Red heat: conspiracy, murder and the Cold War in the Caribbean London: Simon & Schuster, 2011. 972.9052/VON Waller, Douglas C. Wild Bill Donovan: the spymaster who created the OSS and modern American espionage New York: Free Press, 2011. 940.5486/DON Zimmerman, Bill. Troublemaker: a memoir from the front lines of the sixties. New York: Doubleday, 2011. 973.92/ZIM MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST Ancient Worlds The next meeting of the Book Discussion Group will be on Wednesday 9 May at 6 pm How old is ancient? Civilisation are usually termed ‘ancient’ if they existed about 2,000 years ago or before, therefore it is worth noting that the Incan and Aztec archaelological sites of Machu Picchu and Tenochtitlán respectively date back to about the fourteenth century A.D. and the Vikings to the ninth and tenth centuries A.D. How have ancient civilisations shaped our present? Fiction: Alten, Steve. The Mayan prophecy London: Quercus, 2011, c2001. F /ALTE Baxter, Stephen. Bronze summer. London: Gollancz, 2011. F /BAXT Burke, James Lee, 1936Rain gods. London: Orion, 2009. F /BURK Byrnes, Michael. The Genesis plague. London: Simon & Schuster, 2010. F /BYRN Deane, Joel, 1969The Norseman's song Melbourne, Vic.: Hunter Publishers, 2010. F /DEAN Gash, Jonathan, 1933The ten word game. London: Alison & Busby, 2003. F /GASH Gregory, Jill. The illumination Sydney: Pan Macmillan, 2009. F /GREG Hamilton, Lyn. The Orkney scroll New York: Berkley Prime Crime, 2006. F /HAMI FPB /DETECTION Hamilton, Lyn. The chinese alchemist. New York: Berkley Prime Crime, 2007. F /HAMI Himsworth, Neil. Nobilitas: a novel of ancient Rome. Brighton, Sussex: Book Guild, 2009. F /HIMS Holt, Anne. 1222 London: Corvus, 2010. F /HOLT Hwang, Sok Yong. The ancient garden London: Picador, 2009. F /HWAN Lott, Bret. Ancient highway: a novel New York: Random House, 2008. F /LOTT Manfredi, Valerio Massimo. The ancient curse London: Macmillan, 2010. F /MANF Hamilton, Lyn. The Etruscan chimera. New York; Berkley, 2002. F /HAMI Tremayne, Peter, 1943Dancing with demons : a mystery of ancient Ireland New York: St. Martin's Minotaur, 2008. F /TREM Hamilton, Lyn. The Thai amulet. New York: Berkley Prime Crime, 2003. F /HAMI Zhang, Wei. The ancient ship London: Harper Perennial, 2008. FPB /WORLD/Z Hamilton, Lyn. The Magyar Venus. New York: Berkley Prime Crime, 2004. F /HAMI Hamilton, Lyn. The Moai murders New York: Berkley Prime Crime, 2005. F /HAMI Non-fiction: Adams, Mark. Turn right at Machu Picchu: rediscovering the lost city one step at a time. New York: Dutton, 2011. 985.37/ADA Dawn, Maggi The accidental pilgrim : new journeys on ancient pathways. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2011. 263.041/DAW Báez, Fernando, 1970A universal history of the destruction of books: from ancient Sumer to modern Iraq New York: Atlas & Co., 2008. 027/BAE Fagan, Brian M. (Brian Murray), 1936The first North Americans: an archaeological journey New York, N.Y.: Thames & Hudson, 2011. 970/FAG Billington, Penny. The path of Druidry: walking the ancient green way. Woodbury, Minn.: Llewellyn Pub, c2011. 299.16/BIL Feeney, Denis. Caesar's calendar: ancient time and the beginnings of history. Berkeley, Calif.; London: University of California Press, 2007. 529.3/FEE Billows, Richard A. Marathon: how one battle changed western civilization. New York: Overlook Duckworth, 2010. 938/BIL Goldin, Paul R. Confucianism Durham: Acumen, 2010. 181.112/GOL Bowden, Hugh. Mystery cults of the ancient world. London Princeton University Press, 2010. 200.9/BOW The great empires of the ancient world Los Angeles, Calif.: The J. Paul Getty Museum, 2009. 930/GRE Camp, John. The world of the ancient Greeks New York, N.Y.: Thames & Hudson, 2010. 938/CAM Haywood, John, 1956The ancient world London: Quercus, 2010. 930/HAY Carroll, James, 1943Jerusalem, Jerusalem: how the ancient city ignited our modern world. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011. 956.9442/CAR Hazzard, Shirley, 1931The ancient shore: dispatches from Naples Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago Pr, 2008. 914.573/HAZ Cartledge, Paul. Ancient Greece: a history in eleven cities. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009. 938/CAR Hunt, Terry L. The statues that walked: unraveling the mystery of Easter Island New York: Free Press, ©2011. 996.18/HUN Coe, Michael D. (Michael Douglas) The Maya London: Thames and Hudson, 2011. 972.81/COE I am soldier: war stories from the ancient world to the 20th century Oxford: Osprey, 2009. 355.109/IAM Davis, Wade. The wayfinders: why ancient wisdom matters in the modern world. Crawley, W.A.: UWA Publishing, 2010. 305.8/DAV Johnson, Anthony. Solving Stonehenge: the new key to an ancient enigma. London: Thames & Hudson, 2008. 936.1/JOH Krebs, Christopher B. A most dangerous book: Tacitus's Germania from the Roman Empire to the Third Reich. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2011. 878/TAC Lewis-Williams, J. David. Deciphering ancient minds: the mystery of San Bushman Rock Art London: Thames & Hudson, 2011. 759.0113/LEW Malin, David. Ancient light: a portrait of the universe. London: Phaidon Press, 2009. 523.1/MAL Menzies, Gavin. The lost empire of Atlantis: history's greatest mystery revealed. London: Swordfish, 2011. 938.01/MEN Miles, Richard, 1969Ancient worlds: the search for the origins of western civilization London: Allen Lane, 2010. 909/MIL Milovanovic, Mirko. Rome: discovering the ancient metropolis [Germany]: Bucher Publishing, 2010. 914.5632/MIL O'Brien, Cormac. The fall of empires: from glory of ruin, an epic account of history's ancient civilisations. Sydney: Murdoch Books, 2009. 325.32/OBR Oliver, Neil. A history of ancient Britain London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2011. 936.1/OLI INPROCESS no circ Potter, D. S. (David Stone), 1957The victor's crown: a history of ancient sport from Homer to Byzantium. London: Quercus, 2011. 796.09/POT Preston, Diana, 1952Cleopatra and Antony: power, love, and politics in the ancient world. New York: Walker & Co, 2009. 932/CLE The Roman army: the greatest war machine of the ancient world London: Osprey, 2010. 355.0937/ROM Ryan, Donald P. Ancient Egypt on five deben a day. London: Thames & Hudson, 2010. 932/RYA Ryan, Donald P. Beneath the sands of Egypt: adventures of an unconventional archaeologist New York: William Morrow, c2010. 932/RYA Sabin, Philip A. G. Lost battles: reconstructing the great clashes of the ancient world London: Hambledon Continuum, 2009. 930.16/SAB Sawyer, Ralph D. Ancient Chinese warfare. New York: Basic Books, 2011. 355.02/SAW Stothard, Peter. On the Spartacus road: a spectacular journey through ancient Italy. London: Harper Press, 2010. 937.05/STO War: from ancient Egypt to Iraq [New York]: DK, 2009. 355/WAR Waxman, Sharon. Loot: the battle over the stolen treasures of the ancient world. New York: Times Books, 2008. 709.01/WAX Wilkinson, Toby A. H. The rise and fall of ancient Egypt: the history of a civilisation from 3000 BC to Cleopatra London: Bloomsbury, 2010. 932/WIL Yu, Dan, 1965Confucius from the heart: ancient wisdom for today's world Sydney: Pan Macmillan, 2009. 181.112/YU MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST Best of British The next meeting of the Book Discussion Group will be on Wednesday 13 June at 6 pm A strong crop of British authors emerged during the 20th century. From "The Waste Land" to "1984," 20th century British writers helped shape the modern and postmodern movements in art and literature. While they have been strong in number, the majority of great works came during the first half of the century. Unparalleled economic and geopolitical catastrophes helped mould a generation raised with great hardship and little hope. World Wars I and II and the severe economic depression in between encouraged the exploration of themes like destitution and loss and accounts of adventures from the battlefronts and breadlines. Fiction: Adams, Douglas, 1952-2001. Mostly harmless. London: Heinemann, 1992. FPB /SCI-FI Adams, Douglas, 1952-2001. The salmon of doubt: hitchhiking the galaxy one last time. London: Macmillan, 2002. FPB /A Adams, Richard. Daniel. Hull, U.K.: Wrecking Ball Press, 2006. F /ADAM Adams, Richard, 1920Watership Down. London: Penguin, 1974. F /ADAM FPB /CLASSIC/A Amis, Martin, 1949The pregnant widow: inside history. London: Jonathan Cape Ltd, 2010. F /AMIS Amis, Martin, 1949House of meetings. London: Jonathan Cape, 2006. F /AMIS Amis, Martin, 1949The pregnant widow: inside history. London: Jonathan Cape Ltd, 2010. F /AMIS Archer, Jeffrey. The gospel according to Judas London: Macmillan, 2007. F /ARCH Barnes, Julian. Pulse London: Jonathan Cape, 2011. F /BARN Barnes, Julian. The sense of an ending. London: Jonathan Cape, 2011. F /BARN Barnes, Julian, 1946The lemon table. London: Random House, 2004. F /BARN FPB /SHORT STORY/B Barnes, Julian, 1946Arthur & George. London: Jonathan Cape, 2005. F /BARN Beckett, Samuel, 1906-1989. Murphy London: Calder, 1993. FPB /CLASSIC/B Blincoe, Nicholas. Burning Paris. