Read Readings Monthly, February 2014 here
Transcription
Read Readings Monthly, February 2014 here
FEBRUARY 2014 FREE BOOKS MUSIC FILM THE POET’S WIFE MODERN HISTORY Krissy Kneen on Mandy Sayer’s new memoir Ali Alizadeh on the engrossing figure of Joan of Arc page 04 page 06 E V E N TS OUR MOST ANTICIPATED BOOKS FOR 2014 page 06 NEW IN FEBRUARY HANIF KUREISHI BENNY LINDELAUF MANDY SAYER BLUE JASMINE BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN $29.99 $16.99 page 05 page 10 $33 $27.95 $39.95 $29.95 CD $19.95 CD & DVD $24.95 page 10 page 17 page 18 CARLTON 309 Lygon St 9347 6633 HAWTHORN 701 Glenferrie Rd 9819 1917 MALVERN 185 Glenferrie Rd 9509 1952 ST KILDA 112 Acland St 9525 3852 READINGS AT THE STATE LIBRARY OF VICTORIA 328 Swanston St 8664 7540 See shop opening hours, browse and buy online at www.readings.com.au 2 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 News READINGS NEW AUSTRALIAN WRITING AWARD The Readings New Australian Writing Award supports published Australian authors working in fiction, with the vision of increasing the promotion and sales of Australian authors’ works to the wider community. To be eligible for entry in the inaugural New Australian Writing Award, the book must be the author’s first or second published work only. The shortlist will be published in the October Readings Monthly, and winning titles will be published in the November issue. The winner will be awarded prize money of $4000. Please visit readings.com.au for more details, including full eligibility criteria. READINGS CHILDREN’S BOOK PRIZE The inaugural Readings Children’s Book Prize supports an Australian author writing for children aged 5 to 12. The Prize seeks to support an Australian author – who has published no more than four children’s books – in establishing their position as a valued contributor to children’s literature. The winner, who matches good literature with strong appeal to children, will be awarded a prize of $4000. Please visit readings.com.au for more details, including full eligibility criteria. 20% OFF ROUGH GUIDES AT READINGS ST KILDA Throughout February, Readings St Kilda is offering you 20% off all Penguin Rough Guides, including travel guides to more than 200 worldwide destinations, phrase books, inspirational guides, music guides, and reference books on topics as diverse as business, computers, climate change, Shakespeare and social media. Readings Monthly Free independent monthly newspaper published by Readings Books, Music & Film Editorial: Readings will also continue to support the Sacred Heart Mission in St Kilda and The Brotherhood of St Laurence’s HIPPY program (Home Interaction Program for Parents and Youngsters) in Fitzroy with a $6000 donation to each. Please visit readings.com.au/news/the-readingsfoundation-grant-recipients-announcedfor-2014 to read more on each funded project. WHITE NIGHT MELBOURNE AT READINGS STATE LIBRARY On Saturday 22 February, Readings’ State Library shop will be open until midnight as part of the Melbourne White Night celebrations, where Melbourne’s streets, laneways and cultural institutions are transformed into a cultural playground from dusk to dawn. Please visit whitenightmelbourne.com.au for more information on the festivities. The Transitions Film Festival returns to Cinema Nova this February, with an inspiring program of world-changing documentaries. The festival begins on 15 February with free screenings on the Big Screen at Federation Square, before moving to Cinema Nova for a week, and concluding with an innovative weekend of Cinema by Demand screenings. Readings is a proud supporter of the Transitions Film Festival. Please visit transitionsfilmfestival.com for more information. The Readings Foundation has announced grants totalling $131,850 to support a Advertising: RISE (Refugee Survivors and Ex-Detainees) $20,000 The Wheeler Centre Hot Desk Fellowships $20,000 VACCA (Victorian Aboriginal Child Care Agency) $19,760 Save the Children $19,990 100 Story Building $15,100 Reading Out of Poverty $15,000 The Stella Prize $10,000 TRANSITIONS FILM FESTIVAL THE READINGS FOUNDATION GRANTS ANNOUNCED Belle Place belle.place@readings.com.au range of projects and organisations within Victoria in 2014. The successful grant recipients for this year are: Ingrid Josephine ingrid.josephine@readings.com.au (03) 9341 7739 Graphic Design: The Art Department Collective www.theartdepartmentau.com Front Cover: Cover illustration by Rick Milovanovic Based on The Days of Anna Madrigal, page 5 Contributors: Krissy Kneen Ali Alizadeh Thank you to Readings staff members and contributors for your reviews. Readings donates 10% of its profits each year to The Readings Foundation: readings.com.au/the-readings-foundation Oslo Davis CINEMA NOVA Steve McQueen’s vivid and brilliant depiction of 1850s America Nominations inc. 9 Oscar Best Picture, Actor & Director 380 LYGON ST CARLTON www.cinemanova.com.au NOW SHOWING www.oslodavis.com RECOMMENDS Visit the Cinema Nova Bar Chiwetel Michael Lupita Sarah Benedict Paul Brad Ejiofor Fassbender Nyong’o Paulson Cumberbatch Dano Pitt Join our e-news for updates on the Met Opera, National Theatre and other stage spectaculars. DALLAS BUYERS CLUB Matthew McCONAUGHEY From the real-life story of an accidental AIDS activist Jared LETO 6 Oscar Nominations inc. Actor & Supporting Actor “AnBest ambitious thriller assisted A film directed by Jean-Marc Vallée by excellent performances” Empire FEBRUARY 13 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 3 February Events 11 2 19 Join us for the launch of Pirouette, from bestselling young adult author Robyn Bavati. Adopted as babies by two different families, Simone and Hannah have never known they are identical twins, but when the two girls pirouette into each other’s lives, they see a perfect opportunity to make their dreams come true. Free, no booking required. Sunday 2 February, 3pm Readings Hawthorn 5 Launch Free, no booking required. Wednesday 5 February, 6pm Readings Hawthorn Launch DOUG HENDRIE ON HOW GLOBALISATION IS GOOD We’re thrilled to be launching Doug Hendrie’s AmalgaNations: How Globalisation is Good. Part whirlwind world tour through surprising subcultures, part subtle sociological study, all immersive reportage with humour and warmth, AmalgaNations takes the reader across Asia, Oceania and Africa to discover how people are adapting or repurposing ‘global’ cultures. Free, no booking required. Thursday 6 February, 6pm Readings Carlton Launch IN CONVERSATION WITH TROY BRAMSTON, BARRY JONES, SIMON CREAN & RALPH WILLIS Join author Troy Bramston as he sits down with Barry Jones, Simon Crean and Ralph Willis for a discussion on Bramston’s latest book, The Whitlam Legacy. Free, but please book on 9819 1917. Tuesday 11 February, 6pm Readings Hawthorn KATHRYN LEDSON ON THE NEW ERICA JEWELL NOVEL Join us for the launch of the next eagerly awaited instalment in the action-packed Erica Jewell series from Kathryn Ledson. Fast-paced, funny and totally engaging, Monkey Business blends adventure and romance in an irresistible summer read. 6 11 ROBYN BAVATI ON PIROUETTE 22 17 Pieces of Eight: Stories of Encounter and Tele is a collection of tales of allure and intrigue from Lorraine Michael’s work in psychotherapy within acute psychiatry. Join the author along with psychiatrist and psychodramatist Neil Hucker for a reading from the book. 19 26 UP ALL NIGHT WITH WHITE NIGHT MELBOURNE In its 2013 debut, White Night Melbourne attracted more than 300,000 people, and on Saturday 22 February 2014, Melbourne’s city streets, laneways, landmarks and cultural institutions will once again be transformed into a cultural playground from dusk-tilldawn. Come visit our State Library shop during your wanderings. Free, no booking required. Saturday 22 February, from 6pm Readings State Library LORRAINE MICHAEL ON PIECES OF EIGHT Free, but please book on 9819 1917. Monday 17 February, 6pm Readings Hawthorn 22 27 Launch ON SEEKING ASYLUM Together with PEN Melbourne, join us to celebrate the release of A Country Too Far: Writings on Asylum Seekers. Editor Rosie Scott will be joined by contributors Rodney Hall, Judith Rodriquez and Arnold Zable to talk about one of the most conflicted issues facing Australians. To be chaired by Chris Kremmer. 23 DO YOU DARE? RODNEY TIFFEN ON RUPERT MURDOCH In Rupert Murdoch: A Reassessment Rodney Tiffen takes a comprehensive look at Rupert Murdoch’s business career, the entrepreneurial strategies that led to his early success and his later exercises of monopoly power. Rodney will be in conversation with Eric Beecher, publisher of Crikey. Free, but please book on 9347 6633. Wednesday 26 February, 6pm Readings Carlton 27 TRISTEN HARRIS IN CONVERSATION WITH GRAPHIC NOVELIST TIM MOLLOY Join us to celebrate the launch of a new companion series to the much-loved Our Australian Girl books! Do You Dare? presents engaging Australian historical fiction for readers aged 8 to 12 with fast-paced, adventure-driven stories. The first two books in the series are The Bushranger’s Boys by Alison Lloyd and Tough Times by Simon Mitchell. At the same event, we will also launch two new Our Australian Girl books: Meet Pearlie by Gabrielle Wang and Meet Daisy by Michelle Hamer. All four authors will be at the event, signing books and chatting with young readers and fans. Grab your Shrivelled Homunculus, ingest that alien hallucinogen, and delve into the feverish brain of Mr Unpronounceable – or at least, into the mind of his creator, Melbourne graphic novelist Tim Molloy. Join Tim as he chats with 3RRR announcer Tristen Harris about his latest work, Mr Unpronounceable Adventures, which collects the complete adventures of Mr Unpronounceable together for the first time. Free, no booking required. Sunday 23 February, 3pm Readings Hawthorn Free, but please book on 9347 6633. Thursday 27 February, 6.30pm Readings Carlton Launch For more information and updates, please visit the events page at readings.com.au/events. Free, but please book at wheelercentre.com. Wednesday 19 February, 6pm The Wheeler Centre 176 Little Lonsdale Street, Melbourne, 3000 Please note bookings do not necessarily guarantee a seat and some events may be standing room only. Digital WRITERS’ F E S T I VA L 13 – 24 FEBRUARY 2014 digitalwritersfestival.com P re se n te d b y CARLTON Every Monday 11am. 309 Lygon Street, Carlton. Phone 9347 6633 for details. ST KILDA Every Saturday 10.30am commencing 1 February 2014. 112 Acland Street, St Kilda. Phone 9525 3852 for details. MALVERN Every Friday 10.30am commencing 7 February 2014. 185 Glenferrie Road, Malvern. Phone 9509 1952 for details. Please note: All children are to be accompanied by an adult at all times. This is not a child-minding service. 4 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 New Australian Writing Mandy Sayer’s third memoir, The Poet's Wife, vividly details her marriage to the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, Yusef Komunyakaa, and their unconventional life lived across the United States and in Sydney’s Kings Cross. Here, Sayer talks with Krissy Kneen about committing her tumultuous marriage to the page. The Poet’s Wife Krissy Kneen interviews Mandy Sayer about her third memoir. W hen reading a review of a memoir we often come across a repeated set of related words. ‘Brave’ is the first one that springs to mind, along with ‘courageous’, ‘fearless’, ‘bold’. But what is so brave about telling the truth (or at least your subjective truth) about your life publicly? So many of us do it on social media, don’t we? Well, not exactly. We tell a version of ourselves but much of the truth is hidden. We show off our best side: our most flattering selfies, our most humorous quips and clever patter. The art of the memoirist is a different job entirely. ‘Compelling memoirs usually reveal the narrator’s vulnerabilities, secrets, confusions and mistakes,’ says Mandy Sayer, who has just released her third memoir, and eighth book, The Poet’s Wife. ‘Many people aren’t comfortable with that level of public revelation about their so-called weaknesses, which I can understand. However, it’s usually on that level that a bond can grow between reader and narrator, and where identification begins.’ Sayer has certainly forged a kind of bond with her own readers, many of whom have followed her since her first novel, Mood Indigo, won the Australian/ Vogel Literary Award when she was just 26. But it was her first memoir, Dreamtime Alice that gave readers an insight into her life and character. Dreamtime Alice, which focused on her nomadic life tap-dancing across New York and New Orleans with her drumplaying father, intersects with The Poet’s Wife – her newest self-revelation. In both her previous memoirs, Sayer looks back at herself as a child. In The Poet’s Wife, the child becomes an adult, falls in love, and then struggles to retain some sense of self within a relationship that is ultimately destructive. Sayer survived her marriage to Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Yusef Komunyakaa, but The Poet’s Wife begins and ends with a different ‘poet’s wife’, the woman Komunyakaa partnered with after Mandy had left their relationship. Poet Reetika Vazirani, Komunyaaka’s partner, tragically killed herself and their young son. The horror of this murder-suicide haunts the book, giving weight to Sayer’s own struggles with mental illness and self-harm during the years of her marriage to Komunyakaa. There are two ‘wives’ in this memoir, two women who are also writers, and there is a pervading sense that the fate of one might easily have been the fate of the other if things had gone differently for Sayer. ‘The framing device [of Vazirani’s murder-suicide] is intentional and so is the title. I did research a little of Reetika’s life and did find certain similarities,’ says Sayer, ‘especially once I read her posthumous collection, Radha Says. It is so full of anguish and confusion over her relationship that some of the stanzas reminded me of my own shocking, pleading diary entries years ago. My heart went out to her, and of course to their son.’ Sayer’s diary plays a central role in the book: committing her thoughts to paper is a powerful act in the memoir. In fact, the craft of the writer takes centre stage, as the young Sayer begins to help Komunyakaa with his poetry and is, in turn, encouraged by him to embark on a writing career of her own. Photograph by Tanya Lake This book contains many thoughtful insights into the art of writing, alongside the personal struggles of a young woman desperately trying to salvage her relationship, as well as her own self-esteem. In The Poet’s Wife, Sayer studies with some of the great writers and demonstrates her own fascination with the process of writing, and the construction of both novels and memoirs. When pressed about the architecture of her work, and the differences between the two forms, her answer sheds light on the assembly ‘The horror of this murdersuicide haunts the book, giving weight to Sayer’s own struggles with mental illness and self-harm during the years of her marriage to Komunyakaa.’ of her latest book, echoing the same passion for craft that infuses a large part of the narrative in The Poet’s Wife. ‘With a memoir you start off knowing all of the material and the real task, in order to find shapes, patterns and structure, is asking yourself what to leave out of the narration. With a novel, it’s the complete opposite: you start off knowing none of the material – a literal blank page – and the task is asking yourself what to include. The memoir is subtraction; the novel is addition. Both are mathematics!’ The Poet’s Wife is a pacey read. The sentences race along, jumping from moment to moment, leaving a reader with hardly any time to wonder what has been subtracted, what parts of this life have been chipped away to serve the shape of the plot. Sayer is aware of her own natural rhythms, which occur in the text. ‘As a tap dancer, and coming from a musical family,’ she says, ‘I became attuned to nuances of rhythm and music far earlier than those of literature. It’s also the backbeat of everything I write, including fiction, poetry and essays.’ The Poet’s Wife offers much to those interested in the construction of memoir, but also provides readers with plenty of universal truths to unpack along the way. It is a fine balance for most relationships – how do you keep the mystery of a honeymoon period alive while fostering a depth of relationship that only honesty and experience can engender? The Poet’s Wife is a formidable lesson in this struggle associated with marriage. As Sayer says when questioned about the plot of The Poet’s Wife, ‘In some ways it can be read as a kind of domestic thriller, with the wife-detective trying to unravel the truth about a mysterious and unknowable husband.’ Krissy Kneen is the author of the novel Steeplechase (2013), the erotic adventure Triptych (2011), and the memoir Affection (2009). She has had short fiction and essays published in literary journals including Island Magazine, Griffith REVIEW and Nerve online, and her documentaries have screened on SBS and ABC TV. R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 Mark’s Say 5 New Fiction News and views from Readings’ managing director, Mark Rubbo One of the things I’ve always liked to do is support Australian writing and publishing. Over my career, it has been a thrill to see how the local publishing industry has grown, and how Australian readers have embraced the exciting writing being produced. However, it has always been a struggle for Australian writers to gain an audience and secure a living from their works. Of course, there have been well deserved success stories where debut authors gain almost immediate recognition: Favel Parrett’s Past the Shallows, Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites and Graeme Simsion’s The Rosie Project come to mind, but they are very much the exception. A cynic could argue that there’s good reason first-time authors struggle – they just aren’t good enough – and this might be true in some cases, but anyone familiar with the vagaries of creative recognition knows that excellent works are often overlooked or have limited commercial appeal. I know that recently at Readings we have tended to concentrate on those books we feel have the greatest sales potential. It’s been a natural reaction to the vicissitudes of the book trade, though this was something that gnawed at me. I have been trying to figure out how we could give new and emerging Australian writers, particularly, better attention and support. I had the thought of a Readings award, judged by our experienced staff, which required us to seriously consider the new Australian books published each month and commend them to our readers. I discussed this with some colleagues who were equally excited about the concept and over a few months the idea was debated and refined. Martin Shaw, our books division manager, pointed out that for many authors it was their second book that was the important one, as if that book failed then their writing careers were often over. Children’s author and one of our children’s specialists, Emily Gale, also made an impassioned plea to include a prize dedicated to children’s literature. It was harder, she argued, for children’s writers to gain recognition even after their third or fourth book. A prize could make a real difference. So, it is with great pleasure that I announce the inaugural Readings New Australian Writing Award and Readings Children’s Book Prize for 2014. The New Australian Writing Award will be for a work of adult fiction that must be the author’s first or second published book, and the Children’s Book Prize is for an author writing for children aged 5 to 12 who has published no more than four children’s books. We have committed to fund the two awards for the next three years – hopefully it will continue indefinitely! Book of the Month THE LAST WORD Hanif Kureishi Faber. PB. $29.99 Hanif Kureishi is probably best known for his early work: his screenplay My Beautiful Laundrette (made into a film by Stephen Frears and starring Daniel Day-Lewis), won a New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Screenplay in 1986 and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Writing in 1987; The Buddha of Suburbia won a Whitbread Book Award (now the Costa Book Awards) for the best first novel in 1990. Both are lighthearted works dealing with issues of race and sexuality in Thatcher’s England. His 1998 novel, Intimacy, was a much bleaker sort of work which kicked up controversy: the plot – the story of a man leaving his wife and two young sons – closely resembled Kureishi’s own life. Kureishi’s work has raised the ire of family members throughout his career for laying bare (or misrepresenting) intimate details of their personal lives. Amid the buzz surrounding his new novel is discussion of the plot’s uncanny resemblance to the story behind Patrick French’s 2008 biography of Nobel Laureate V.S. Naipaul, The World Is What It Is. Kureishi’s novel is about the battle of wills between two men: Mamoon, the older, eminent writer, and Harry, the young up-and-comer who wants to make his mark in the world by writing Mamoon’s biography. In the book’s promotional clip, Kureishi describes it as a ‘sort of English country comedy, quite light in some ways, but it’s also about some of the most serious things: sexuality, passion, love and writing’. Kureishi’s writing rolls out at a good clip: there are fantastic, bright lines and his prose is an enchantment – crisp, brisk and sharp as a tack. But The Last Word is also a curious book: Mamoon’s resemblance to Naipaul, whose misogyny is no secret, means that the female characters are necessarily portrayed as objects, around which the two men play out their battle. This portrayal results in a slightly off-kilter reading experience, which suits Kureishi (and his characters) to a T. Ed Moreno is from Readings Carlton Australian From the Books Desk ONE BOY MISSING Unwittingly, Harry becomes trapped in a spiral of murderous violence and intimidation that he can neither understand nor resist. Stephen Orr Text. PB. $29.99 Martin Shaw, Readings Books Division Manager February of course is back-to-school month, but with the new Liberal government signalling education is in need of ‘pulling its socks up’, as it were, it’s salient that two new books address issues that will surely only be perpetuated under Minister Pyne. Marion Maddox, in Taking God to School, considers the surprising impact that Christian groups are having on what was once the proudly free and secular public school tradition. David Gillespie, meanwhile, in Free Schools, considers whether the backing given to the private sector in our school system actually benefits no one, least of all the students themselves. Another title certain to create a little controversy this month is a new book about the place of the Anzac legend in the Australian consciousness. In Anzac’s Long Shadow: The Cost of Our National Obsession, James Brown, a former military man himself, argues that the eulogising aspects of our commemorations occlude our awareness of serving officers in contemporary war zones, thereby rendering those who should be the pride of our nation into a rather marginal position in our society. This month we also have a couple of quite interesting literary autobiographies. Mandy Sayer has A Poet’s Wife, a sequel of sorts to Dreamtime Alice, documenting her marriage to the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Yusef Komunyakaa. And the American novelist Gary Shteyngart – of Super Sad True Love Story fame – has a hilarious but also deeply affecting memoir of his emigration to the United States from Russia as a child, and how he slowly shrugged off the tag his mother only half-jokingly gave him growing up, which provided him the title for his memoir: Little Failure. From the fiction offerings, we have two fine novels in translation: Patrick Deville’s Plague and Cholera from the French, and Danish author Jonas T. Bengtsson’s A Fairy Tale. Hanif Kureishi is always a singular reading pleasure, so The Last Word is eagerly anticipated. And fans of Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City series have the ninth, and perhaps last, instalment to devour: The Days of Anna Madrigal. Our reviewer declares it to be ‘a joy, and those of us who have followed the lives of this group of San Franciscans for so many years will be genuinely touched’. Finally, two offerings of a South Pacific theme: Nancy Horan, who wrote an acclaimed novelisation of the life of Frank Lloyd Wright a few years ago, has now re-created Fanny and Robert Louis Stevenson’s life in Samoa in Under the Wide and Starry Sky; and the latest GriffithREVIEW is a New Zealand-themed issue entitled Pacific Highways – a fascinating collection of essays, memoir, poetry, visual art, fiction and reportage from ‘across the ditch’. One Boy Missing is a new departure in literary crime from Stephen Orr. It was a butcher on smoko who reported the man stashing the kid in the car boot. He didn’t really know whether he’d seen anything at all, though. Maybe an abduction? Maybe just a stressed-out father. Detective Bart Moy, newly returned to the country town where his ailing, cantankerous father still lives, finds nothing. As far as he can tell, no one in Guilderton is missing a small boy. Still, he looks deeper into the butcher’s story – after all, he had a son of his own once. But when the boy does turn up, silent, apparently traumatised, things are no clearer. Who is he? Where did he come from and what happened to him? ASKING FOR TROUBLE Peter Timms HarperCollins. PB. $27.99 There are things in his past that Harry Bascombe definitely doesn’t want to remember. But when a nosey journalist with a taste for scandal turns up out of the blue, he is forced to confront his memories. An uncertain and diffident boy, Harry struggles to survive a suburban upbringing in the 1950s. Family life is complicated, with an ineffectual father, a highly strung mother who is leading a double life, and an older brother who is ‘not quite himself’. School is no easier. However hard young Harry tries to stay out of trouble, it seems he is always ‘asking for it’. International THE DAYS OF ANNA MADRIGAL Armistead Maupin Random House. PB. Was $32.95 $27.95 Armistead Maupin began writing Tales of the City as instalments for a San Francisco newspaper in the seventies. Nearly four decades later, The Days of Anna Madrigal, which is his ninth book in the series, is said to be the last. Transgender lady Anna Madrigal is 92 years old and content. She is in close contact with her former tenants from 28 Barbary Lane; they consider her as family. But a rediscovered childhood book sparks memories of the desert whorehouse where Mrs Madrigal grew up and some unfinished business that she feels must be put to rest. Anna employs the help of her old friend, Brian, and his new wife, Wren, and they head off to the brothel in Winnemucca that she fled from as a 16-year-old boy named Andy Ramsey. Meanwhile, another of Anna’s old tenants, Michael Tolliver, his husband, Ben, and Brian’s adult daughter, Shawna, are making their way to the Nevada desert to take part in Burning Man, the weeklong cultural and ‘radical self-reliance’ festival. Shawna wants to fall pregnant at the festival but her choice of father is far from conventional, especially for Michael. Continued on page 7 6 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 Essays Turning a new page Readings’ chief book buyer Martin Shaw looks to our most anticipated books for 2014 W ell, what a bountiful year 2014 is shaping up to be! There will be legions of fans awaiting new novels from the likes of Haruki Murakami, Marilynne Robinson, Sebastian Barry, Emma Donoghue, Ian McEwan, Sarah Waters, David Mitchell and Siri Hustvedt. Short-story aficionados have new collections from Lorrie Moore and Lydia Davis to look forward to. A new Gerald Murnane novel is always a cause for celebration. And towards the end of the year we can await a collection of personal essays from Lena Dunham, which recalls Nora Ephron, Tina Fey and David Sedaris, and comes with quite a pitch: ‘I’m already predicting my future shame at thinking I had anything to offer you with this book, but also my future glory in having stopped you from trying an expensive juice cleanse or having the kind of sexual encounter where you keep your sneakers on.’ There’s even a novel already getting touted as a Booker Prize contender: the South African writer Damon Galgut, who has already been shortlisted twice for the award, brings us Arctic Summer (Atlantic Books), a fictional re-creation of E.M. Forster’s travels to India – and the freedoms and inspiration he found there – which led to the creation of Forster’s classic novel, A Passage to India. I’ll finish with a rather eclectic list of predominantly Australian titles that are well worth keeping your eye out for. Particularly pleasing is to see some fantastic young writers on debut, with significant careers ahead of them, I suspect. Tony Birch With The Promise (UQP), Birch returns to arguably his métier – the short form – with this story collection. Already it’s being hailed as his best work to date. Emily Bitto A noteworthy debut this year, I’m sure, will be Bitto’s novel, The Strays (Affirm Press), loosely based on the Heide arts community of 1930s Melbourne. Bitto is influenced by how the controversial artists’ lives impacted on their offspring, and the novel explores the deep cracks in this utopian colony. Maxine Beneba Clarke Clarke’s story collection, Foreign Soil (Hachette), was the first book I read for 2014 and, to be honest, I’m not sure I’ll read a better debut this year. With stories of migration and emigration ranging across America, Africa, the United Kingdom and Australia, Clarke’s material is compelling, and her writerly facility utterly extraordinary. Joël Dicker is a name you most likely won’t have heard before, but this Swiss author knocked Dan Brown from the top of the bestseller list in Europe last year with The Truth about the Harry Quebert Affair (MacLehose). Concerning a young writer who discovers his university professor and mentor is accused of committing a murder 30 years before, it’s enough for me to know that this literary thriller is published by Christopher MacLehose, the legendary publisher who most recently brought Stieg Larsson to the attention of the English-speaking world. Geoff Dyer There can’t be many authors with a more diverse list of publications, both fiction and non-fiction, than Dyer. This time, in Another Great Day at Sea (Random House), he documents life on board a US aircraft carrier, and how the men and women on the vessel lead lives diametrically opposite to his own, governed by service and self-constraint, and a refusal to embrace uncertainty. No doubt as funny as it will be insightful, it seems this is more classic Dyer. Chris Flynn It’s great to hear there is a second novel due from Flynn, whose first, A Tiger in Eden (Text), released two years ago, was so fresh and inventive. This time he adopts an Australian setting, with a tale concerning a travelling fair. Apparently, Flynn was once a sumo wrestling judge at such a fair himself! Helen Garner A new Garner book is always the cause of much interest and anticipation. Given this forthcoming title is another in the ‘true crime’ genre – detailing the tragic tale of Robert Farquharson, convicted of killing his three children by driving them into a farm dam – I’m sure it will be no different. Eli Glasman Glasman recently published on his blog a terrific piece about his writing journey to date, which left you in no doubt that he is a real writer, with all the self-doubt and hardwon successes involved. His debut novel, The Boy’s Own Manual to Being a Proper Jew (Sleepers), concerns a homosexual boy growing up in the Melbourne Orthodox Jewish community. Karl Ove Knausgaard No doubt the translator is working very hard to be as quick as he can, but alas it’s looking like a new Knausgaard will only be an annual event in the years to come. This year we’ll receive Boyhood Island (Harvill), volume three of the acclaimed Norwegian’s sixpart autobiographical series, My Struggle. Boyhood Island focuses on his childhood in the 1970s, and is described as the most Proustian of all the volumes. For the fans, these books are a drug (I admit, I’m hopelessly addicted!), so all I can say is if you haven’t yet taken the trip, I heartily recommend that you do so. Wayne Macauley In recent years, Macauley, author of The Cook, has well and truly arrived as one of our most exciting prose practitioners. No word on the content of Demons (Text), his forthcoming novel, but I don’t think we care – we’re reading it! Angela Meyer From the muchadmired writer and critic comes Captives (Inkerman & Blunt), a debut collection of what Meyer calls ‘micro’ or ‘flash’ fictions, in which – in the publisher’s words – ‘Roald Dahl meets Raymond Carver’. Expect then lots of rather strange things going on – and Meyer tells me that they’re also rather dark. Miriam Sved Usually, if anyone had asked me to read a book of stories set around the game and culture of AFL, I would have tended to do a handball. But the stories I have read so far in Game Day (Picador), Sved’s debut story collection, are stunning, showing that all manner of narrative thematics and perspectives are possible in what turns out to be a fertile and fresh literary terrain. Rebecca Starford I was intrigued to discover that Starford, the well-known co-founder of edgy literary journal Kill Your Darlings, has a memoir coming (Bad Behaviour, A&U). It’s an account of adjusting to life at the Timbertop boarding campus of Geelong Grammar during her high school years, and an advance excerpt published in the GriffithREVIEW made for riveting reading. How do you solve a problem like Joan? Ali Alizadeh writes on the trouble with depicting the perplexing figure of Joan of Arc I have spent quite a number of years reading about the enigmatic, engrossing historical figure of Joan of Arc, the young European peasant who ran away from home, became a knight, led the armies of the King of France against his enemies, and was burnt as a heretic in the early fifteenth century. Most historical accounts of the medieval woman’s life and persona are attempts at a purely factual representation of her story, or attempts at telling her story, as the thinker Walter Benjamin may have it (according to his important essay on the philosophy of history, as collected in Illuminations), ‘the way it really was’. While some of these texts make for highly informative, persuasive historical studies and biographies of Joan – among my own favourites being anything by Régine Pernoud, Mary Gordon’s biography and Marina Warner’s brilliant study of Joan’s iconic image – they mostly confirm, supplement and contest the existing views of the famous figure, known to her contemporaries as Jehanne la Pucelle (Joan the Maid), rather than offering new depictions. I am instead mostly interested in the portrayals of Joan that are, put in Benjamin’s terms, ‘our own concerns’. According to Benjamin, instead of focusing on ‘the way the past really was’, we must realise that ‘every image of the past that is not recognised by the present as one of its own concerns threatens to disappear irretrievably’. In other words, for a radical thinker or writer, the past is not over, but it is ‘time filled with the presence of the now’. Images of the past must ‘be blasted out of the continuum of history’ to be made new; in my view, it is creative writers and other artists, and not historians and biographers, who have provided us with a fascinating array of imaginative, unsettling, inspired and at times frankly weird new depictions of Joan of Arc. Starting with her own contemporary, the late-medieval poet and feminist Christine de Pizan’s long poem La Ditié de Jehanne d’Arc (1429), poets, novelists, playwrights, composers, songwriters, painters and filmmakers have sought to remove Joan from her immediate historical and political context – that is, the battlefields of the Hundred Years’ War – to make her story relevant to literature readers, theatregoers and moviegoers of the artists’ own eras. In so doing, these artists have indeed blasted Joan out of her historical continuum, albeit with rather erratic levels of artistic success and effectiveness. I find it fascinating that some of the least memorable literary depictions of Joan have been offered by some of the world’s best-known writers – such as Shakespeare, Voltaire, Schiller and Mark Twain – and many an acclaimed writer has failed to produce a version of the famous woman’s life that has stood the test of time. Thomas Keneally’s 1974 novel Blood Red, Sister Rose is one of the Booker Prize-winner’s least-known novels, and is currently out of print. Keneally’s decision to characterise his protagonist as some kind of gender outcast, due to her not menstruating, has very little historical basis – there exists only one second- or third-hand statement given by Joan’s (male) squire, Jean d’Aulon, 25 years after Joan’s death, in which the attendant claims to have heard that women who had seen Joan undress had not noticed signs of menstruation – but Keneally’s depiction is, nevertheless, unusual, even bold, speaking to the contemporary readers’ fascination with the body, gender, sexuality and physiology. Continued on page 7 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 Continued from page 6 A far more successful and enduring modern retelling of Joan’s story is George Bernard Shaw’s 1923 play Saint Joan. While this text, as with most other creative representations of the historical figure, entails a level of loyalty to the historical records – most scenes in the play are based on rather well-known episodes in the commonly accepted narrative of Joan’s life, such as her supposedly miraculous recognition of the French King, Charles of Valois, upon her arrival at his castle in Chinon in 1430 – Shaw used the narrative to offer a new and timely critique of organised religion. In his version of the above historical scene, for example, Joan’s recognition of Charles is attributed to her common sense, intelligence and scepticism, and not the workings of a divine force. Shaw’s humanist depiction of Joan may be seen as a reaction against her canonisation by the Vatican in 1920. Another powerful and arguably antireligious portrayal of the medieval figure is to be found in a different work of this period, Carl Dreyer’s 1928 silent movie La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc. Here, Joan – portrayed by the actress Renée Jeanne ‘Maria’ Falconetti – is seen as a pious individual, victimised by the clergymen who intimidate and mock the young woman during her Trial of Condemnation, prior to sentencing her to death. Despite being a financial failure upon release, Dreyer’s film is now seen as one of the greatest movies of all time. Other cinematic depictions of Joan, however, have been far less compelling. The 1948 historical epic Joan of Arc with Ingrid Bergman, the 1994 two-part drama Jeanne la Pucelle with Sandrine Bonnaire, and 1999’s bloody, star-studded Jeanne d’Arc, featuring Milla Jovovich, have all been rather quickly forgotten. The latest movie based on Joan’s life, Jeanne Captive (2011), with Clémence Poésy, seems to have disappeared without a trace. Joan of Arc’s historical narrative is perhaps too complex, paradoxical and challenging to lend itself easily to a literary or cinematic mould. But I don’t believe that readers interested in this remarkable figure should limit themselves to the works of historians and scholars. Creative writers and other artists have, in my view, mostly failed to produce depictions that do justice to the gravity of Joan; regardless, their work can be acknowledged as projects which have prevented the image of Joan of Arc from ‘disappearing irretrievably’. Even the epic rap battle between the Maid and Miley Cyrus on YouTube may help with animating the medieval figure ‘with the presence of the now’. The news is everywhere and we check it constantly – but what is it doing to our minds? Ali Alizadeh is a Melbourne writer, and his latest book is Transactions. He is currently writing a novel about Joan of Arc, and is a lecturer in Creative Writing and Literary Studies at Monash University. In this dazzling new book, Alain de Botton takes twenty-five archetypal news stories – from an aircrash to a murder, a celebrity interview to a political scandal – and submits them to unusually intense analysis. The ultimate manual for our news-addicted age. Continued from page 5 The Days of Anna Madrigal is a joy, and those of us who have followed the lives of this group of San Franciscans for so many years will be genuinely touched. Admittedly, I find it hard to be overly critical of any Tales of the City book; my respect for these characters runs too deep. It’s said that for many readers, Tales of the City marked the first time gay characters were portrayed as normal people. That is definitely the case personally, and picking up the first book in the series at the age of 20 was revelatory. I’m sure I’m not alone in saying that they have been companions along the road. Jason Austin is from Readings Carlton A FAIRY TALE Jonas T. Bengtsson Scribe. PB. $29.99 Do not let the title fool you: there are no fairies – kindly godmother types or otherwise – in Danish author Jonas T. Bengtsson’s third novel. It is a narrative that navigates through the shadows of humanity and, like the works of the Brothers Grimm, eagerly throws open doors many would consider best left closed. That being said, an undercurrent of tenderness and innocence is present in the form of the protagonist: a young boy desperately trying to understand the opposing forces of love and betrayal he feels towards his father. A Fairy Tale charts the nomadic life of this boy and his idiosyncratic father who believes they are being pursued by what he classifies as ‘The White Men’. As a consequence, the boy’s life is scattered into brief encounters with a variety of characters and locations that shape, for better or worse, the man he eventually becomes. Bengtsson cleverly examines how parental authority can mould a child’s internal world and brings to painful clarity how easy it is for things to go wrong, despite best intentions. A Fairy Tale is not an easy read, just as Cormac McCarthy’s The Road is not an easy read: the novel challenges the reader to examine the extremes of familial love and the resilient bonds that knit such love together. The father figure in A Fairy Tale, however, is a more complex character than McCarthy’s dad, a man whose sole focus is the safety of his child, no matter the cost. Bengtsson’s father is a character more prone to mistakes, delusions and human error; as a consequence, the impact his behaviour has on his son is both affecting and tragic. Bengtsson has artfully created a piece of existential fiction (fans of Knut Hamsun or John Fante rejoice!) that