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2004. FPB /WORLD/B Brookner, Anita. The rules of engagement. London: Viking, 2003. F /BROO Brookner, Anita. Leaving home London: Viking, 2005. FPB /B Brookner, Anita. Strangers London: Fig Tree, 2009. F /BROO Burgess, Anthony, 1917-1993. A clockwork orange London: Penguin Books, 1996. F /BURG FPB /CLASSIC/B Burgess, Anthony, 1917-1993. The kingdom of the wicked. London: Hutchinson, 1985. F /BURG Byatt, A. S. (Antonia Susan), 1936A whistling woman. London: Chatto & Windus, 2002. General Note: Fourth novel in the quartet that began with The virgin in the garden, Still life and Babel Tower. F /BYAT Byatt, A. S. (Antonia Susan), 1936The children's book London: Chatto & Windus, 2009. F /BYAT Byatt, A. S. (Antonia Susan), 1936Ragnarok: the end of gods Melbourne: Text, 2011. F /BYAT FPB /B Greene, Graham, 1904-1991. No man's land London: Hesperus, c2005. FPB /CLASSIC/G Fleming, Ian, 1908-1964. Quantum of solace: the complete James Bond short stories. London: Penguin, 2008. FPB /THRILLER Hornby, Nick, 1957A long way down. Camberwell, Vic.: Viking, 2005. F /HORN Fleming, Ian, 1908-1964. Octopussy. London: Penguin, 2008. F /FLEM Fowles, John, 1926-2005. The Magus: a revised edition. London: Cape, 1977. F /FOWL Fowles, John, 1926-2005. The collector. London: Cape, 1979. F /FOWL Fowles, John, 1926-2005. The French lieutenant's woman. London: Cape, 1969. F /FOWL Garland, Alex, 1970The coma New York: Riverhead Books, 2004. F /GARL Gibbons, Stella, 1902-1989. Nightingale Wood London: Virago, 2009. FPB /G Gibbons, Stella, 1902-1989. Cold comfort farm. London: Allen Lane, 1976. F /GIBB Gibbons, Stella, 1902-1989. Christmas at Cold Comfort farm. London: Vintage, 2011. FPB /G Greene, Graham, 1904-1991. The power and the glory. New York: Penguin, 2003. F /GREE FPB /CLASSIC/G Hornby, Nick, 1957Slam London: Penguin, 2007. YA /HORN Hornby, Nick, 1957Juliet, naked London: Penguin, 2009. FPB /H Horowitz, Anthony, 1955Scorpia rising. London: Walker Books, 2011. YA /HORO Horowitz, Anthony, 1955The house of silk London: Orion, 2011. F /HORO Huxley, Aldous, 1894-1963. Brave new world revisited London: Vintage, 2004. FPB /CLASSIC/H James, P. D. The lighthouse. London: Faber and Faber, 2005. F /JAME James, P. D. The private patient London: Faber, 2008. F /JAME James, P. D. Death comes to Pemberley London: Faber, 2011. F /JAME Lodge, David, 1935Thinks. London: Secker & Warburg, 2001. F /LODG Lodge, David, 1935Author, author. London: Secker & Warburg, 2004. F /LODG Rushdie, Salman. Luka and the Fire of Life London: Jonathan Cape, 2010. F /RUSH Lodge, David, 1935Deaf sentence London: Harvill Secker, 2008. F /LODG Sharpe, Tom, 1928Wilt in nowhere. London: Hutchinson, 2004. F /SHAR Lodge, David, 1935A man of parts London: Harvill Secker, 2011. F /LODG Swift, Graham, 1949Tomorrow London: Picador 2007. F /SWIF Murdoch, Iris, 1919-1999. The green knight. London: Chatto & Windus, 1993. F /MURD Swift, Graham, 1949Wish you were here. London: Picador, 2011. F /SWIF Murdoch, Iris, 1919-1999. Something special. London: Chatto & Windus, 1999. F /MURD Toibin, Colm, 1955The master. London: Picador, 2004. F /TOIB Murdoch, Iris, 1919-1999. Jackson's dilemma. London: Chatto & Windus, 1995. F /MURD Toibin, Colm, 1955Mothers and sons Sydney: Pan Macmillan Australia, 2006. F /TOIB Naipaul, V. S. (Vidiadhur Surajprasad), 1932Among the believers: an Islamic journey. London: Picador, 2001. 956/NAI Toibin, Colm, 1955Brooklyn New York: Scribner, 2009. F /TOIB FPB /T Naipaul, V. S. (Vidiadhur Surajprasad), 1932Magic seeds. London: Picador, 2004. F /NAIP Toibin, Colm, 1955The empty family: stories. London: Picador, 2010. F /TOIB Rathbone, Julian, 1935A very English agent. London: Little, Brown, 2002. FPB /HISTORICAL/R Unsworth, Barry. Land of marvels. New York: Nan A. Talese, 2009. F /UNSW Rendell, Ruth, 1930Tigerlily's orchids. London: Hutchinson, 2010. F /REND Unsworth, Barry. The quality of mercy. London: Hutchinson, 2011. F /UNSW Rendell, Ruth, 1930The vault. London: Hutchinson, 2011. F /REND Waugh, Evelyn, 1903-1966. A handful of dust. London: Penguin, 2000. F /WAUG FPB /CLASSIC/W Waugh, Evelyn, 1903-1966. Brideshead revisited. Camberwell, Vic.: Penguin Books, 2009. FPB /CLASSIC/W Wells, H. G. (Herbert George), 1866-1946. The collector's book of science fiction by H.G. Wells. N.J.: Castle books, 1979. F /WELL Wells, H. G. (Herbert George), 1866-1946. The country of the blind London: Penguin, 2005. NFPB /LITERATURE Wells, H. G. (Herbert George), 1866-1946. Time machine; The invisible man ; and, The war of the worlds New York: Everyman's Library, 2010. F /WELL Winterson, Jeanette, 1959Lighthousekeeping. London: Fourth Estate, 2004. F /WINT FPB /W Winterson, Jeanette, 1959Weight. Melbourne: Text Publishing, 2005. FPB /W Winterson, Jeanette, 1959The stone gods. Melbourne: Hamish Hamilton, 2007. F /WINT Winterson, Jeanette, 1959The battle of the sun. London: Bloomsbury, 2009. YA /WINT Witting, Amy, 1918-2001. Maria's war. Ringwood, Vic: Viking, 1998. F /WITT Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. Mrs Dalloway; and, A room of one's own. Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010. F /WOOL Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. Orlando: a biography London: Vintage, 2004. F /WOOL Non-Fiction and Biography: Amis, Martin, 1949The second plane: September 11: 2001-2007 London: Jonathan Cape, 2008. 973.931/AMI Barnes, Julian, 1946Nothing to be frightened of. London: Jonathan Cape, 2008. 828.914/BAR Beckett, Samuel, 1906-1989. I can't go on, I'll go on: a selection from Samuel Beckett's work New York: Grove, 1991. 828.914/BEC Beckett, Samuel, 1906-1989. Waiting for Godot: a tragicomedy in two acts London: Faber and Faber, 2006. 822.91/BEC Bowker, Gordon. James Joyce: a biography. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2011. 823.912/JOY Graves, Robert, 1895-1985. Lawrence and the Arabs New York: Paragon House, 1991, c1955. 940.415/GRA Graves, Robert, 1895-1985. The white goddess: a historical grammar of poetic myth. Manchester, UK: Faber and Faber, 1999. 291/GRA Greene, Graham, 1904-1991. The lawless roads New York: Penguin Books, 2006. NFPB /TRAVEL Greene, Graham, 1904-1991. Journey without maps New York: Penguin Books, 2006. NFPB /TRAVEL Greene, Graham, 1904-1991. Graham Greene: a life in letters London: Little, Brown, 2006. 823.912/GRE Heaney, Seamus. Human chain New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2010. 821.914/HEA Pinter, Harold, 1930-2008. The Caretaker: Pinter: plays. Faber Paperbacks, 1991. 822.914/PIN Heaney, Seamus, 1939District and circle London: Faber and Faber, 2006. 821/HEA Stoppard, Tom, 1937Arcadia. London: Faber, 1993. 822.914/STO Hughes, Ted, 1930-1998. Letters of Ted Hughes / selected and edited by Christopher Reid. London: Faber and Faber, 2007. 821.914/HUG 920/HUG Stoppard, Tom, 1937Plays one London: Faber, 1996. 822.914/STO Hughes, Ted, 1930-1998. River London: Faber and Faber, 2011. 821.914/HUG Hughes, Ted, 1930-1998. Remains of Elmet London: Faber, 2011. 821.914/HUG Jacobs, Alan, 1958The Narnian : the life and imagination of C.S. Lewis San Francisco: Harper SanFrancisco, 2005. 823/LEW O'Casey, Sean, 1880-1964. Three Dublin plays London: Faber, 1998. 822.912/OCA Orwell, George, 1903-1950. George Orwell: a life in letters: selected and annotated by Peter Davison. London: Harvill Secker, 2010. 823.91/ORW Orwell, George, 1903-1950. Homage to Catalonia; and, Down and out in Paris and London. Boston, Mass: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010. 920/ORW Orwell, George, 1903-1950. Some thoughts on the common toad. London: Penguin Books, 2010. NFPB /LITERATURE Thomas, Dylan, 1914-1953. The Dylan Thomas omnibus London: Dent, 1995. 828.912/THO Winterson, Jeanette, 1959Why be happy when you could be normal? London: Jonathan Cape, 2011. 823.92/WIN Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. Hyde Park Gate News: the Stephen family newspaper London: Hesperus Press, 2005. 828.91/WOO Fry, Stephen, 1957Moab is my washpot. London: Arrow Books, 2004. 792.092/FRY Fry, Stephen, 1957The Fry chronicles London: Michael Joseph, 2010. 792.7/FRY James, P. D. Talking about detective fiction. London: Faber, 2009. 808.3872/JAM Lodge, David, 1935Scenes of academic life London: Penguin, 2005. NFPB /LITERATURE Swift, Graham, 1949Making an elephant: writing from within. London: Picador, 2009. 828.914/SWI MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST Dagger Awards August 2012 T Th hee n neexxtt m meeeettiin ng go off tth hee B p up ou Grro nG on ussssiio Diissccu okk D oo Bo w n on bee o wiillll b W usstt 22001122 gu ug Au daayy 88 A neessd dn Weed aan d nd tthh T daayy 99 A usstt 22001122 urrssd gu hu ug Th Au aatt 66 p m pm The Crime Writers‘ Association‘s prestigious Diamond Dagger recipient is chosen each year by the CWA committee, from a shortlist nominated by the membership. It is very much an honour awarded by the author‘s peers and this makes it special. Shortlisted authors must meet two essential criteria: first, their careers must be marked by sustained excellence, and second, they must have made a significant contribution to crime fiction published in the English language, whether originally or in translation. The award is made purely on merit without reference to age, gender or nationality. 2011 The Diamond Dagger, awarded for sustained excellence in crime writing, was presented to bestselling historical author Lindsey Davis. Davis is the creator of the well-loved ancient Roman private eye Marcus Didius Falco, and widely recognised as the godmother of the historical crime genre. Lindsey Davis‘s website is at www.lindseydavis.co.uk. Manly Library holds a number of Davis‘ books, including Alexandria, Nemesis, Rebels and Traitors, and Saturnalia at F/DAVI 2011 CWA Gold Dagger was awarded to Tom Franklin for Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter Franklin, Tom. Crooked letter, crooked letter. F /FRAN Amos, Mississippi, is a quiet town. Silas Jones is its sole law enforcement officer. The last excitement here was nearly twenty years ago, when a teenage girl disappeared on a date with Larry Ott, Silas‘s one-time boyhood friend. The law couldn't prove Larry guilty, but the whole town has shunned him ever since. Then the town's peace is shattered when someone tries to kill the reclusive Ott, another young woman goes missing, and the town‘s drug dealer is murdered. Woven through the tautly written murder story is the unspoken secret that hangs over the lives of two men - one black, one white. Miller, Andrew. Snowdrops. F /MILL FPB /WORLD/M Snowdrops is an intensely riveting psychological drama that unfolds over the course of one Moscow winter, as a young Englishman‘s moral compass is spun by the seductive opportunities revealed to him by a new Russia: a land of hedonism and desperation, corruption and kindness, magical dachas and debauched nightclubs; a place where secrets – and corpses – come to light only when the deep snows start to thaw…. Mina, Denise. The end of the wasp season. F /MINA When notorious millionaire banker Lars Anderson hangs himself from the old oak tree in front of his Kent mansion his death attracts no sympathy. One less shark is little loss to a world nursing a financial hangover. But the legacy of a life time of self-serving is