tugs on the heartstrings and leaves a solid impression. Samuel Zifchak is from Readings Carlton PLAGUE AND CHOLERA Patrick Deville Little, Brown. PB. $29.99 I like my novels to drop me straight into events and Patrick Deville’s Plague and Cholera does just that. The reader joins Dr Alexandre Yersin in Paris, May 1940, as he is fleeing France during World War II. Moments later a second narrative is introduced, taking the reader through Yersin’s early life: from his medical studies to his induction and time spent at the Pasteur Institute and his yearning for travel and adventure. In this fictionalised memoir of the Swiss-born scientist and polymath, the two narratives cleverly present the different stages of Yersin’s life. As a young 7 8 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 What I Loved Annie Condon Readings Hawthorn HOW THE LIGHT GETS IN M.J. Hyland I Penguin. PB. $9.95 n 1996 I began the RMIT Professional Writing and Editing course, and while I didn’t share any classes with M.J. Hyland, I soon began to hear a lot about her from classmates. Not only was she an amazing writer, I heard, but a talented editor as well. Since our student days she has published three books, one of which (This Is How, 2007) was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. However it’s her first novel, How the Light Gets In (2003), which I re-read every few years. The book begins with 16-year-old exchange student Louise Connor on a plane from Sydney to Chicago, where she will spend a year with a host family. Louise, known as Lou, is terribly afraid and also excited; she is escaping a life of poverty, crime and two older sisters who relentlessly mock her. Lou has tried to learn as much as she can about the habits of middle-class life and secretly hopes her host family will adopt her so she never has to return home. But she’s not prepared for the forceful emotional dynamics of the Harding family. From the outset, the reader knows things are not going to be clear cut for Lou. When she asks the air hostess, ‘Could I possibly borrow some of your perfume?’, it’s apparent that Lou’s personal boundaries are compromised. The beauty of Hyland’s writing is that she builds these small, irregular moments into a surprising crescendo. Within moments of Lou meeting her host family, the mother, Margaret, takes Lou’s hand and holds it as they walk. Her host brother, James, stares at her, commenting each time she blushes. Bridget, her host sister, is both disdainful of Lou, and jealous of her mother’s affections. ‘The beauty of Hyland’s writing is that she builds these small, irregular moments into a surprising crescendo.’ Lou arrives at the Hardings’s prefabricated suburban mansion worn out, overcome with jetlag but unable to sleep. When the Hardings take a two-week road trip before school resumes, Lou’s insomnia, a pivotal problem throughout the novel, and James’s scrutiny mean that she is exhausted and underwhelmed by the trip. She has come to America to escape the close quarters of her family’s council flat in Sydney, but finds herself in even closer quarters with the Hardings. Hyland is wonderful at evoking emotionally claustrophobic situations. The more sleepless and unwell Lou feels, the less she meets the mostly unspoken expectations of her host family; things spiral downward from here. In Lou, Hyland has created a wonderfully flawed narrator. The reader can empathise with her desire to live a life other than the one she’s grown up with, and her humour, intelligence and wordplay converge into literature of the finest form. Lou’s vulnerability, which is at odds with her fierce desire for independence, makes you want to give her a big hug at the end of the book. But of course she would hate that! man he could well be seen as fickle, unable to stay put in any one career or locale. The young Yersin is eager to learn and explore the unchartered; he is bored stuck in a laboratory doing research and gains employment as a ship’s doctor, widening his thirst for exploration. As an old man leaving war-torn Europe for the sanctuary of his second home in Indochine, he reflects on the life he has made, fondly recalling friends and colleagues, now long passed, and wonders with what luck he is still here. Deville’s prose is comfortable – almost conversational – and is vividly engaging. I struggled to put the book down, torn between racing through it like a young Yersin eager for his next great discovery or adventure, or reading at a slower pace akin to Yersin in his seventies. I chose slow and steady to best enjoy every moment of this epic adventure. Yersin is most often remembered as the discoverer of the bacillus bacteria responsible for the bubonic plague – but his life work and experience was far wider than just this. With an enthralling blend of fact and fiction, Deville’s Plague and Cholera brilliantly highlights this wonderful man. A great read. Suzanne Steinbruckner is from Readings St Kilda THE UNDERTAKING Audrey Magee A&U. PB. $29.99 On the Eastern Front in 1941, Peter Faber, a German soldier, is fighting for his country. In a not yet divided Berlin, Katharina Spinell is waiting for a conflict she doesn’t understand to end. Fed up with rations and the banality of something so big it’s entirely incomprehensible, Peter and Katharina – having picked each other from a catalogue of photographs – decide to marry. A thousand miles apart, their ceremonies take place simultaneously. The arrangement is a good one: honeymoon leave for Peter and a pension for Katharina if he doesn’t return from the front. Such is great fortune in times of war. Unexpectedly, or perhaps out of a desperate need to give meaning to their petty lives, when Peter and Katharina meet they fall in love. Returned to Russia and surrounded at Stalingrad, Peter wonders if he is more than just cannon fodder while Katharina climbs the social ranks of the Nazi Party in Berlin. Consumed by their individual desires, neither appears to fully understand the ramifications of their actions, or those of the party they blindly obey. Leaving the specific horrors of the Holocaust out of the story, The Undertaking is an empathetic tale about two people who can’t, or won’t, see the truth of the war or the regime they have wed themselves to – it’s this tension that defines Audrey Magee’s debut. Covering the conflict in Northern Ireland for six years as a correspondent for The Times, Magee wanted to tell a story about people whose experience of war pushed the issues and politics to one side: the result is an unsettling read. Light on historical content, The Undertaking is an unlikely romance that’s heavy on the heartstrings. Tara Kaye Judah is from Readings St Kilda THE VISITORS Rebecca Mascull Hodder Headline. PB. $29.99 The ghost story has been rattling the chains of literary history for centuries, with the likes of Shakespeare, Dickens, Poe, and Henry James (among many others) all experimenting with the subject – Rebecca Mascull’s debut novel adds another imaginative tale to the genre. Adeliza Golding is deaf and blind, unable to interact with anyone except the ghosts she communicates with in her head until she runs out into the fields of her father’s hop farm and a stranger, Lottie, takes her hand and draws shapes upon it with her fingers. Lottie teaches Adeliza how to communicate, opening the world to her, and the two become inseparable. Set in late Victorian England, The Visitors explores Liza’s friendship with Lottie and her brother Caleb, as she travels from her father’s farm to the oyster beds of Kent, to a doctor’s office in London, and onward to South Africa during the Boer War, where the truth of the Visitors ultimately unfolds. As the story opened I was reminded of Patrick Süskind’s Perfume: the reader is led by the nose into a vivid reality of smell and touch via a lively character a little out of kilter with the world, somewhat wild and not always likeable. The Visitors is written in the first person, present tense – a narrative style not to everyone’s liking – but Mascull has utilised it well; it gives the tale a sense of immediacy while allowing the reader inside the head of her eccentric deaf-blind protagonist. The Visitors is an inventive story with well-drawn characters but sometimes falls short by telling the reader too much – the wrap-up towards the end seemed unnecessary. However, for lovers of ghost stories and oddities, Mascull’s tale will offer a weird and wonderful escape into a richly imagined world peopled with some extraordinary characters. Deborah Crabtree is from Readings Carlton THE PEOPLE IN THE TREES Hanya Yanagihara Atlantic Books. PB. $27.99 In 1950, a young doctor, Norton Perina, and the anthropologist Paul Tallent set out for a remote Micronesian island in search of a rumoured lost tribe. They succeed, but also find a group of forest dwellers they dub ‘The Dreamers’, who turn out to be fantastically long-lived. Perina suspects the source of their longevity is a hard-to-find turtle, and after smuggling some meat back to the States, he proves his thesis but soon discovers that its miraculous property comes at a terrible price. SEASON TO TASTE Natalie Young Headline. PB. Was $30 $24.95 Meet Lizzie Prain. Ordinary housewife. Fifty-something. Lives in a cottage in the woods, with her dog Rita. Likes cooking, avoids the neighbours. Runs a little business making cakes. No one has seen Lizzie's husband, Jacob, for a few days. That’s because last Monday, on impulse, Lizzie caved in the back of his head with a spade. And if she's going to embark on the new life she feels she deserves after 30 years in Jacob's shadow, she needs to dispose of his body. Her method appeals to all her practical instincts, though it’s not for the fainthearted. Will Lizzie have the strength to follow it through? Season to Taste is a deliciously subversive treat and in the shape of Lizzie Prain, Natalie Young has created a most remarkable heroine. UNDER THE WIDE AND STARRY SKY Nancy Horan Hachette. PB. Was $30 $24.95 In her second novel, New York Times bestselling author Nancy Horan tells the passionate and turbulent story of Stevenson – who would eventually write such classics as Treasure Island and The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde – and his tempestuous American wife. At the age of 35, Fanny van de Grift Osbourne has left her philandering husband in San Francisco to set sail for Belgium to study art. There she meets Robert Louis Stevenson, ten years her junior, who is instantly smitten with the earthy and opinionated belle Americaine, and the two begin a fierce love affair that spans decades. THAT PART WAS TRUE Deborah McKinlay Orion. HB. $24.99 When Eve Petworth writes to Jackson Cooper to praise a scene in one of his books, they discover a mutual love of cookery and food. As their letters criss-cross the ocean that lies between them, friendship and then romance blossom despite Jackson’s colourful love life and Eve’s tense relationship with her soon-tobe-married daughter. Little by little, Eve and Jack begin to believe that they may have a chance to change their lives, they just need to actually meet. R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 THE LIE Helen Dunmore New Crime Dead Write with Fiona Hardy Random House. PB. $27.99 In 1920s Cornwall, just after the First World War, a young man is back from the war, homeless and without family. Behind him lies the terror of the trenches, but also the most intense relationship of his life, forged in a crucible of shared suffering. Daniel has survived, but the horror and passion of the past seem more real than the quiet fields around him. He is about to step into the unknown, but will he ever be able to escape the terrible, unforeseen consequences of a lie? THE KING Kader Abdolah A&U. PB. $29.99 Already a bestseller in Europe, The King follows the young Persian King, Shah Naser, who upon taking the throne inherits a medieval, enchanted world. But beyond the court, the greater forces of colonisation and industrialisation close in. The Shah’s grand vizier sees only one solution – to open up to the outside world, and to bring Persia into modernity. But the Shah’s mother fiercely opposes the vizier’s reforms and sets about poisoning her son’s mind against his adviser. THE WIND IS NOT A RIVER Brian Payton Pan Mac. PB. $29.99 Following the death of his younger brother in World War II, journalist John Easley is determined to find meaning in his loss. Leaving behind his wife, Helen, he heads north from Seattle to investigate the Japanese invasion of Alaska’s Aleutian Islands. While John is accompanying a crew on a bombing run, his plane is shot down over the island of Attu. He survives, only to find himself exposed to a harsh and unforgiving wilderness where he must battle the elements and starvation while evading discovery by the Japanese. Alone in their home three thousand miles to the south, Helen is forced to re-imagine who she is. Somehow, she must find John and bring him home, a quest that takes her into the farthest reaches of the war. Anthology PACIFIC HIGHWAYS: GRIFFITH REVIEW 43 Julianne Schultz & Lloyd Jones (eds) Text. PB. $27.99 Pacific Highways explores and maps New Zealand, in the words of the country’s finest writers, including Kate De Goldi, C.K. Stead, Bernard Beckett, Owen Marshall, Hinemoana Baker and many more. From reports of the Kiwi Diaspora in Australia, to a consideration of the growing Asian economic and cultural influence, to the contribution of Pacific society to the arts and sports, this collection of original essays, memoir, poetry, fiction and reportage will challenge the way you think about New Zealand. Book of the Month DESERVING DEATH Katherine Howell Pan Mac. PB. $29.99 On a springtime morning in Sydney, two paramedics get a call: to attend to a collapsed woman in Sydenham. The paramedics recognise the address, and when they arrive their worst fears are confirmed: their co-worker and friend, Alicia Bayliss, is found bloody and beaten to death. Just weeks earlier, another paramedic suffered the same grisly fate. In Katherine Howell’s latest Detective Ella Marconi novel, there is as much emotional involvement as there is procedural detail. Marconi is unnerved, sensing unexpected tensions among the paramedics she interviews, while attempting to sustain her relationship with Dr Callum McLennan as the anniversary of his cousin’s death