widespread, the carnage most acute among those he ought to be protecting: his family. He leaves behind two deeply damaged children and a broken wife. Meanwhile, in a wealthy suburb of Glasgow, a young woman is found savagely murdered in her home. The genteel community is stunned by what appears a vicious, random attack. When DS Alex Morrow, heavily pregnant with twins, is called in to investigate, she soon discovers that behind the murder lurks a tangled web of lies. A web that will spiral through the local community, through Scotland and ultimately right back to a swinging rope hundreds of miles away. 2011 CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger The broadest definition of the thriller novel is used for books eligible for this Dagger; these can be set in any period and include, but are not limited to, spy fiction and/or action/ adventure stories. Ian Fleming said there was one essential criterion for a good thriller - that ‗one simply has to turn the page‘. Hamilton, Steve. The lock artist. F /HAMI Michael survived the terrible incident that took his parents. But although his escape was miraculous, it left him unable to speak. Taunted as a freak, school becomes a fresh nightmare, until Michael discovers he has a special talent that makes people sit up and take notice: he can open locks. A teenage prank burgling the house of a rival school‘s quarterback lands him in hot water and, despite his best intentions, Michael soon finds himself on a downward slope that ends with expert instruction on how to open safes. And unless he agrees to put his newfound skills to use, the mob are going to kill the father of the girl he now loves. So begins an extraordinary life of crime - at once terrifying and exhilarating. The Lock Artist was also shortlisted for the CWA Gold Dagger and has won an Edgar from the Mystery Writers of America, for the best novel of 2011. Gruber, Michael The Good Son A SON Once a child warrior in the mujhadeen‘s struggle against the Soviets, once a Delta Force soldier, now a covert operative in the USA‘s secret War Against Terror in Pakistan. His name is legend among the tribes of Pashtun. A MOTHER Held hostage in the mountain fastness of North West Pakistan. With a long-standing fatwah hanging over her, her execution is a certainty. She knows she can‘t out-fight her captors, but can she out-think them? A FAMILY Prepared to do whatever it takes to protect its own, whatever the cost, even if it means unleashing a nightmare that could engulf the world in flames. THE GOOD SON A provocative, highstakes thriller that moves from the subterranean corridors of Washington DC to the backstreets of Lahore to the high mountains of the Hindu Kush, tackling the collision of Islam and the West head on with a high-octane mixture of CIA and NSA tradecraft, Sharia law and Sufi mysticism. Other books by Michael Gruber at Manly Library include: The book of air and shadows F /GRUB Forgery of Venus. FPB /THRILLER Valley of bones. F /GRUB 2011 CWA John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger Award This award is made in memory of CWA founder John Creasey, for first books by previously unpublished writers. The CWA Dagger Awards are the longest established literary awards in the UK and are internationally recognised as a mark of excellence and achievement. Watson, S. J. Before I go to sleep. F /WATS Rooted in the workings of memory, Before I Go To Sleep is all the more frightening for its authenticity as Watson based his protagonist‘s terrifying predicament on a factual medical condition. ‗As I sleep, my mind will erase everything I did today. I will wake up tomorrow as I did this morning. Thinking I‘m still a child. Thinking I have a whole lifetime of choice ahead of me …‘ The book was also in the running for the Ian Fleming Steel Dagger, and the film rights have already been bagged by Ridley Scott. Fitzgerald, Conor. The dogs of Rome: an Alec Blume novel F /FITZ Alec Blume, is a Chief Inspector in the Roman police, yet is fated to be a constant foreigner, a constant observer. Like many a hard-boiled detective/ sheriff/ western hero, he will negotiate his own moral course, but not without mistakes and doubts. Alec Blume is called on to investigate the atrocious killing of an animals‘ rights activist during the hottest days of the summer. The victim is also the husband of an important Italian politician, and Blume is reminded that even a murder inquiry has to follow the lines of political convenience. 2011 CWA International Dagger The CWA International Dagger is a competition for crime, thriller, suspense or spy fiction novels which have been translated into English from their original language, for UK publication. The 2011 winners are Anders Roslund & Börge Hellström with Three Seconds, and translated from the Swedish by Kari Dickson. Roslund, Anders. Three seconds F /ROSL Piet Hoffmann is the best undercover operative in the Swedish police force, but only one other man is even aware of his existence. After a drug deal he is involved in goes badly wrong, he must face the hardest mission of his life – infiltrating Sweden‘s most infamous maximum-security prison. Detective Inspector Ewert Grens is charged with investigating the drugrelated killing. Unaware of Hoffmann‘s real identity, he believes himself to be on the trail of a dangerous psychopath. But he cannot escape the feeling that vital information pertaining to the case has been withheld or manipulated. Varesi, Valerio. River of shadows. F /VARE Introducing Commissario Soneri, a highly original, complex creation, in a brooding and evocative crime novel set in the Po valley.Rain falls relentlessly on the Po valley in northern Italy, and the river is swollen to its limits. A huge barge leaves its moorings, steering an erratic course downstream and away into the foggy night. When finally it runs aground hours later, the bargeman is nowhere to be found. Commissario Soneri is summoned to investigate the apparent suicide of a man in nearby Parma. He and the bargeman were brothers, and when the detective discovers that they served together in the fascist militia fifty years earlier, the incidents seem likely to be linked. Vargas, Fred. An uncertain place F /VARG Commissaire Adamsberg leaves Paris for a three-day conference in London. With him are a young sergeant, Estalère, and Commandant Danglard, who is terrified at the idea of travelling beneath the Channel. It is the break they all need, until a macabre and brutal case comes to the attention of their colleague Radstock from New Scotland Yard. Just outside the baroque and romantic old Highgate cemetery a pile of shoes is found. Not so strange in itself, but the shoes contain severed feet. Villar, Domingo. Death on a Galician shore F /VILL One misty autumn morning in a quiet fishing port in northwest Spain, the body of a drowned sailor, his hands tied, washes up in the harbour. Detective Inspector Leo Caldas is called in from police headquarters in the nearby city of Vigo to sign off on what appears to be a suicide. But details soon come to light that turn this routine matter into a complex murder investigation. Finding out the truth is not easy when the villagers are so suspicious of outsiders and sparing with their words. As Caldas delves into the maritime life of the village, he uncovers a Currently in disturbing decade-old case of a shipwreck and two mysterious processing disappearances. 2011 CWA Non-Fiction Gold Dagger The CWA Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction is a competition for any non-fiction work on a real-life crime theme or a closely-related subject by an author of any nationality, as long as the book was first published in the UK in English. The 2011 winner is Douglas Starr for The Killer of Little Shepherds. Starr, Douglas Perret The killer of little shepherds: a true crime story and the birth of forensic science. 364.1523/VAC At the end of the nineteenth century, serial murderer Joseph Vacher, dubbed ―The Killer of Little Shepherds,‖ terrorised the French countryside. He eluded authorities for years - until he ran up against prosecutor Emile Fourquet and Dr. Alexandre Lacassagne, the era‘s most renowned criminologist. The two men typified the Belle Epoque, a period of immense scientific achievement and fascination with its promise to reveal the secrets of the human condition. Currently in processing Flanders, Judith. The invention of murder: how the Victorians revelled in death and detection and created modern crime. 364.1523/FLA Murder in the 19th century was rare. But murder as sensation and entertainment began and became ubiquitous – transformed into novels, into broadsides and ballads, into theatre and melodrama and opera – even into puppet shows and performing dog-acts. Flanders retells the gruesome stories of many different types of murder – both famous and obscure. From the crimes (and myths) of Sweeny Todd and Jack the Ripper, to the tragedies of the murdered Marr family in London‘s East End, Burke and Hare and their bodysnatching business in Edinburgh, to Greenacre who transported his dismembered fiancée around town by omnibus. Rideau, Wilbert. In the place of justice: a story of punishment and deliverance. 365.6092 22/RIDE In 1961, young, black, eighth-grade dropout Wilbert Rideau despaired of his small-town future in the segregated deep south of America. He set out to rob the local bank and after a bungled robbery he killed the bank teller, a fifty-year-old white female. He was arrested and gave a full confession. When we meet Rideau he has just been sentenced to death row, from where he embarks on an extraordinary journey. He is imprisoned at Angola, the most violent prison in America, where brutality, sexual slavery and local politics confine prisoners in ways that bars alone cannot. Capuzzo, Mike. The murder room: in which three of the greatest detectives use forensic science to solve the world's most perplexing cold cases. 363.25/CAP Three of the world‘s greatest detectives – a renowned former FBI agent, a forensic sculptor and an eccentric profiler known as ‗the living Sherlock Holmes‘ – were distraught at the growing tide of unsolved murders. And so William Fleisher, Frank Bender and Richard Walter pledged themselves to a quest for justice . . . They invited the finest collection of forensic minds ever assembled, drawn from five continents, to bring the coldest killers in the world to account. Colquhoun, Kate. Mr Briggs' hat: a sensational account of Britain's first railway murder. 364.1523/BRI In July 1864, Thomas Briggs was travelling home after visiting his niece and her husband for dinner. He entered a First Class carriage on the 9.45pm Hackney service of the North London railway. At Hackney, two bank clerks entered the carriage and discovered blood in the seat cushions; also on the floor, windows and sides of the carriage. A bloodstained hat was found on the seat along with a broken link from a watch chain. The race to identify the killer and catch him as he flees on a boat to America was eagerly followed by citizens both sides of the Atlantic. The CWA Dagger in the Library authors are nominated by UK libraries and Readers‘ Groups and judged by a panel of librarians, all of whom work with the public. The Dagger is awarded to an author for a body of work, rather than a single title. Mo Hayder is winner of the 2011 CWA Dagger in the Library. The judges praised her ―Twisting, hard-hitting crime novels with a haunting emotional pull on the reader‖, adding ―Damaged detective Jack Caffery and police diver Flea Marley are one of the best pairings in current crime writing with each story leaving fans clamouring for more.‖ Her web site is www.mohayder.net Some of her books held at Manly Library are: Pig Island. F /HAYD Ritual. F /HAYD Tokyo. F /HAYD FPB /THRILLER Gone. F /HAYD Hanging Hill. F /HAYD S.J. Bolton was also nominated Judges said her books are ‗Fast-paced, lurid page turners that you simply can‘t put down. Splendidly warped and macabre stories with larger than life characters that grip and don't let go till the end.‘ Blood Harvest was shortlisted for the 2010 CWA Gold Dagger. Her website is www.sjbolton.com. Manly Library holds : Dead scared just published and is on order Awakening F /BOLT Blood harvest F /BOLT Now you see me also on order R.J. Ellory was also nominated Judges said: ‗He writes American style fiction better than the Americans, with each one different from the last. A master at creating whole new casts of characters and engaging the reader's emotions in the story. ‘ His web site is www.rjellory.com Manly Library holds: The anniversary man. F /ELLO Bad signs F /ELLO Saints of New York. F /ELLO A simple act of violence F /ELLO A dark and broken heart is on order Jason Goodwin was also nominated Judges‘ said ‗Yashim the Eunuch is a great new addition to the pool of crime fiction detectives, and one who will inspire great affection in readers. The historical setting springs to life almost as another character and the stories are well plotted and satisfying reads.‘ His website is www.jasongoodwin.net Some of his books held at Manly Library include: The Bellini card. F /GOOD An evil eye: a novel. F /GOOD The snake stone. F /GOOD Susan Hill was also nomiated Judges said ‗Beautifully written, lyrical tales following not just the detective but his family and immediate circle as well. Each book leaves the reader better aquainted with her beguiling world and less and less willing to leave it. ‘ Her website is www.susan-hill.com Some of her books at manly Library include: A kind man. F /HILL The shadows in the street. F /HILL The risk of darkness: a Simon Serrailler crime novel. F /HILL The betrayal of trust F /HILL A kind man. F /HILL Philip Kerr, another popular crime writer Judges‘ said ‗Bernie Gunther is the original hard-boiled cop; his time in the SS makes him a somewhat morally ambiguous but likeable character which adds an extra dimension to some intricately plotted stories. The historical details are meticulously researched. ‘ His website is www.philipkerr.org Some of Philip Kerr‘s books at Manly Library: Field gray. F /KERR Field grey: a Bernie Gunther novel F /KERR If the dead rise not. F /KERR Prague fatale F /KERR A quiet flame. F /KERR 2011 CWA Ellis Peters Award (Historical) Martin, Andrew. The Somme stations F /MART The Somme Stations, plunges into the horrors of World War One trench combat. Stringer and his unit must undertake dangerous nocturnal assignments: driving the trains taking munitions to the front. Death is everywhere, as the trains travel through blasted surrealistic landscapes, and a single-minded military policeman continues to investigate a killing that occurred before the departure for France. Clements, Rory. Prince. F /CLEM Rory Clements won the Ellis Peters award last year for Revenger, the second instalment in his John Shakespeare series. Prince is the third book to feature this Elizabethan intelligencer, and finds Shakespeare caught up in the infighting between the Queen‘s rival favourites, Robert Cecil and Lord Essex, as he investigates a series of bombings targeting Dutch immigrants in London. Eastland, Sam. The red coffin. F /EAST Sam Eastland‘s second novel sees the return of the brilliant special investigator Inspector Pekkala, once the trusted advisor of Tsar Nicholas II, now forced to work for Stalin. It is 1939 and rogue Russian soldiers are trying to precipitate war with Germany before Stalin‘s secret weapon is ready — a super tank known as the ―red coffin‖. This manages to be a superbly entertaining thriller while fully conveying the horrors of life under Stalin. Ferris, Gordon. The hanging shed. F /FERR The Hanging Shed was a massive success even before its print incarnation hit the bookshops, when it became one of the most downloaded books in Britain after being released on the Amazon Kindle. The setting is Glasgow in 1946, and the author‘s delineation of the immediate post-war years has a bristling immediacy. Ferris‘s protagonist Brodie is an expoliceman, forced to save a childhood friend from hanging via a daunting odyssey through the dangerous backstreets of the Gorbals, obstructed by both bent coppers and murderous razor gangs. Morris, R. N. The cleansing flames F /MORR Reading this splendid fourth entry in the RN Morris sequence of riffs on the detective Porfiry from Dostoevsky‘s Crime and Punishment is a bittersweet experience, as Morris is about to put the character on hold. In the new book, St Petersburg is in flames, and the fires are harbingers of the revolution that will tear the country apart. After a post-winter thaw, a body surfaces in a canal, and Porfiry is in business again. As before, character building, locale, and historical detail are all beautifully balanced.. Robertson, Imogen. Island of bones. F /ROBE This is Imogen Robertson‘s third novel to feature her wilful heroine Mrs Harriet Westerman and gives us some background to her sleuthing sidekick, the eccentric and reclusive amateur anatomist Gabriel Crowther, as the duo head to the Lake District to investigate when one corpse too many is found in the ancestral tomb at Gabriel‘s family seat. Robertson expertly juggles family politics, murder mystery and kidnap thriller, while giving a fascinating picture of country life in the late 18th century. MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST Life stories The next meeting of the Book Discussion Group will be on Wednesday 12 September at 6 pm & Thursday 13 September at 10.30am Life stories include autobiography, memoir, travel and sojourn writing, narrative non-fiction, biography and even the personal essay. Life stories are inclusive – they give you the opportunity to be a fly on the wall and explore other people’s lives, places and relationships. Memoir and autobiography are not just straightforward historical records or exercises in self-justification, but are true journeys of exploration, exciting and sometimes confronting. There is joy and revelation and the creative struggle to find the words to do justice to their experience. Abad Faciolince, Hector Joaquin. Oblivion: a memoir New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012. Summary: "An account of the author's father: a Colombian doctor who fought against oppression and social inequality and who was murdered by paramilitaries in 1987"-868.64/ABA Abdelnour, Salma. Jasmine and fire: a bittersweet year in Beirut. Sydney: HarperCollins Publishers, 2012. Summary: 'In a way, food has always been my road home. The Beirut scenes I remember most vividly from childhood are of hanging out for hours over fragrant platters of juicy chargrilled meats and just-caught seafood, piping-hot loaves of fresh pita, and pistachiotopped pastries oozing with cream and honey and orange-blossom syrup..' Salma Abdelnour was just nine years old when, in July 1981, as bombs exploded around them, she and her family fled the bloody civil war in Lebanon for a quiet, safe new life in surburban America. Now, thirty years later, she returns to the place where she hopes to never feel like a stranger. In Jasmine and Fire, Abdelnour shares her intimate journey of rediscovery as she explores today's Beirut, one of the world's most hauntingly beautiful, dynamic and troubled cities, and of witnessing up close a year of dramatic changes in the Middle East and the rise of the Arab Spring. Against a backdrop of turmoil and uncertainty, she takes comfort in some of Beirut's enduring traditions, especially its legendary love of food. Through rediscovering the favourite dishes of her childhood, she slowly begins to find her way home and a new sense of belonging. Like the best Lebanese meal, this unforgettable love letter to a fascinating city full of beauty, tragedy and hope will leave you wanting more. 956.92/ABE Albright, Madeleine Korbel, 1937Prague winter: a personal story of remembrance and war, 1937-1948. New York: Harper, 2012. 943.71/ALB Ayres, Pam, 1947The necessary aptitude: a memoir. London: Ebury, 2011. 920/AYR Bauer, Graham. Australian story: stories of courage, determination and love. Sydney: ABC Books, 2012. 920/BAU Blumenthal, Karen. Steve Jobs: the man who thought different: a biography. London: Bloomsbury, 2012. 337.76/JOB Brody, Leslie. Irrepressible: the life and times of Jessica Mitford. Berkeley, Calif.: Counterpoint Press, 2010. Summary: Follows the life of a young British aristocrat who severed ties with her family and moved to the United States to work as a civil rights activist, a Communist organizer, and a writer. 