approaches. Marconi is the one who helped find the killer – the doctor’s own perverse father – and McLennan’s mother cannot forgive her for it. Meanwhile, paramedic Carly Martens is troubled, determined to find justice for her dead friend, while waiting to see if her girlfriend will be able to brave her family’s bigotry and disclose their relationship. The emergency services – both police and ambulance – require trust on the field, but in this case, suspicion spreads far and wide. Deserving Death was a revealing and tense read, and the cause of a Very Late Night Staying Up Just To Finish One *cough* Twelve More Chapters. This is a book full of smart and powerful women, and the men who feel inadequate when confronted by them. Exactly the right kind of crime novel to throw us screaming into 2014. RIPPER YOU WILL NEVER FIND ME Isabel Allende Robert Wilson Fourth Estate. PB. $29.99 Orion. PB. $29.99 Isabel Allende is a lyrical storyteller, and each of her characters is always vividly built. In Ripper, she tells the tale of a mother and daughter, Indiana and Amanda Jackson, holistic healer and teenage sleuth respectively: they are happy, close, and heading into danger. Amanda has a predilection for crime novels and spends her time playing Ripper, an online mystery game; when she discovers a series of deaths in their beloved home of San Francisco could be connected, she is well placed to investigate further – until Indiana vanishes. Charlie Boxer knows how to find people – he does it for a living – but when his daughter, Amy, goes missing, leaving a note that reads, You will never find me, Charlie knows that sometimes the disappeared don’t want to be found. After years of work in intense environments, Charlie’s relationship with Amy is patchy, and his uneven parenting means he may not have enough insider knowledge to find her. THE FARM Tom Rob Smith Simon & Schuster. PB. $29.99 Daniel is a dutiful British son, pleased that his parents have retired to an idyllic farm in his mother’s homeland of Sweden, until news comes from his father: his mother has had a psychotic breakdown, accusing those around her of horrendous crimes. After being released from a psychiatric ward she has since vanished. Before he can leave England, Daniel gets another call: this time from his mother, seemingly rational, and on her way to Heathrow to prove that there was a crime – and that Daniel’s father was involved. BIG BAD WOLF Nele Neuhaus Pan Mac. PB. $29.99 It’s a hot German summer and Inspectors Pia Kirchhoff and Oliver von Bodenstein are trying to uncover the identity of a teenager brutally murdered and washed up on a Frankfurt riverbank. There are no leads until they stumble upon a connection in a new case – a controversial television personality is violently attacked – and the investigation takes a turn for the sickening. Complex, surprising and not for the faint of heart. IN THE MORNING I’LL BE GONE Adrian McKinty Profile. PB. $29.99 One grand thing about the end of the January holidays is that February means getting my paws on a copy of this, the latest no-longer-Detective Inspector Sean Duffy book. With Duffy at a place so low it’s close to underground, it’s the best time for MI5 to strike with a request, and he’s tasked to track down IRA prison escapee, bomb builder and ex-schoolmate Dermot McCann. Said mission points him in the direction of a locked-room mystery and – because he’s never far from it – further peril and utterly enjoyable reading. THE GIRL WITH A CLOCK FOR A HEART Peter Swanson Faber & Faber. PB. $29.99 In college, George Foss has a relationship that ends with drama, confusion and a warrant out for his girlfriend’s arrest; decades later, in his favourite bar, Liana Decter reappears, asking for a favour. Still in her thrall despite the intervening years and (you’d think) acquired wisdom, George agrees – anything to save Liana from what a punch in the kidneys by a hired goon shows to be a very real danger. But what will that one favour lead to? (Answer: a pretty great and twisty crime novel.) 9 Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards 2014 Here are the winners, each an exceptional literary achievement – and together making for a robust reading list Prize for Poetry LIQUID NITROGEN Jennifer Maiden Giramondo. PB. $24 Politically-charged and exquisitely-structured, Jennifer Maiden’s intimate poems read like verse essays, subjecting the political issues of our time, and the figures who dominate them, to a fierce scrutiny. Maiden was also awarded the Victorian Prize for Literature. Prize for Fiction COAL CREEK Alex Miller A&U. PB. Was $30 $26.95 In this tenderly provocative novel, Bobby Blue becomes caught between loyalty to his only friend Ben Tobin, and his boss Daniel Collins, the new Constable at Mount Hay. Readings’ Managing Director Mark Rubbo calls it ‘a great achievement.’ Prize for Non-Fiction FORGOTTEN WAR Henry Reynolds New South. PB. $29.99 Forgotten War continues the story told in Reynolds’ seminal book The Other Side of the Frontier, which argued that the settlement of Australia had a high level of violence and conflict that we chose to ignore. Our reviewer describes it as ‘an intelligent, challenging work.’ Prize for Writing for Young Adults MY LIFE AS AN ALPHABET Barry Jonsberg A&U. PB. $14.99 My Life as an Alphabet is a delightful novel about an unusual girl who goes to great lengths to bring love and laughter into the lives of everyone she cares about. Our reviewer writes, ‘This book completely won me over, just as unusual misfit Candice wins over everyone she meets.’ Prize for Drama With Savages, multi award-winning playwright Patricia Cornelius takes a tough look at masculinity and misogyny amongst a pack of ordinary young men. 10 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 New Young Adult Fiction New Non-Fiction See books for kids, junior and middle readers on pages 14-15 Australian Book of the Month NINE OPEN ARMS Benny Lindelauf (translated by John Nieuwenhuizen) A&U. PB. $16.99 Emily Gale is from Readings Carlton Romily Bernard S&S. PB. $16.99 Wick Tate and her sister haven’t had an easy life. With a mother who committed suicide and a drug-dealing father on the run, the Tate sisters have finally been put in a loving foster home and feel like they can start a new life. That is until Wick, an expert computer hacker, finds the diary of a local dead girl left at her front door with the message ‘find me’ written inside. As Wick starts to delve into the girl’s world through social media, she gets a nasty surprise to discover that the person responsible is ready to strike again, and this time much closer to home. I have to admit, it took me a little time to get into this book, I think because I wasn’t really sure how it was going to work and if it would be captivating enough. However, by the time I was about a quarter of the way in, I was hooked, and keen to find out what would happen. Find Me certainly isn’t literary genius, but it doesn’t claim to be. Simply put, it’s a fun mystery that will engross teens who like a bit of whodunnit. For ages 13 and up. Katherine Dretzke is from Readings Hawthorn GRASSHOPPER JUNGLE Andrew Smith Egmont. PB. $19.95 This unusual comingof-age novel has been likened to the voices of Vonnegut and Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye, with good reason. The narrator, a self-proclaimed historian, Austin Szerba, is a 15-year-old Polish kid living in the middle of a dead-end town in Lutheran Ohio. He’s obsessed with sex and cigarettes and happens to be equally in love with his best friend, Robby, as his girlfriend, Shann. He is also recording the end of the world, which may or may not have been caused by him and Robby, and which will definitely involve giant, sex-obsessed insects. As our narrator Mandy Sayer A&U. PB. Was $33 $27.95 We see many successful adult novels translated to English from the Dutch (a notable release of late being Herman Koch’s The Dinner). Nine Open Arms is welcome proof that young adult publishers recognise the value of translated fiction, too. Originally published in 2003, Nine Open Arms has won several esteemed awards in its native Holland. It’s unclear whether we’ll get the sequel (which has been compared to The Book Thief), but I sincerely hope so. Nevertheless, this story stands alone. It takes place during the 1930s, in the Netherlands, and follows the trials of a large, motherless family, always on the move because their father – a dreamer – takes risks that never pay off. In fact, they’re destitute and come to live in a dilapidated house at the end of a dusty road, placing them literally on the edge of civilisation. The narrative is with the eldest girl, Fing, a wise and responsible child, perfectly pitched to show off the more eccentric characters, such as her sister Muulke, who is dramatic and fearless, and her hard-as-nails grandmother, Oma Mei. The house has its secrets, and somehow they are linked to Fing’s family. We’re taken back to the 1860s to see how. For me, the joy was in the journey more than the revelations, in the warmth and humour alongside the hardship and sadness. Highly recommended for ages 12 and up, with good crossover appeal. FIND ME THE POET’S WIFE notes, ‘good books are about everything’ and Grasshopper Jungle is a great book that is both a crazy, thrilling ride and a wise and funny look at the confusion of being a teenager – especially when the end of the world happens to be just around the corner. Angela Crocombe is from Readings St Kilda THE INTERN Gabrielle Tozer HarperCollins. PB. $16.99 When Josie Browning lands an internship at the glossy fashion magazine Sash, she thinks her luck could finally be changing. A coveted columnist job is up for grabs, but Josie quickly learns that the magazine industry is far from easy. This debut novel from industry insider Gabrielle Tozer reveals just what is behind the seeming sparkle of the magazine industry. TAPE Steven Camden HarperCollins. PB. $19.99 In 1993, Ryan records a diary on an old tape. He talks about his mother’s death, about his dreams and about his love for a new girl at school who doesn’t even know he exists. In 2013, Ameliah moves in with her grandmother after her parents die and discovers a tape in the spare room. The tape has a boy’s voice on it, which seems to be speaking to her. But Ryan and Ameliah are connected by more than just a tape. THIS STAR WON’T GO OUT Esther Earl Penguin. PB. $19.99 A collection of the journals, fiction, letters and sketches of the late Esther Grace Earl, who passed away in 2010 at the age of 16. Photographs and essays by family and friends help to tell Esther’s story, along with an introduction by award-winning author John Green, who dedicated his bestselling novel, The Fault in Our Stars, to her. Mandy Sayer’s vivid new memoir, set predominantly in New Orleans, Indiana, and later in Sydney’s Kings Cross, details her volatile ten-year marriage to the Pulitzer-Prize winning poet, Yusef Komunyakaa. Two memoirs precede this work: Dreamtime Alice, which detailed the years she spent tap-dancing on the street with her drummer father, Gerry; and Velocity, the story of her childhood spent on society’s fringe. In The Poet’s Wife we are introduced to Sayer as she meets Komunyakaa at Mardi Gras in New Orleans. Sayer is in her early twenties, still busking with Gerry, while Komunyakaa is nearly forty, a struggling poet from the Deep South. Sayer positions news she received in 2003 of the murder-suicide of Komunyakaa’s two-year-old son and then partner, the poet Reetika Vazirani, at the beginning of her memoir, and it’s difficult to shift the shadow that this situation casts. In Sayer’s marriage to Komunyakaa, he is unpredictable and dynamic, roaming without any real warning between vehemence and tenderness. His bad behavior makes for engaging reading, before the jolt comes that this is someone’s life story. While Sayer is capable of tremendous achievements they do nothing to mollify her shallow sense of self-worth, and she suffers from crippling anxiety and depression. She’s an intriguing character, one capable of staggering pragmatism – you root for her while being simultaneously infuriated. Despite the bleakness of Sayer’s domestic landscape, her writing is buoyant. Aside their travels between America and Australia, the pair makes impressive professional achievements. Sayer has now moved outside of Komunyakaa’s orbit, but it’s impossible not to wonder about his influence. Professionally, he encouraged her to write and produce novels – Sayer’s first, Mood Indigo, was published while she was married to Komunyakaa – though dually she contributed editorial advice to his poetry. The Poet’s Wife would be striking simply as an account of the early careers of a significant poet and an accomplished writer – but this is, of course, a record of a deeply troubled relationship. Sayer offers a memoir written with clear-eyed precision, The Poet’s Wife rippling as much with her measured prose as her generous storytelling. Belle Place is the editor of Readings Monthly ANZAC’S LONG SHADOW: THE COST OF OUR NATIONAL OBSESSION battle over Australia’s culture brings into question what Anzac means in contemporary Australia. Education Minister Christopher Pyne suggests that the review will address concerns about the history curriculum ‘not giving important events in Australia’s history and culture the prominence they deserve, such as Anzac Day’. Yet here, Brown, former Australian Army officer and current military fellow at the Lowy Institute, puts forward that the Anzac legend is in no danger of slipping from the public consciousness. The fourth book from Black Inc.’s Redback imprint, Anzac’s Long Shadow takes a candid look at how Australia eulogises the Anzacs and why. Brown considers the costs and dangers of a culture that reveres the Anzac story and spirit, yet predominantly ignores our current military presence in Afghanistan. This is not a damning critique of the Anzac legacy, but rather a considered commentary on the myriad ways in which the ‘sheer effort we are expending on the Anzac centenary is utterly irreconcilable’ with the marginal place of the serving military in our society. Brown writes that ‘touching the sacred is a difficult thing to do. Grabbing hold of it with both hands and wrestling with it can be tricky indeed.’ Brown, as both an intelligent military theorist and an engaging storyteller, is able to tackle such a controversial issue with humour and candour. A personal, challenging and informative work, Anzac’s Long Shadow has the potential to contribute a great deal to Australia’s understanding of our own military service, and how we think about war itself. Stella Charls is from Readings Carlton Biography LITTLE FAILURE: A MEMOIR Gary Shteyngart Penguin. PB. $32.99 Gary Shteyngart’s loving but mismatched parents dreamed that he would become a lawyer, or at least an accountant, something their distracted son was simply not cut out to do. Fusing English and Russian, his mother created the term Failurchka – ‘Little Failure’ – which she applied to her son. With love. Mostly. A candid and deeply poignant story of a Soviet family’s trials and tribulations, and of their escape in 1979 to the consumerist promised land of the United States, Little Failure is also an exceptionally funny account of the author’s transformation from asthmatic toddler in Leningrad to 40-something Manhattanite with a receding hairline and a memoir to write. SHEILA James Brown Robert Wainwright Black Inc. PB. $19.99 A&U. PB. Was $33 This year, many local books will focus on the Gallipoli centenary in 2015; indeed, James Brown’s Anzac’s Long Shadow offers a timely, biting analysis of the Anzac legend – one that will most likely sit outside the usual commemorative milieu. As the Abbott government launches a review of the national curriculum, a new $27.95 An extraordinary woman unknown to most Australians, Shelia is spellbinding. Born on an Australian sheep station in New South Wales, she wedded earls and barons, befriended literary figures and movie stars, bedded a future king, and was feted by R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 London and New York society for 40 years before dying as a Russian princess. Edward, Prince of Wales, called her ‘a divine woman’ and his brother Bertie, the future George VI of England, was especially close to her. INSIDE TRADER Trader Faulkner Scribe. PB. $35 As a boy, Ronald ‘Trader’ Faulkner was a troubled and rebellious surfer and tearaway, and dreamed of a career in the Royal Australian Navy. But through a series of chance encounters, he found himself embarking on a career in the theatre — not unlike his father, the silent film actor John Faulkner, and his mother, Sheila Whytock, a ballerina who danced with Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes and the great Anna Pavlova. After he arrived in England in 1950, his career in the theatre soon took off, bringing him into contact with some of the finest actors, directors, and playwrights of his time. Politics MY PROMISED LAND: THE TRIUMPH AND TRAGEDY OF ISRAEL Ari Shavit Scribe. HB. $45 My Promised Land is a profoundly inspiring and challenging book. It is an intensely personal impression of a country, for which the writer has intense admiration and affection but also grave misgivings. Israel was founded on a paradox. The ideals of Zionism embodied the rights to freedom, to self determination, to safety and to a just society – politically and economically. The early Zionists were amazingly successful in creating a real living society that incorporated these ideals but the creation of this society required the displacement of millions of people, often quite harshly. Ari Shavit, a leading Israeli journalist and a columnist for Haaretz, does not shy away from any aspect of Israeli history or society. He speaks lovingly and admiringly of the Zionist movement and what it achieved in a harsh land. But he also writes of a massacre of Palestinians in the town of Lydda, and how the survivors were forced to leave their homes for the refugee camps in Jordan – he acknowledges that the Israeli soldiers ‘did dirty work that enables myself, my daughter and my sons to live’. Shavit explores how the State of Israel has evolved, and what it has become. There is much that worries him but he does not have the answers: ‘If Israel does not retreat from the West Bank, it will be politically and morally doomed, but if it does retreat, it might face an Iranian-backed and Islamic Brotherhood-inspired West Bank regime whose missiles could endanger Israel’s security.’ This is not a history of Israel; it is a beautifully written reflection on a complex society by a compassionate and intelligent participant. It is essential reading. Mark Rubbo is Managing Director of Readings THE SNOWDEN FILES Luke Harding Faber. PB. $29.99 It began with a tantalising, anonymous email: ‘I am a senior member of the intelligence community...’ What followed was the most spectacular intelligence breach in history: the leaking of highly sensitive secrets from the heart of US power by young contractor Edward Snowden. Award-winning Guardian journalist Luke Harding spins a highoctane account of integrity and intrigue as he unspools the thread of Snowden’s narrative, one that simultaneously earned him the titles of hero and traitor. Cultural Studies T his comprehensive book traces his business career, THE ROAD TO MIDDLEMARCH the entrepreneurial strategies that led to Rupert Murdoch’s early success and his later Rebecca Mead exercises of monopoly power. It Text. PB. $32.99 I’ve read Middlemarch twice, once as a teenager and once as an adult. Although I loved it the first time, it was the second reading that convinced me this was to be my favourite novel. Rebecca Mead reads Middlemarch every five years and each time finds more to admire. There is something truly remarkable in Eliot’s ability to create an epic story that still has such resonance today, despite the fact that the characters are confined to a provincial English town during a short period of time in the early 1830s. The complicated genius of the author is something that Mead set out to discover along her road to Middlemarch. The subtitle is ‘My Life with George Eliot’, and certainly Mead uses reflections from her own life to explore her deeply personal relationship with the book, but this never feels like an indulgent autobiography; it’s almost as if it’s impossible to discuss the novel in any depth without conveying what it means to the reader. Nor does Mead shy away from discussing criticisms of both the book and its author; her research uncovers some letters written by Eliot that she finds difficult to read for their ‘embarrassing pretentiousness’. But it’s Mead’s close analysis of the book that I most enjoyed, from pages and pages examining a single paragraph to speculation about which acquaintances of Eliot’s might have inspired particular characters. Although I suspect the reader will get more from Mead’s book if they have read Middlemarch at least once, it will certainly inspire others to revisit its pages. I think it’s time I got started on my third reading. Kara Nicholson is from Readings Carlton THE NEWS: A USER’S MANUAL Alain de Botton Hamish Hamilton. HB. $29.99 In The News, Alain de Botton, the bestselling author of Religion for Atheists, takes 25 archetypal news stories – from an aircrash to a murder, from a celebrity interview to a political scandal – and submits them to intense analysis. His manual is sure to bring understanding and a measure of sanity to our daily interactions with the news machine. dissects his political ideas, the relish with which he approaches political campaigning, and the way he leverages political support into policy outcomes that favour his business. w w w . n e w s o u t h b o o k s . c o m . a u Art ClimAte ethiCs: WhAt role for the Arts? 6.00–7.30pm (free entry) Saturday 15 February, 2014 Deakin Edge, Federation Square, Melbourne Art Climate Ethics will consider what role the arts can play in understanding and deepening our engagement with the challenge of climate change. Hear what leading thinkers in art, science and philosophy have to say. Moderated by ABC’s rafael epstein with panellists including Philosopher Damon Young, Artists mandy martin and fiona hall and Climate Expert Peter Christoff. further information at www.climarte.org Proudly supported by Sustainable Living Festival, Sofitel Luxury Hotels, Cordial Creative and Melbourne Conversations MARITIME MYSTERY Why did the elegant SS Koombana disappear off the Pilbara coast in 1912, and why was it never found? ‘an impressive and engagingly written history …’ The West Australian ‘a fascinating mix …* * * * ’ Books+Publishing fremantlepress.com.au 11 12 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 THE TRIPLE PACKAGE Amy Chua & Jed Rubenfeld Bloomsbury. PB. $29.99 The Triple Package is an examination of how three cultural traits enable some groups to outperform others: a superiority complex; insecurity; impulse control. Drawing on original research and startling statistics, Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld explore the motivational drive that leads to the rise, and sometimes fall, of cultural groups. BLOCKBUSTERS Anita Elberse Scribe. PB. $32.99 What’s behind the phenomenal success of entertainment businesses such as Warner Bros and MGM – along with such stars as Jay-Z and Lady Gaga? Anita Elberse, Harvard Business School’s expert on the entertainment industry, reveals why executives often spend outrageous amounts of money in search of the next blockbuster, and why superstars are paid unimaginable sums. Required reading for anyone wanting to understand how the entertainment industry really works. Travel Writing INSIDE A PEARL Edmund White Bloomsbury. PB. $29.99 Writers writing in Paris – Genet, Proust and Rimbaud – are who attracted me to Inside a Pearl and while touched upon they appear infrequently within the pages of the latest memoir by Edmund White. An American writer, White arrived in Paris in 1983 at 43, where he lived for 15 years, penned the definitive Jean Genet biography and wrote about the lives of Marcel Proust and Arthur Rimbaud. White writes a little about his work, his Vogue writing assignments, about hiring assistants and meeting friends, associates or descendants of these writers, but mostly Inside a Pearl reads like a glossy celebrity magazine that left me wondering how he ever found the time to write. Luminous characters appear out of nowhere, star in an anecdote or two and are gone again. Susan Sontag, Nigella Lawson, Julian Barnes, Lauren Bacall, Salman Rushdie, Stephen Fry, Catherine Deneuve, Michel Foucault, Yves Saint Laurent, Martin Amis, Paloma and Claude Picasso, Christian Lacroix, and the King and Queen of Sweden are just some of this cast of, seemingly, thousands. There is a name-dropping aspect to the writing that at times left me wanting a little more depth, but it is the 1980s and the writing is perhaps reflective of the excesses of the time. White’s thousands of anonymous and named gay lovers also grace the pages here, not without devastation as AIDS takes hold and many are diagnosed HIV positive. At the heart of this memoir is White’s friendship with Marie-Claude, an older French woman who is his guide to Paris, French language and etiquette. White’s observations and discoveries offer a mixture of cultural generalities and astute and wry reflections, while he deftly weaves some dazzling sentences together in this recollection of a remarkable life. Deborah Crabtree is from Readings Carlton AFTERNOONS IN ITHAKA: A MEMOIR OF GREECE AND FINDING YOUR PLACE Spiri Tsintziras HarperCollins. PB. $24.99 From the first heady taste of tomatoes on home-baked bread at her mother’s village in Petalidi, to sitting at a taverna some 30 years later in Ithaka with her own young family, Spiri Tsintziras heads on a culinary journey that propels her between Europe and Australia. These funny and poignant stories explore how food and culture, language and music all help to create a sense of meaning and identity. THE PERFECT THEORY Pedro G. Ferreira Little, Brown. PB. $32.99 From the moment Albert Einstein first proposed his General Theory of Relativity in 1915, it was received with enthusiasm alongside tremendous resistance – and, for the following 90 years, was the source of feuds, ideological battles and international collaborations. In this first complete popular history of the theory, Pedro G. Ferreira shows how it has informed our understanding of exactly what the universe is made of, and how much is still undiscovered today. MORAL TRIBES Joshua Greene Atlantic. PB. $32.99 Our brains were designed for tribal life, for getting along with a select group of others (Us), and for fighting off everyone else (Them). But modern life has thrust the world’s tribes into a shared space, creating conflicts of interest and clashes of values, along with unprecedented opportunities. A grand synthesis of neuroscience, psychology and philosophy, Moral Tribes reveals the underlying causes of modern conflict and lights a way forward. demolishing the once proudly free and secular education system in favour of taxpayer-funded dogma and division, and the frightening implications for Australia’s future as a democracy. FREE SCHOOLS David Gillespie Pan Mac. PB. $29.99 In Free Schools the bestselling author of Sweet Poison shows us how to get the better of an education system that is costing a fortune in fees, yet failing to deliver. David Gillespie was considering sending his six children to private schools for an estimated cost of $1.3 million and so began to investigate what level of advantage they would receive. Shockingly, the answer he found was none whatsoever. Taking on an ingrained and historical system of vested interests, his findings are a must-read for parents, teachers and policy-makers. Visual Arts THE DEALER IS THE DEVIL: AN INSIDER’S HISTORY OF THE ABORIGINAL ART TRADE Adrian Newstead Brandl & Schlesinger. PB. $49.95 Psychology Personal Development ONE WAY AND ANOTHER: NEW AND SELECTED ESSAYS MY AGE OF ANXIETY Adam Phillips Penguin. PB. $32.99 Throughout his brilliant career, Adam Phillips has lent a new and incisive dimension to the art of the literary essay, and in so doing revived the form for audiences of the new millennium. Collected here are 20 pieces that have best defined his thinking – including ‘On Tickling’, ‘On Being Bored’ and ‘Clutter’ – along with a selection of new writings and an introduction by Man Booker Prize-winner John Banville. Science UNDER THE MICROSCOPE Earl Owen Vintage. PB. $34.99 Here, Earl Owen, one of the earliest and most inventive pioneers of microsurgery, tells his story from receiving