920/MIT Busch, Benjamin. Dust to dust: a memoir. New York, NY: Ecco: HarperCollins, 2012. Summary: A U.S. Marine who served two combat tours in Iraq, an actor on "The Wire," and son of novelist Frederick Busch reflects on his childhood in rural New York, his experiences as a Marine, and the nature of mortality. 920/BUS Cascio, Frank. My friend Michael : an ordinary friendship with an extraordinary man New York: William Morrow, 2011. Summary: The music legend's close friend for more than twenty-five years offers a personal behind-the-scenes look at Michael Jackson, setting the record straight on Jackson's misunderstood Peter Pan reality and his complex lifestyle. 780.42/JAC Clarke, Robert. Seven years with Banksy London: Michael O'Mara, 2012. Summary: This is an illuminating memoir of the world's most celebrated graffiti artist, offering an insight into his life and work through the experiences that he and the author Robert Clarke shared together during Banksy's formative years. Clarke takes us through his first encounters with Banksy, which took place in a hotel in New York in the 1990s. 751.73/BAN Collins, Joan, 1933The world according to Joan. London: Constable, 2011. 791.43/COL Crumpton, Henry A. The art of intelligence: lessons from a life in the CIA's clandestine service. New York: Penguin Press, 2012. Summary: A counterterrorism spy describes his leadership of the campaign that routed al Qaeda and the Taliban in the weeks after the September 11 attacks, offering insight into the ways in which the Afghanistan campaign changed American warfare. 327.1273/CRU Dodson, James. American triumvirate: Sam Snead, Byron Nelson, Ben Hogan, and the modern age of golf. New York: Alfred. A. Knopf, 2012. 796.352/DOD Dratch, Rachel. Girl walks into a bar--: comedy calamities, dating disasters, and a midlife miracle. New York: Gotham Books, 2012. 792.7/DRA Eliot, Marc. Steve McQueen: a biography. New York: Crown Archetype, 2011. 791.43/MACQ Feldman, Deborah, 1986Unorthodox: the scandalous rejection of my Hasidic roots. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2012. Summary: Traces the author's upbringing in a Hasidic community in Brooklyn, describing the strict rules that governed her life, arranged marriage at the age of seventeen, and the birth of her son, which led to her plan to leave and forge her own path in life. 920/FEL Field, Anthony. How I got my wiggle back: the remarkable health and fitness regiment that turned my life around Sydney, N.S.W.: ABC Books, 2012. Summary: Part memoir, part fitness and health manual, How I Got My Wiggle Back chronicles the life of internationally acclaimed children’s entertainer Anthony Field, and details his remarkable victory in a 25-year battle with illness and injury. 615.85/FIE Garner, James, 1928The Garner files New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011. 791.43/GAR Greenfield, Robert. The last sultan: the life and times of Ahmet Ertegun. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011. 781.64/ERT Halpern, Justin I suck at girls. New York: It! books, 2012. 814.6/HAL Heiss, Anita, 1968Am I black enough for you? North Sydney, N.S.W.: Bantam, 2012. 305.89915/HEI Jovanovic, Rob. Seeing the light: inside the Velvet Underground. New York: St. Martin's press, 2012. 780.42/VEL Kantor, Jodi, 1975The Obamas. New York: Little Brown and Company, 2012. 973.932/OBA Kellow, Brian. Pauline Kael: a life in the dark. New York : Viking, 2011. Summary: In her nearly quarter-century (19681991) reviewing films at The New Yorker, Pauline Kael became the most widely read, the most influential, the most powerful, and, often enough, the most provocative critic in America. Her passionate engagement with the work of a new generation of artists--and her ability to share her enthusiasm with a fresh, vernacular, and confrontational style--changed the face of film criticism. On the tenth anniversary of her death comes the first fullscale biography: author Brian Kellow has interviewed family members, friends, colleagues, and adversaries and written a detailed portrait of this remarkable, often relentlessly driven woman. Kellow examines the controversy Kael generated by overstepping what many considered the boundaries of critical propriety. He follows her successes as well as her battles. For anyone who loves film or is concerned about the role of criticism in the arts, this book is a revelatory biography of one of the most influential women of the past half century. 791.43/KAE MacLauchlin, Cory. Butterfly in the typewriter: the tragic life of John Kennedy Toole and the remarkable story of A confederacy of dunces. New York: Da Capo Press, 2012. 813.54/MACL Large, Storm. Crazy enough: a memoir. North Sydney, N.S.W.: Ebury Press, 2012. 780.42/LAR Nielsen, Sally, 1986Sammy, I love you: a true story of love and hope. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2012. Summary: As seen on ABC TV's Australian Story Sally Nielsen is a wedding planner, whose own wedding plans were turned upside down when her fiance suffered a catastrophic stroke, leaving him completely dependent on her and his family for all his needs. When others said she should put him in a home and get on with her life, Sally refused. 362.196/NIE Milligan, Spike, 1918-2002. Milligan's meaning of life: an autobiography of sorts. London: Viking, 2011. Summary: With his lightning-quick wit, unbridled creativity and his ear for the absurd, Milligan revolutionised British comedy, leaving a legacy of influence that stretches from Lancaster, Jen. Monty Python's "Flying Circus" to the work of Jeneration X: ne reluctant adult's attempt to unarrest her arrested development, or why it's self-confessed acolytes such as Eddie Izzard and Stephen Fry today. This is his never too late for her dumb ass to learn why autobiography. froot loops are not for dinner. 791.457/MIL New York: New American Library, 2012. 814.6/LAN Mould, Bob, 1960See a little light: the trail of rage and melody Lanzmann, Claude. Boston, Mass.; London: Little, Brown, 2011. The patagonian hare: a memoir Summary: The musician behind the groundNew York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012. Summary: The author traces his life in film and breaking punk band Hüsker Dü describes his early passion for music; reveals his struggles journalism, describing his early experiences as an underground soldier in occupied Paris, with homosexuality and drug and alcohol addiction; and discusses his solo career and his affair with Simone de Beauvoir, and the founding of the band Sugar. making of his seminal documentary Shoah. 780.42/MOU 791.43/LAN Lawson, Jenny. Let's pretend this never happened: (a mostly true memoir) New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 2012. 070.92/LAW Long, Martha. Ma, I've got meself locked up in the madhouse. Edinburgh: Mainstream Pub., 2011. 920/LON Niemi, Lisa. Worth fighting for: love, loss, and moving forward. London: Simon & Schuster, 2012. Louvin, Charlie, 1927-2011 Satan is real: the ballad of the Louvin brothers 791.43/SWA New York: ItBooks, c2012. Orgias, Glenn. 780.42/LOU Man in a grey suit Camberwell, Vic.: Penguin Group, 2012. 797.32/ORG Parkes, Ian, 1934A youth not wasted. Sydney: Fourth Estate, 2012. 636/PAR Rhodes, Richard, 1937Hedy's folly: the life and breakthrough inventions of Hedy Lamarr, the most beautiful woman in the world. New York: Doubleday, 2011. 791.43/LAM Sheen, Martin. Along the way the journey of a father and son London: Simon & Schuster, 2012. Summary: Spanning nearly 50 years of family history, the book chronicles the remarkable lives of two creative talents, Martin Sheen and Emilio Estevez. It's a story of father and son set against the backdrop of Hollywood; this narrative is organized around their physical and spiritual journey along the Camino de Santiago, Spain. 791.43/SHE Shields, Charles J., 1951And so it goes: Kurt Vonnegut: a life. New York: Henry Holt and Co., 2011. 813.54/VON Slakey, Francis. To the last breath: a memoir of going to extremes. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2012. Summary: A Georgetown University physics professor describes the rigidly scheduled and isolated existence he led before embarking on a life-risking effort to climb the world's highest mountains and surf every ocean. 796.522/SLA Smith, Claire Bidwell. The rules of inheritance: a memoir. Melbourne: Text Pub., 2012. Summary: Claire Bidwell Smith, a fourteenyear-old only child, learns that both her parents have cancer. The fear of becoming a family of one compels her to make a series of fraught choices, set against the glittering backdrop of New York and Los Angeles - and the pall of regret. When the inevitable happens and Claire is alone in the world, she is inconsolable at the revelation that suddenly she is no one's special person. It is only later, when Claire falls in love, marries and becomes a mother, that she emerges from the fog of grief. Using the five stages of grief as a window onto her personal experience, Claire Bidwell Smith has written a powerful memoir that is at once exquisite and profound. 616.994/SMI Strayed, Cheryl. Wild: a journey from lost to found. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2012. 813.6/STR Taylor, Tony, 1928Fishing the river of time. Melbourne, Vic.: Text Pub., 2012. Fishing the River of Time is an elegant meditation on nature, life and family, written with warmth and wisdom. It inspires selfreflection and an appreciation of the natural world and the fundamentals of our human experience. It is destined to become a classic work of simple living after Henry David Thoreau's Walden. 799.1/TAY Thornton, Billy Bob. The Billy Bob tapes: a cave full of ghosts New York: William Morrow, 2012. 791.43/THO Webster, Andrew. Supercoach: the life and times of Jack Gibson. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2011. 796.333/GIB Wilkins, Richard. Black ties, red carpets, green rooms Sydney: New Holland, 2011. 791.45/WIL Williams, Kate, 1974Young Elizabeth: the making of our queen. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2012. Summary: We can hardly imagine a Britain without Elizabeth II on the throne. It seems to be the job she was born for. And yet, for much of her early life, the young princess did not know the role that her future would hold. 929.72/ELI Coming soon to Manly Library Anderson, Kristian Days like these Sydney, N.S.W.: HarperCollins, 2012. Summary: The love story of Kristian and Rachel Anderson. When Kristian wanted to show his wife Rachel how much he loved her after learning he was terminally ill, he ended up winning hearts around the world, thanks to the now famous YouTube video he made for her 35th birthday. 616.994/AND Black, Dasia. Letter from my father. [Blackheath, N.S.W.]: Brandl & Schlesinger, 2012. Summary: Ester was a four-year-old child during the Holocaust in Poland when she was told that both her parents had been killed. In 'Letter from my father' Dasia Black (born Ester Hadasa) tells of her struggle as a child to survive the loss of her family, her name and identity. 940.5318/BLA Chidgey, Jane Under the baobab tree: a memoir of two great loves. Sydney: ABC Books, 2012. Summary: From Melbourne career woman to 'Lady of the Lodge' in Africa . A heartwarming memoir about having the courage to follow love and change your life, no matter what your age. 920/CHI Hjortsberg, William, 1941Jubilee hitchhiker: the life and times of Richard Brautigan. Berkeley, CA: Counter Point, 2012. 813.54/BRA Kranish, Michael. The real Romney New York: Harper, 2012. Summary: From the investigative reporters who have tracked his career for years comes a riveting, no-holds-barred biography of Mitt Romney, the early frontrunner for the Republican nomination for president. 974.4/ROM Kurlansky, Mark. Birdseye: the adventures of a curious man. New York: Doubleday, 2012. 338.7/BIR Manguso, Sarah, 1974The guardians: an elegy. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012. 362.28/WUL Nops, Lisa My life in a pea soup. Warriewood, N.S.W.: Finch Publishing, 2012. 616.858/NOP Sheldrick, Daphne Jenkins, 1934An African love story: love, life and elephants. London: Viking, 2012. 599.67/SHE Choi, Amy Playing house. Yarraville, Vic.: Transit Lounge Pub, 2012. 920/CHO Spence, Simon. The Stone Roses: the true story London: Viking, 2012. 780.42/STO Farmer, Pat. Pole to Pole: one man, 20 million steps. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2012. Summary: In a feat that ranks with the brave and inspiring deeds of Scott of the Antarctic, Sir Edmund Hillary and Jessica Watson, famed Australian ultramarathon runner Pat Farmer did what no human has ever done: run from the North Pole to South Pole. His mission: to raise money for the Red Cross to fund water projects in the world's neediest regions. 796.425/FAR Williams, Jenny. More lives than one: a biography of Hans Fallada. London: Penguin, 2012. 833.912/FAL Wright, Thomas. Circulation: William Harvey's revolutionary idea. London: Chatto & Windus, 2012. 920/HAR MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST Aw esom e Ad vent ure The next meeting of the Book Discussion Group will be on Wednesday 10 October at 6 pm & Thursday 11 October at 10.30am An adventure is defined as an exciting or unusual experience; it may also be a bold, usually risky undertaking, with an uncertain outcome. The term is often used to refer to activities with some potential for physical danger, such as skydiving, mountain climbing and or participating in extreme sports. The term also broadly refers to any enterprise that is potentially fraught with physical, financial or psychological risk, such as a business venture, a love affair, or other major life undertakings. Adventurous experiences create psychological and physiological arousal, which can be interpreted as negative (e.g. fear) or positive (e.g. flow). For some people, adventure becomes a major pursuit in and of itself. According to adventurer André Malraux, in his La Condition Humaine (1933), "If a man is not ready to risk his life, where is his dignity?". Similarly, Helen Keller stated that "Life is either a daring adventure or nothing." Some of the oldest and most widespread stories in the world are stories of adventure such as Homer's The Odyssey. Mythologist Joseph Campbell discussed his notion of the monomyth in his book, The Hero with a Thousand Faces. Campbell proposed that the heroic mythological stories from culture to culture followed a similar underlying pattern, starting with the "call to adventure", followed by a hazardous journey, and eventual triumph. The adventure novel exhibits these "protagonist on adventurous journey" characteristics as do many popular feature films. Anderson, Mark. The day the world discovered the sun: An extraordinary story of scientific adventure and the race to track the transit of venus. Boston: Da capo press, c2012. 523.42/AND Bain, Andrew, 1970A year of adventures: a guide to the world's most exciting experiences. Footscray, Vic.; London : Lonely Planet, 2010. 913/LON Banks, Tony. Storming the Falklands: my war and after. London: Little, Brown, 2012. 997/BAN Beaumont, Mark, 1983The man who cycled the Americas. London: Bantam, 2011. 796.64/BEA Beddoe, Noel. The Yalda crossing St Lucia, Qld.: UQP, 2012. F /BEDD Booth, Janice Holly. Only pack what you can carry: my path to inner strength, confidence, and true selfknowledge. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic, 2011. Summary: Through a series of compelling travel essays and deeply thoughtful memoirs, Booth, former CEO of the Girl Scouts Pioneer Council in North Carolina, draws readers into each adventure and shares her secrets to a fuller life through traveling alone. 910.4/BOO Summary: Real stories can touch our humanity and move us to understand ourselves, as well as the person we are reading about. The adventurers here provide a mosaic of Australia over the past century, a priceless legacy. 920/CAR Chapman, Ann Women in my rose garden: the history, romance and adventure of old roses Melbourne, Vic.: Hardie Grant Books, 2012. Summary: Many of our best-loved heritage roses are named after women, and in this charming book, Ann Chapman explores the lives and stories behind the evocative names. We may be familiar with Mary Queen of Scots, Amy Robsart and Jeanne d.Arc, but who were Adelaide dOrlans, Nancy Steen and Nur Mahal? 635.933/CHA Christopher, Paul. The Templar throne New York: Signet, 2010. F /CHRI Ciancimino, Massimo, 1963Don Vito: the secret life of the Mayor of the Corleones London: Quercus, 2011. 364.106/CIA Coates, Frank. Softly calls the Serengeti Sydney: HarperCollins Australia, 2011. F /COAT Crawford, Dean. Immortal. London: Simon & Schuster, 2012. Summary: While carrying out an autopsy on a Box, C. J. body recently brought into a morgue in Santa Force of nature Fe, county coroner Alexis Cruz makes a London: Corvus, 2012. surprising discovery. Lodged in the dead Summary: Having hidden the truth about a man's femur is a musket ball which, carbon past colleague's violation, former Special Forces agent Nate Romanowski is targeted by dating reveals, was fired some 200 years a determined killer who threatens Joe Pickett's earlier in the American Civil War. But before she can notify the authorities, Alexis life as part of a violent plot. disappears. F /BOX F /CRAW Carroll, Margaret. The man who loved crocodiles and stories of other adventurous Australians. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2011. Cussler, Clive, 1931The jungle London: Michael Joseph, 2011. F /CUSS Cussler, Clive, 1931The Kingdom London: Michael Joseph, 2011. F /CUSS Cussler, Clive, 1931The race London: Michael Joseph, 2011. F /CUSS Cussler, Clive, 1931Devil's gate London: Michael Joseph, 2011. F /CUSS Farmer, Pat. Pole to Pole: one man, 20 million steps. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2012. Summary: In a feat that ranks with the brave and inspiring deeds of Scott of the Antarctic, Sir Edmund Hillary and Jessica Watson, famed Australian ultramarathon runner Pat Farmer did what no human has ever done: run from the North Pole to South Pole. His mission: to raise money for the Red Cross to fund water projects in the world's neediest regions. 796.425/FAR Farquhar, Michael. Behind the palace doors: five centuries of sex, adventure, vice, treachery, and folly from royal Britain. New York: Random House Paperbacks, 2011. 941/FAR Davidson, Jim. The ledge: an adventure story of friendship and survival on Mount Rainier New York: Ballantine Books, 2011. 796.52/DAV Flannery, Tim F. (Tim Fridtjof) Among the islands. Melbourne, Vic.: Text Publishing, 2011. 919.6/FLA Dietrich, William, 1951The emerald storm: an Ethan Gage adventure New York: Harper, c2012. F /DIET Fogle, Ben, 1973The accidental adventurer. London: Bantam, 2011. 910.92/FOG Dodd, Mark. The last pearling lugger: a pearl diver's story. Sydney: Macmillan, 2011. Summary: Mark Dodd arrived in Broome in 1978 as a 20-year-old looking for adventure. There he fell in with the crew of the fabled DMcD, one of the last of the old wooden pearling luggers that still worked the Kimberley coast diving for pearl shell. The Last Pearling Lugger is his extraordinary memoir of five seasons on the Broome pearling fleet as a deckhand and diver in the late 1970s and early 1980s. 639.412/DOD Garcia Ortega, Adolfo, 1958Desolation Island London: Harvill, 2011. F /GARC Donachie, David, 1944Enemies at every turn London: Allison & Busby, 2011. F /DONA Grant, Richard, 1963Crazy river: a plunge into Africa. London: Little, Brown, 2012. 916.78/GRA Edwards, Hugh, 1933Dead men's silver: the story of Australia's greatest shipwreck hunter. Sydney: HarperCollins Australia, 2011. 910.452/EDW Grylls, Bear. Mud, sweat and tears. London: 4 Books, 2011. 796.5/GRY Gibbins, David. The gods of Atlantis. London: Headline, 2011. F /GIBB Giraldi, William. Busy monsters: a novel New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 2011. F /GIRA Haddelsey, Stephen. Shackleton's dream: Fuchs, Hillary and the crossing of Antarctica. Stroud: History, 2012. Summary: In 1914 Sir Ernest Shackleton embarked on what he called 'The last great polar journey' - the crossing of Antarctica. His expedition ended in disaster, with the Endurance crushed and the frozen corpses of three explorers left on the Antarctic plateau. 919.8/HAD Hunt, Stephen Jack Cloudie London: Harper Voyager, 2011. F /HUNT Jeal, Tim. Explorers of the Nile: the triumph and the tragedy of a great Victorian adventure. London: Faber, 2011. Summary: Between 1856 and 1876, five explorers, all British, took on the seemingly impossible task of discovering the source of the White Nile. 916.7/JEA Kemp, Ross. Devil to pay London: Arrow, 2011. F /KEMP Kerouac, Jack, 1922-1969. The sea is my brother: the lost novel London: Penguin, 2010. F /KERO Kirk, Jay. Kingdom under glass: a tale of obsession, adventure, and one man's quest to preserve the world's great animals. New York, N.Y.: Henry Holt, 2010. 590.92/AKE Lee, Michael A. Letters from a professional nuisance: improbable jobs, impossible items and implausible complaints. London : Portico, 2010. Summary: After drinking a pint or two of strong ale a few years ago, the now best-selling author Michael A. Lee decided, on a whim, to apply to be the new mayor of El Paso. After an international news channel - CBS Channel 4 rang to confirm if he was actually being serious and subsequently aired an interview on their evening TV broadcast across Mexico, Michael embarked on an inspired letter writing adventure that continues to this day. NFPB /HUMOUR Lomb, Nick. Transit of Venus: 1631 to the present. Kensington, N.S.W.: UNSW Press, 2011. Summary: The transit of Venus across the sun in June 2012 will be the last chance in our lifetime to see this rare planetary alignment that has been so important in history. Rich in historical detail and cutting edge science, along with practical information on how and when to view the transit, Transit of Venus is the must-have companion to this extraordinary astronomical event. From Johannes Kepler's first prediction of a transit of Venus in 1631, to Captain Cook's 1769 transit expedition to Tahiti (which led to the European settlement of Australia), and on to our 21st-century quest to find distant Earth-like planets using the transit method, astronomer Nick Lomb takes us on a thrilling journey of exploration and adventure. 523.92/LOM Lynn, Matthew. Shadow force London: Headline, 2011. F /LYNN McDermott, Andy. Empire of gold London: Headline, 2011. F /MACD McDermott, Andy. Temple of the gods London: Headline, 2012. F /MACD McElhatton, Heather, 1970A million little mistakes. London: Headline Review, 2010. FPB /M McIntosh, Fiona, 1960The lavender keeper. Camberwell, Vic: Michael Joseph, 2012. Summary: Lavender farmer Luc Bonet is raised by a wealthy Jewish family in the foothills of the French Alps. When the Second World War breaks out he joins the French Resistance, leaving behind his family's fortune, their home overrun by soldiers, their lavender fields in disarray. Lisette Forestier is on a mission of her own: to work her way into the heart of a senior German officer - and to bring down the Reich in any way she can. What Luc and Lisette hadn't counted on was meeting each other. When they come together at the height of the Paris occupation, German traitors are plotting to change the course of history. But who, if anyone, can be trusted? As Luc and Lisette's emotions threaten to betray them, their love may prove the greatest risk of all. F /MACI Neville, Lucy. Oh Mexico!: love and adventure in Mexico City. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2011. 917.25/NEV Paech, Jane. A family in Paris: stories of food, life and adventure. Camberwell, Vic.: Lantern, 2011. 944.084/PAE Rothschild, David de. Plastiki: across the Pacific on plastic, an adventure to save our oceans San Francisco, Calif.: Chronicle Books, 2011. 910.9164/ROT Schedneck, Jillan. Abu Dhabi days, Dubai nights. Sydney: Pan Macmillan, 2012. 953.57/SCH Sharma, Robin S. (Robin Shilp), 1964The secret letters of the monk who sold his Ferrari. London: HarperElement, 2011. 158.1/SHA Sillar, Shamus. Sicily, it's not quite Tuscany. Sydney: Arena / Allen & Unwin, 2012. Summary: This is the story of a newly married couple and the year they spent in Sicily. Packed with history, culture - and plenty of misadventure - it will definitely make you laugh. It also has as much romance as an ordinary Aussie bloke can muster, and, of course, a little bit of Mafia action. 914.58/SIL Sullivan, Mark T. The Rogue London: Quercus, 2012. Summary: Robin Monarch, the CIA's top field operative, stumbles across a US governmental conspiracy during a mission in Istanbul. What he sees is enough to make him go rogue. F /SULL Veitch, Michael. The forgotten islands: a personal adventure through the islands of Bass Strait. Camberwell, Vic.: Viking, 2011. 919.467/VEI Zuckoff, Mitchell. Lost in Shangri-la: a true story of survival, adventure, and the most incredible rescue mission of World War II. New York: Harper Press, 2011. Summary: Three months before the end of World War II, a U.S. Army plane flying over New Guinea crashed in uncharted mountains inhabited by a Stone Age tribe. Nineteen passengers and crew were killed and two were mortally wounded. But somehow three survived: a lieutenant whose twin brother died in the crash, a sergeant who suffered terrible head wounds, and a beautiful member of the Women's Army Corps. 940.548/ZUC MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST Geek reads The next meeting of the Book Discussion Group will be on Wednesday 14 November at 6 pm & Thursday 15 November at 10.30am The word 'geek' today does not mean what it used to mean. A geek isn't the skinny kid with a pocket protector and acne. There can be computer geeks, video game geeks, car geeks, military geeks, and sports geeks. Being a geek just means that you're passionate about something. (Olivia Munn) Computers are incredibly fast, accurate, and stupid; humans are incredibly slow, inaccurate and brilliant; together they are powerful beyond imagination. (Albert Einstein) Arthur, Charles, 1961Digital wars: Apple, Google, Microsoft and the battle for the Internet. London: Kogan Page, 2012. 338.47/ART Assange, Julian. Julian Assange: the unauthorised autobiography. Melbourne, Vic.: Text Publishing Co, 2011. 323.445/ASS Auletta, Ken. Googled: the end of the world as we know it. New York: Penguin Press, 2009. 338.76/GOO Beckett, Charlie. Wikileaks: news in the networked era / Charlie Beckett with James Ball. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2012. 323.445/BEC Bizony, Piers. The search for aliens: a rough guide to life on other worlds. London: Rough Guides, 2012. 576.839/BIZ Blumenthal, Karen. Steve Jobs: the man who thought different : a biography. London: Bloomsbury, 2012. 337.76/JOB Clayton, Philip, 1956Religion and science: the basic. London; New York: Routledge, 2012. 201.65/CLA Clegg, Brian. The universe inside you: the extreme science of the human body from quantum theory to the mysteries of the brain. London: Icon, 2012. 612/CLE Cline, Ernest. Ready player one New York: Crown Publishers, c2011. F /CLIN Domscheit-Berg, Daniel. Inside Wikileaks : my time with Julian Assange at the world's most dangerous website Carlton North, Vic.: Scribe Pub, 2011. 323.445/ASS Dufty, David. How to build an android: the true story of Philip K. Dick's robotic resurrection. New York: H. Holt, 2012. Melbourne University Pub., 2011. 629.892/DIC Dunn, Jancee. But enough about me London: Headline, 2006. 070.92/DUN Dyson, George, 1953Turing's cathedral: the origins of the digital universe. London: Allen Lane, 2012. 153.35/LEH Fowler, Andrew John. The most dangerous man in the world: the inside story on Julian Assange and the WikiLeaks secrets Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne Uni Pr, 2011. 323.445/ASS Gallo, Carmine. The presentation secrets of Steve Jobs: how to be insanely great in front of any audience. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2010. 658.452/GAL Gallo, Carmine. The innovation secrets of Steve Jobs: insanely different principles for breakthrough success. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2011. 658.4/JOB Geek wisdom: the sacred teachings of nerd culture edited by Stephen H. Segal ; with commentary by Zaki Hasan ... [et al.] ; Philadelphia, Pa.; Quirk Books, 2011. 158.1/SEG Gill, Michael (Michael Gates). How starbucks saved my life : how one man who had it all lost everything - then found it again at Starbucks. North Sydney: Bantam, 2007. 647.95/GIL Henderson, Mark. The geek manifesto: why science matters London; Sydney: Bantam Press, 2012. Summary: There has never been a better time to be a geek (or a nerd, or a dork). What was once an insult used to marginalize those curious people (in either sense of the word) and their obsessive interest in science has increasingly become a badge of honour. 1)XX(875492.2) Hertzfeld, Andy Revolution in the valley: [the insanely great story of how the Mac was made] Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly Media, [2011] Summary: Traces the development of the Macintosh computer from its inception as an underground research project in 1979 through the end of Steve Jobs tenure as CEO of Apple in 2011. 338.761/HER Huddleston, Rob. Android fully loaded. Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley, 2011. 621.38/HUD I, Steve: Steve Jobs in his own words Richmond, Vic.: Hardie Grant Books, 2011. 338.76/JOB Isaacson, Walter. Steve Jobs. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011. 338.76/JOB Jennings, Ken. Maphead: charting the wide, weird world of geography wonks. New York: Scribner, 2011. 912/JEN Kahney, Leander. Inside Steve's brain. New York: Portfolio, 2008. 338.761/JOB Katz, Danny. Dork geek Jew. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2002. A 828/KAT Lacy, Sarah. Brilliant, crazy, cocky: how the top 1% of entrepreneurs profit from global chaos. Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley, 2011. 658.421/LAC Levy, Steven. In the plex: how Google thinks, works, and shapes our lives. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011. Summary: Few companies in history have ever been as successful and as admired as Google, the company that has transformed the Internet and become an indispensable part of our lives. How has Google done it? Veteran technology reporter Steven Levy was granted unprecedented access to the company, and in this revelatory book he takes readers inside Google headquarters the Googleplex - to show how Google works. 338.76/LEV Lopp, Michael. Being geek: the software developer's career handbook. Berkeley, Calif.: O'Reilly, 2010. 658/LOP MacCormick, John, 1972Nine algorithms that changed the future : the ingenious ideas that drive today's computers. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Uni Pr, 2012. Summary: Every day, we use our computers to perform remarkable feats. A simple web search picks out a handful of relevant needles from the world's biggest haystack: the billions of pages on the World Wide Web. 006.3/MACC McKenna, Paul. I can make you smarter. London: Bantam, 2012. 158.1/MACK Marcus, Ben. The flame alphabet New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2012. F /MARC Mitnick, Kevin David. Ghost in the wires: my adventures as the world's most wanted hacker New York: Little, Brown & Company, 2011. Summary: The world's most famous former computer hacker, now a security consultant, describes his life on the run from the FBI creating fake identities, finding jobs, and keeping tabs on his pursuers. 364.168/MIT Morgan, Kevin John, 1956Detective Piggott's casebook: true tales of murder, madness and the rise of forensic science. Richmond, Vic.: Hardie Grant Books, 2012. 363.25/PIG Morozov, Evgeny. The net delusion: the dark side of internet freedom. New York: Public Affairs, 2011. 303.4833/MOR Palma, Felix J. The map of the sky: a novel Brunswick, Vic.: Scribe Publications, 2012. XX(886359.1) ON-ORDER Pariser, Eli. The filter bubble: what the Internet is hiding from you London: Viking, 1120. XX(840828.2) Segall, Ken. Insanely simple: the obsession that drives Apple's success. New York: Portfolio, 2012. 658.4/SEG Simon, Leslie, 1947Geek girls unite: how fangirls, bookworms, indie chicks, and Other misfits are taking over the world. New York: It Books, 2011. 305.42/SIM Smiley, Jane. The man who invented the computer: the biography of John Atanasoff, digital pioneer. New York: Doubleday, 2010. 004.092/ATA Stokes, Abigail. Is this thing on?: a computer handbook for late bloomers, technophobes, and the kicking & screaming. New York: Workman, 2011. 004.16/STO Sundem, Garth. Braintrust: 93 top scientists reveal labtested secrets to surfing, dating, dieting, gambling, growing man-eating plants and more! New York: Three Rivers Press, 2012. 500/SUN Rapkin, Mickey. Theater geek: the real life drama of a summer at Stagedoor Manor, the famous performing arts camp. New York: Free Press, 2010. 792.02/RAP Turner, Alwyn W. The man who invented the Daleks: the strange worlds of Terry Nation London: Aurum, 2011. XX(880232.3) ON-ORDER Rentel, Ron. Karma queens, geek gods, and innerpreneurs New York: McGraw-Hill, 2007. 658.8/REN Wozniak, Steve, 1950iWoz: computer geek to cult icon : getting to the core of Apple's inventor London: Headline/Review, 2006. 621.39/WOZ Robb, J. D., 1950Celebrity in Death London: Piatkus Books, 2012. F /ROBB Young, Jeffrey S. iCon: Steve Jobs, the greatest second act in the history of business Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2005. 338.76/JOB Robb, Peter, 1945Lives. Melbourne, Vic : Black Inc, 2012. A 829.4/ROB MANLY LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP BOOKLIST Summer Reading The next meeting of the Book Discussion Group will be on Wednesday 12 December at 6 pm & Thursday 13 December at 10.30am Living in the southern hemisphere means that the Australian Christmas takes place at the height of summer. It also means that the end of year break for students is in summer, commonly known as the 'summer holidays', or the 'Christmas holidays'. It is a popular time for holidays, catching up with family and friends, outdoor activities, rest, recreation, relaxation and reading. Here are a few suggestions: Adams, Jessica. The summer psychic. London: Black Swan, c2006. FPB /CHICK-LIT/A Clayton, Meg Waite. The four Ms. Bradwells. New York: Ballantine, 2011. F /CLAY Ainge, Judith. An Edwardian summer: Sydney & beyond through the lens of Arthur Wigram Allen Sydney, N.S.W.: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2010. 994.41/ALL Cloyed, Deborah. The summer we came to life. Chatswood, N.S.W.: Mira Books, 2011. F /CLOY Andrews, Mary Kay, 1954Summer rental New York: St. Martin's Press, 2011. F /ANDR Antalek, Robin. The summer we fell apart: a novel. New York: Harper, 2010. FPB /A Baldacci, David. One summer New York: Grand Central Pub., 2011. F /BALD Baxter, Stephen. Bronze summer. London: Gollancz, 2011. F /BAXT Bingham, Charlotte. The land of summer London: Bantam, 2008. F /BING Black, Benjamin, 1945A death in summer New York: Henry Holt, 2011. F /BLAC Burnside, John, 1955Summer of drowning London: Jonathan Cape, 2011. F /BURN Bushnell, Candace. Summer and the city London: HarperCollinsPublishers, 2011. F /BUSH Capote, Truman, 1924-1984. Summer crossing London: Allen Lane, 2006. F /CAPO Coetzee, J. M., 1940Summertime: scenes from a provincial life. Sydney: Random House Australia, 2009. F /COET Cusk, Rachel. The Last Supper: a summer in Italy London: Faber, 2009. 945/CUS Darling, Tom. Summer. London: Abacus, 2012. F /DARL De Blasi, Marlena. That summer in Sicily: a love story. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2008. 914.58/DEB De Rosa, Domenica. Summer school. London: Headline Review, 2008. F /DERO Diamond, Lucy. Summer with my sister. London: Pan, 2012. FPB /CHICK-LIT/D Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, 1821-1881. Winter notes on summer impressions Richmond: Oneworld Classics, 2008. 891.783/DOS Ellis, Bob. One hundred days of summer: how we got to where we are. Camberwell, Vic: Viking, 2010. 994.07/ELL Feeny, Penny. That summer in Ischia Birmingham: Tindal Street Press, 2011. F /FEEN Fforde, Katie. Summer of love London: Century, 2011. F /FFOR Johnson, Milly. A summer fling London: Pocket, 2010. FPB /CHICK-LIT/J Flynn, Katie. The lost days of summer London: Arrow books, 2011. F /FLYN Jones, Cindy Sundermann. My Jane Austen summer: a season in Mansfield Park New York: Morrow, 2011. FPB /CHICK-LIT/J Frank, Dorothea Benton. Lowcountry summer. New York: Morrow, 2010. F /FRAN Giuffre, Katherine Anne. An afternoon in summer Wellington, N.Z.: Awa Press, 2010. NFPB /BIOGRAPHY Griffin, Lynne Reeves. Life without summer New York: St. Martin's Press, 2009. F /GRIF Gwynne, S. C. (Samuel C.), 1953Empire of the summer moon: Quanah Parker and the rise and fall of the Comanches, the most powerful Indian tribe in American history New York: Scribner, 2010. 970.1/PAR Hart, Marjorie, 1924Summer at Tiffany. New York: William Morrow, 2007. 381.14/HAR Heinrich, Bernd. Summer world: a season of bounty. New York: Ecco Press; [London]: 2009. 591.43/HEI Hilderbrand, Elin. A summer affair. London: Sphere, 2008. F /HILD Hill, Antonio. The summer of dead toys. London: Doubleday, 2012. F /HILL Hustvedt, Siri. The summer without men. London: Sceptre, 2011. F /HUST Johansen, Iris. Dark summer New York: St. Martin's Press, 2008. F /JOHA Jones, Daniel. Summer of blood: the peasants' revolt 1381 London: HarperPress, 2009. 942.038/JON Jungstedt, Mari, 1962The dead of summer London: Doubleday, 2011. F /JUNG Kallentoft, Mons. Summertime death London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2012. F /KALL Kampion, Drew. Jack O'Neil: it's always summer on the inside. San Francisco, Calif.: Chronicle Bks, 2011. 797.32/ONE Kessler, Andrew. Martian summer: robot arms, cowboy spacemen, and my 90 days with the Phoenix Mars Mission. New York: Pegasus Books, 2011. 629.45/KES Kinghorn, Judith. The last summer. London: Headline Review, 2012. F /KING Ladd, Kylie. Last summer. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2011. F /LADD McLynn, Pauline. Summer in the city London: Review, 2005. F /MACL McNees, Kelly O'Connor. The lost summer of Louisa May Alcott. New York: Amy Einhorn Books, 2010. FPB /HISTORICAL/M Matthews, Carole. Summer daydreams. London: Sphere, 2012. F /MATT Skrzynecki, Peter, 1945Boys of summer Sydney: Brandyl & Schlesinger, 2010. FPB /AUSTRALIAN/S Merullo, Roland. The Italian summer: golf, food, and family at Lake Como. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2009. 914.523/MER Spencer, Allie. Summer loving. London: Arrow, 2011. FPB /CHICK-LIT/S Mitchard, Jacquelyn. Still summer. London: John Murray, 2007. F /MITC Monroe, Mary Alice. Beach house memories New York: Gallery Books, 2012. F /MONR Montefiore, Santa. The summer house London: Simon & Schuster, 2012. F /MONT Muir, John, 1838-1914. My first summer in the Sierra Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011. 508.7944/MUI Patterson, James, 1947James Patterson Summer omnibus: The beach house; and Beach Road London: Headline, c2009. F /PATT Spencer, Allie. Summer nights. London: Arrow, 2012. FPB /CHICK-LIT/S Trevor, William, 1928Love and summer. London: Viking, 2009. F /TREV Von Tunzelmann, Alex, 1977Indian summer: the secret history of the end of an empire London: Simon & Schuster, 2007. 954.0359/TUN Watson, Bruce. Freedom summer: the savage season that made Mississippi burn & made America a democracy. New York: Viking, 2010. 323.1196/WAT Way, Camilla. The dead of summer. London: Harper, 2007. FPB /W Pearson, Ridley. Killer summer. New York: Putnam, 2009. F /PEAR Wendel, Tim. Summer of '68: the season that changed baseball-- and America-- forever. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press, 2012. 796.357/WEN Pollen, Bella. The summer of the bear. London: Mantle, 2010. F /POLL Wharton, Edith, 1862-1937. Ethan Frome; Summer; and, Bunner sisters London: Everyman, 2008. F /WHAR Rodi, Robert. Seven seasons in Siena: my quixotic quest for acceptance among Italy's proud people. New York: Ballantine Books, 2011. 945.591/ROD Willett, Marcia. The summer house. London: Bantam, 2010. F /WILL Shaw, Rebecca. One hot country summer London: Orion, 2007. F /SHAW Simmons, Dan, 1948Summer of night New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 2011. F /SIMM Williams, Polly. It happened one summer. London: Headline, 2011. F /WILL Wright, Tom. What dies in summer. Melbourne: Text Publishing, 2012. F /WRIG