radiation treatment as a baby with a birth defect, to performing the first finger transplant on a child and becoming the first surgeon to be able to reverse vasectomies and complete fallopian tube ligatures. Scott Stossel William Heinemann. PB. Was $35 $29.95 Drawing on his own life-long experiences with anxiety, Scott Stossel presents an astonishing history of efforts to understand anxiety from medical, cultural, philosophical and experiential perspectives. His story travels from the earliest medical reports of Galen and Hippocrates, to the investigations by great nineteenth-century scientists such as Charles Darwin and Sigmund Freud, and on to the latest research by neuroscientists and geneticists. Adrian Newstead presents the definitive exposé of ‘the first great art movement of the 21st century’, from pre-contact and colonial days to the heady celebrations of the Sydney Olympics, to the devastating impact of the global financial crisis. Through vivid portraits of artists, dealers and scamsters, Newstead takes us deep into remote Indigenous communities where dispossessed populations of tribal elders and troubled youth play a significant role, and on to the galleries and art institutions of major cities all over the world. Australian Studies CHEQUERED LIVES Iola Hack Mathews & Chris Durrant Education TAKING GOD TO SCHOOL Marion Maddox A&U. PB. $29.99 In Taking God to School Marion Maddox uncovers the surprising impact of Christian groups on what was once secular public schooling, and examines the ways in which governments have been persuaded to support their cause. She demonstrates how our governments are systematically Wakefield Press. PB. $29.95 Chequered Lives is the story of a Quaker family from England who camped on the beach in 1837 before the city of Adelaide was created, but rose to owning a 3000-acre estate in the Adelaide Hills. Barton Hack became a merchant who owned ships, a whaling station and a vineyard, but his family lost everything in the crash of 1841–43. When Barton’s great-great-granddaughter, journalist Iola Hack Mathews, uncovered their letters and memoirs, she knew she had to write the family’s story. *Includes travel and phrase books and business and computer books. 20% off all Rough Guides at Readings St Kilda* Valid on in stock items in store at Readings St Kilda only from 1 – 28 February 2014, 112 Acland St, St Kilda. Ph 9525 3852. www.readings.com.au R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 Meet the Bookseller Samuel Zifchak Readings Carlton Why do you work in books? Books have always been an instrumental part of my life. My grandfather was heavily involved in bookselling and both my parents are voracious readers. We used bookshelves for wallpaper. I would rarely raise my head from a book as a child. Books inspire me, entertain me and gently encourage me to examine my own beliefs about everything: from water usage to love. It’s a joy to work among such instigators of change. What’s something new you’ve observed in bookselling? A bookshop, despite a world of efficiency and the quick fix, remains a sanctuary where time slows. I’ve observed people spend hours engrossed in browsing shelves while ignoring the attention-seeking whines of their mobiles. It’s a place where you can put your world aside for a while and leave with another world under your arm. I hope that never changes. Describe your own taste in books. Stephen King once described books as ‘uniquely portable magic’. I like books that have enough magic to evoke a reaction in me. I want to finish a book feeling that something indescribable within me has been satiated. Name a book that has changed the way you think, in ways small or large. There’s a title called The Gift by Lewis Hyde. It’s a gorgeous exploration into market-driven societies and the role and importance of creativity in a moneyfuelled world. It’s a gentle and wellresearched book with a powerful message. I’d strongly recommend it to both artists and non-artists alike. What book would you happily spend a weekend indoors with? I’d happily spend a weekend indoors engrossed in a Haruki Murakami novel. Kafka on the Shore is an obvious choice, but Dance, Dance, Dance was one of the few novels that I had to read from start to finish without pause. Your job entails recommending good reads: how do you balance personal taste with customer nous? I think you can get a pretty good idea of someone’s taste through a simple enquiry about what books they’ve enjoyed in the past. From there it’s just a matter of going through an internal catalogue and finding a match. What’s the best book you’ve read lately? I really enjoyed The 100-Year-Old Man who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson. It’s a humorous and insightful novel about a centenarian who decides to break out of his nursing home on his birthday. From that premise, it gets wilder and wilder as you realise that throughout his life the protagonist has, albeit unintentionally, shaped the modern world. There are gangsters and elephants as well. What’s not to love? Who has the best book cover? It’s a hard question, but Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book certainly caught my attention. It’s a stark cover where the coloured type offsets the sombre, detailed bird in the background. It’s alluring and draws you in. Dorothy Porter’s Collected Works uses a similar strategy and is just as striking. Art & Design with Margaret Snowden RELICS: DAMIEN HIRST Francesco Bonami (ed.) Skira. HB. $95 This richly illustrated retrospective catalogue traces Damien Hirst’s career from his emergence on the art scene in the Young British Artists movement to his present status as one of the most controversial and highly regarded artists of his generation. The catalogue gathers over 100 works, combining historic oeuvres with more recent projects, and is a complete overview on the artist’s wide-ranging practice, which includes installation, painting, sculpture and drawing, and challenges the boundaries between art, science and popular culture. THE BOOK OF TREES: VISUALIZING BRANCHES OF KNOWLEDGE Manuel Lima PAP. HB. $47.95 The author of Visual Complexity, Manuel Lima, here examines the more than 800-year history of the tree diagram. Lima presents 200 intricately detailed tree diagram illustrations on a remarkable variety of subjects, from some of the earliest known examples from Ancient Mesopotamia and the manuscripts of medieval monasteries to contributions by leading contemporary designers. Tree diagrams suggest strategies for representing data across many disciplines, including science, law, genealogy, linguistics, economics and sociology. DESIGNING PATTERNS Lotta Kühlhorn DGV. HB. $79.95 From whom should we learn how to design timelessly elegant patterns if not from a Swede? Leading Scandinavian pattern designer Lotta Kühlorn explains the ins and outs of how to design patterns – for everything from wallpaper designs to tea services. Readers are shown how to use the most common techniques for creating patterns and the best ways to combine colours and forms. An included CD features 10 sample projects to get you started, and the author also shares personal anecdotes, photographs and inspirations. IMPRESARIO: PAUL TAYLOR, THE MELBOURNE YEARS, 1981—1984 Helen Hughes & Nicholas Croggon Surpllus. PB. $30 This book brings together a diverse body of texts focused on Paul Taylor, the Australian editor, writer, curator and impresario, and in particular his important and influential early years in Melbourne between 1981 and 1984. The dates of the texts included span some 30 years and take a variety of forms – critical essays, reviews, short reflective texts, interviews, transcriptions of lectures – the combination of which seeks to analyse Taylor’s impact on Australian art history in the early 1980s, when he founded Art & Text and curated the landmark exhibition POPISM at the National Gallery of Victoria, and the subsequent ripples that continue to encircle us in his wake, 30 years on. LIVING WELL IS THE BEST REVENGE Calvin Tomkins Museum of Modern Art. PB. $19.95 First published in 1971 and now available for a younger generation with a new introduction by the author, Living Well Is the Best Revenge is Calvin Tomkins’ now-classic account of the lives of Gerald and Sara Murphy, American expatriates who formed an extraordinary circle of friends in France during the 1920s. First in Paris and then in the seaside town of Antibes, they played host to a cast of some of the most memorable artists and writers of the era, including Cole Porter, Pablo Picasso, Fernand Léger, Ernest Hemingway and Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. It was in Paris that Gerald Murphy first encountered Cubist painting, which prompted him to embark on an all-too-brief career as a painter – roughly from 1922 to 1929 – during which he produced 15 works, seven of which survive, and every one of which is a unique American modernist masterpiece. BEFORE THEY PASS AWAY Food & Gardening with Chris Gordon In the last few years, cookbooks have become more glamorous, more tactile, more suited to the coffee table as we spin around the world with tremendous cookbooks from UK chefs writing on India, beautiful images of mosaic tiles from Turkey and gourmet sliders from New York. This trend of international cuisines and artisans will continue in 2014, of course. Expect more wonderful Asian cookbooks as Australia takes note of who its geographical neighbours are. Phaidon have a wonderful ode to authentic Thai home cooking in the aptly named Thailand: The Cookbook (pictured), coming out in May. It’s a beautiful collection with recipes from simple street food to elaborate palace cuisine. Another theme heading from the outskirts to your kitchen table is the paleo effect. As more people look to roll their eating habits back hundreds of years, more on-trend cookbooks will surely emerge. Look out for Paleo Café owner Marlies Hobbs own collection on healthy living in Paleo Cafe Lifestyle & Cookbook. And my challenge for you this year? Celebrate your local chef in your local restaurant as much as you might a British chef on your television. Let’s buy local in both food and books. I hope to see more books from Melbourne chefs who understand our particular needs and desires. Jimmy Nelson teNeues. HB. $320 In his landmark project, Before They Pass Away, Jimmy Nelson captures the lives and traditions of the last surviving tribes who have managed to preserve their traditional ways and customs within our increasingly globalised world. The British photographer’s epic portraits present these dignified inheritors of noble and age-old traditions in a proud spirit and in all their glory – a unique visual experience. This exquisitely photographed showcase for world tribal culture is not only a joy to look at, but also an important historical record. Nelson’s large-plate field camera has captured the wide variety of human experiences and cultural expressions across the ages. THIS IS DALÍ & THIS IS WARHOL Sign up to our enews for the latest in books, music and film. Catherine Ingram & Andrew Rae (illus.) Laurence King. HB. $19.95 These are the first in a new graphic-novel style series of artist introductions (This is Dalí pictured here). They are an excellent format for presenting the artists’ lives, and have a fresh perspective, which is very engaging. Starting with formative childhood experiences, the text follows the multi-faceted careers of both within a cultural and social framework. Great illustrations by Andrew Rae make the books delightful, even if you are already very familiar with this famous pair. 13 readings.com.au Free delivery on everything, anywhere in Australia. 14 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 Picture Books ALONG THE ROAD TO GUNDAGAI Jack O’Hagan & Andrew McLean (illus.) Omnibus. HB. $24.99 ‘There’s a track winding back, to an oldfashioned shack / Along the road to Gundagai ...’ Musician Jack O’Hagan wrote the song in 1922 and it became a well-known folk tune. Andrew McLean’s illustrations bring to life the story of the men who went to the Great War, many of them never to return home. A BOOK IS A BOOK Jenny Bornholdt & Sarah Wilkins (illus.) Gecko. HB. $19.99 I gasped with delight on my first encounter with this whimsical marriage of words and pictures, and I reverently turned the cream-coloured pages with their delightful illustrations. Obviously talented creators had fun celebrating everything to do with the wonder that’s the book. You too will be inspired to have lots of fun exploring with young readers what a book is, what it’s for, how to use it and what to do with it. My favourite observation is that, ‘Some books are small because some writers are very tired.’ And of course, ‘A book can never run out of power.’ Hark, book lovers! This beautiful little treasure is for you. Highly recommended. Story Time Athina Clarke is from Readings Malvern FIRE Jackie French & Bruce Whatley (illus.) Scholastic. HB. $24.99 Readings Carlton Mondays 11am – 11.30am Readings St Kilda Saturdays 10.30am – 11am Readings Malvern Fridays 10.30am – 11am Each week, Readings’ staff will read their favourite picture books – new or classic – for pre-school children (0 to 6 years old). The emphasis is very much on providing a relaxed environment and on reading being fun. Story Time is free and there’s no need to book. For half an hour after Story Time, Readings offers a 20% discount off all fullpriced children’s books. Please note: all children must be accompanied by an adult as this is not a child-minding service. Fire, everyone’s nightmare if not contained in a fireplace, is something Australians are all too familiar with, and this moving picture book hauntingly conveys the sheer immensity of bushfire. The succinct urgency of the verse captures the spark that ignites the landscape in all its terrifying ferocity and the atmospheric pictures bring it all to life. While bush and properties are destroyed by nature, it is the unwavering courage of the firefighters and the preciousness of our loved ones that is quietly championed. And then, nature, which took so much away, will slowly give back and new growth will appear among the blackness, and birds, animals and hope will return. This book captures it all brilliantly. For ages 5 and up. Alexa Dretzke is from Readings Hawthorn MY TWO BLANKETS Irena Kobald & Freya Blackwood (illus.) Little Hare. HB. $24.95 Cartwheel arrives in a new country, and feels the loss of all she’s ever known. She creates a safe place under an old blanket made out of memories and thoughts of home. As time goes on, Cartwheel weaves a new blanket, one of friendship and a renewed sense of belonging. It is different from the old blanket but eventually just as warm and familiar. A beautiful tale about friendship and culture, paired with award-winning Freya Blackwood’s stunning illustrations. Junior Fiction WAFFLE HEARTS: LENA AND ME IN MATHILDEWICH COVE Maria Parr Walker. HB. $19.95 They say opposites attract and the two main characters of this charming Norwegian novel couldn’t be more different. Lena and Trille live next door to each other and where Trille is sensitive and steadfast, Lena is a resilient daredevil who gets them into all manner of scrapes with her impetuous and questioning nature. This is a gentle and magical book about friendship and loving families with the added attraction of a different culture that is in tune with the sea and the land. Lena reminds me of a modern-day Pippi Longstocking, and Trille, who fears Lena doesn’t consider him her best friend, is her trusty sidekick. However when needs must, Trille can be bold and brave enough to save someone or something he cares deeply about. Simply told Waffle Hearts is thoroughly enjoyable and would suit children aged from 6 to 10. AD THE VANISHING OF BILLY BUCKLE: WINGS & CO. 3 Sally Gardner & David Roberts (illus.) Hachette. PB. $14.95 The Wings & Co detectives are in Puddliepool-on-Sea. The giant Billy Buckle is missing. His daughter Primrose is desperate to find him – and so are the detectives, because Primrose is growing bigger every day and living with a giant isn’t half as fun as it sounds. There’s also a murdered pianist and a vanished fortune-teller to deal with. It’s up to Emily, Fidget and Buster to get to the bottom of it! With marvellous illustrations from David Roberts, creator of Dirty Bertie. PRANK ALERT: DOUBLE TROUBLE BOOK 1 Fiona Regan & Louis Shea (illus.) Scholastic. PB. $3.99 Meet Thomas and Cooper: identical twins and master prankers! The best thing about being twins is that you always have twice the fun (but get into double the trouble!). Tommy and Coop can’t help themselves, they just love pranking. But what will happen when their school prank gets completely out of hand? Will they get stuck with the worst punishment ever ... more recorder practice? The second book in the series, Skateboard Stars, is also available. THE CATIER EMERALD: KITTEN KABOODLE MISSION 1 Eileen O’Hely & Heath McKenzie (illus.) Walker. PB. $14.95 ‘Your mission,’ said the chief, ‘should you choose to accept it, is to penetrate DOG Fortress, disguised as a pedigree kitten.’ Kitten Kaboodle is no ordinary cat. He’d rather chase a Rottweiler than a ribbon and prefers kung-fu to cuddles. He is the number one secret agent at CAT – the Clandestine Activity Taskforce. When pedigree kittens start disappearing, Kitten Kaboodle is on the job. Who could guess that this mission will lead him straight to DOG – the Disaster Organisation Group – and the priceless Catier Emerald? Middle Fiction OPHELIA AND THE MARVELLOUS BOY Karen Foxlee Five Mile. PB. $14.95 Ophelia and the Marvellous Boy has it all: a magical realm embroiled in a battle between good and evil; a council of wizards pitted against an evil Snow Queen; a 300-year-old boy and a pragmatic, rational girl caught in a peculiar museum; a delicious juxtaposition of magic and logic; and a quest to save the world. Our heroes, Ophelia and the Marvellous Boy, are endearing characters, vulnerable yet strong, ultimately courageous in the face of adversity, their fates inextricably linked. Certainly, Ophelia’s quirky mannerisms and adroit observations inject a touching humour. I cared for both of them deeply and shed a few tears when the going got tough! In this enchanting story, which skilfully draws from a number of sources, fantasy kingdoms collide and merge with the real world and parallels are artfully drawn and explored. A wonderful adventure, perfect for independent readers 9 years and up, and an ideal readaloud for the whole family. AC R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 15 Book of the Month A VERY GOOD IDEA: THE TINKLERS THREE M.C. Badger Egmont. PB. $12.95 Fresh material for those growing in confidence with their reading is always welcome, and I think this new series will be popular with parents as well as children. The Tinkler children (one boy, two girls) fend for themselves while their parents work in a travelling circus. Their lives are both recognisable and deliciously far-fetched. In A Very Good Idea they decide to see if they can get across town without once touching the ground. Such a simple and familiar challenge (who hasn’t tried to do this across a room as a child?), but the Tinklers are allowed to take it further than boring old reality. The siblings are nice to one another and realistically mischievous, while the humour is gentle and doesn’t try too hard. Short sentences and illustrations make this an ideal step up from Sally Rippin’s Billie B books. A lovely new addition for ages 5 to 8. The second and third books in the series, An Excellent Invitation and The Coolest Pool, are also available. Emily Gale is from Readings Carlton KEEPER OF THE PHOENIX: ASH ROVER BOOK 1 Aleesah Darlison & Nicole Onslow (illus.) Walker. PB. $14.95 Can Ash and his friends rescue the village and break the evil wizard’s spell in time? Ash Rover wants to do something important with his life. When he discovers a phoenix egg, he gets his wish. But the magical bird brings trouble to Ash’s village. Soon Ash is not only the unlikely Keeper of the Phoenix, he is also on a desperate quest to save his family and friends. SHAMANKA Jeanne Willis Walker. PB. $16.95 What is magic? What is illusion? What is real? Step into the extraordinary world of Sam Khaan, who has just discovered a witch doctor’s notebook in her attic. Convinced that it belongs to her long-lost father – the son of a witch doctor – she sets out on a journey to discover the answers to these questions. In her encounters with diviners and healers, conjurers and mystics, Sam learns the truth about magic the hard way. Here is your chance to take a far easier route. QUINCY JORDAN: CRYSTAL BAY GIRLS BOOK 1 Jen Storer Puffin. PB. $16.99 One of the things I recall about being an avid pre-teen reader was my love of Francine Pascal’s Sweet Valley High books, that widely criticised series – soap opera in book form – that nobody approved of apart from the millions of tweens who devoured them. What Melbourne writer Jen Storer does with her new series is to create the warm, easy feel of SVH but with lots of improvements: more realism, more attention to cultural diversity, rounded characters. I think she gets the balance right. In the first book, Quincy’s life is ruined when her father walks out, and a new life on the coast is difficult to adjust to. Quincy is likeable but not perfect, and although romance is a theme it is only part of her journey, rather than the destination. Quality escapism for ages 10 and up. EG New Kids’ Books Activity Books THE FLYING MACHINE KIT Nick Arnold & Brendan Kearney (illus.) T&H. HB. $29.95 A spectacular interactive guide to aerodynamics that has five fabulous flying machines to make. There are two specially designed paper planes, a rubberband-powered single-prop plane, a unique, superspeedy twin-prop plane and a vertical take-off helicopter. Flying hints and tips suggest how to manipulate your machine’s speed, distance and flight direction, demonstrating the basic aerodynamic principles and helping you to understand the forces that affect flight. Non-Fiction Classic of the Month THE OPEN OCEAN THE CHILDREN OF GREEN KNOWE COLLECTION Francesco Pittau & Bernadette Gervais Hardie Grant. HB. $34.95 Guess a sea creature from its silhouette, shell, or scales – and lift the flap to discover the answer! This lush, oversized book about marine life features a variety of guessing games and special features, and provides hours of educational entertainment. With elegant, graphic illustrations, plus intriguing facts about each animal, learning about ocean life has never been so fun and interactive. Also available in this series: Out of Sight (mammals) and Birds of a Feather. LONELY PLANET WORLD SEARCH SERIES Lonely Planet Lonely Planet. PB. $19.99 each Fancy riding high in the saddle with a group of gauchos in Argentina? Or strapping on your rollerblades and zooming through the streets of Paris with the police? Get ready for an adventure around the globe with loads of cool jobs to try. Aimed at readers aged 5+, this fun series, including Amazing Jobs (pictured), Busy Jobs and Incredible Animals lets kids lift the flap on scenes from around the world to see what’s happening inside. Lucy M. Boston Faber. PB. $15.99 It was such a delight to re-read this past favourite for this review and find it still as spellbinding and full of enchantment as I remember. Tolly, the young hero, is such a quiet, introspective boy, and his holiday with his greatgrandmother at the old farm Green Knowe promises to be slow-paced and solitary. But the house – with its ancient furnishings, half-tame birds and old topiary gardens – is full of mystery, and Tolly is used to being on his own and listening to the house around him. In this place, where the line between past and present is very thin, his great-grandmother seems unsurprised that he mysteriously meets other children who have also loved the manor. Like them, Tolly fears the overgrown Green Noah, lurking for generations in a corner of the garden. A world not to be missed for imaginative readers aged 10 and up, or as a shared family read-aloud. Kathy Kozlowski is from Readings Carlton 16 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 MASTERING THE ART OF SOVIET COOKING Anya Von Bremzen Jane Mount & Thessaly La Force PB. Was $24.95 Now $12.95 HB. Was $29.99 Now $12.95 In this tragicomic memoir, Anya Von Bremzen reconstructs her family history spanning three generations through stories of cooking and food. Her narrative is embedded in a larger historical epic: Lenin’s bloody grain requisitioning, World War II starvation, Stalin’s table manners, Khrushchev’s kitchen debates, Gorbachev’s disastrous anti-alcohol policies and the ultimate collapse of the USSR. THE NAKED LADY WHO STOOD ON HER HEAD Gary Small & Gigi Vorgan HB. Was $41.95 Now $15.95 The Naked Lady Who Stood on Her Head is a spellbinding record of psychiatrist Gary Small’s most bewildering cases, from shrinking penises and hysterical blindness to fainting schoolgirls and selfamputations. Small takes you on a tour of his career that moves from the halls of a crowded inner-city Boston emergency room to the multimillion-dollar ski lodges of the nation’s elite. THE HANDMADE LOAF Dan Lepard HB. Was $35 Now $15.95 Dan Lepard presents a collection of recipes, personal stories and photographs that capture the breads and home bakers of Europe. The blend of history and innovation will appeal to the experienced baker, but also to a generation ready to discover the simple pleasure of baking their first crisp loaf at home. VAGINA: A NEW BIOGRAPHY Naomi Wolf PB. Was $29.99 Now $12 This astonishing book from Naomi Wolf, the author of The Beauty Myth, will radically change how you think about, talk about and understand the vagina. Wolf combines cutting-edge science with cultural history to explore the role of female desire and how it affects identity, creativity and confidence; the result is revelatory and exhilarating. THE HOUR BETWEEN DOG AND WOLF: RISK TAKING, GUT FEELINGS AND THE BIOLOGY OF BOOM AND BUST John Coates HB. Was $42.95 Now $15.95 A successful Wall Street trader turned Cambridge neuroscientist reveals the biology of boom and bust and how risk taking transforms our body chemistry, driving us to extremes of euphoria and risky behaviour, or to stress and depression. While Coates’s research concentrates on traders, his conclusions shed light on all types of high-pressure decision making, from the sports field to the battlefield. THE VOICE IS ALL: THE LONELY VICTORY OF JACK KEROUAC MY IDEAL BOOKSHELF Joyce Johnson In My Ideal Bookshelf, one hundred leading cultural figures reveal the books that matter to them most. This gorgeous book includes excerpts of interviews with editor Thessaly La Force, alongside original paintings by artist Jane Mount that showcase the selections, with colourful, hand-lettered book spines and occasional objets d’art from the contributors’ personal bookshelves. HB. Was $56.95 Now $15.95 Joyce Johnson peels away layers of the Kerouac legend to show how, caught between two cultures and two languages, the young man forged a voice to contain his dualities. She looks deeply into how Kerouac’s French Canadian background enriched his prose and gave him a unique outsider’s vision of America. THE CHEMISTRY BETWEEN US PERMANENT REVOLUTION: MIKE BROWN AND THE AUSTRALIAN AVANT-GARDE 1953-97 Larry Young & Brian Alexander HB. Was $41.95 Now $13.95 All manners of ‘love’ – physical attraction, jealousy, infidelity, mother-infant bonding – are under scrutiny by social neuroscience. In The Chemistry Between Us, expert Larry Young and journalist Brian Alexander place the influx of revelations into historical, political and social contexts, touching on everything from gay marriage to why single-mother households might not be good for society. Richard Haese HB. Was $49.99 Now $19.95 In 1961 the 22-year old Mike Brown joined the New Zealand artist, Ross Crothall, in an old terrace house in inner Sydney’s Annandale, and over the following two years the artists filled the house with a remarkable body of work. Their work launched the movement they called Imitation Realism which introduced collage, assemblage and installation to Australian art for the first time. Bargain Table THE MAGIC TOYSHOP Angela Carter HB. Was $27.99 Now $12 With a stunning cover design by Jacqueline Groag and an introduction by Carmen Callil, this special edition of Angela Carter’s 1967 gothic novel is a must-have. After her parents are killed, a young girl is sent to London to live with her tyrannical uncle, a toy-maker whose creations are uncannily life-like. CULINARY VIETNAM Daniel Hoyer HB. Was $57.95 Now $19.95 Daniel Hoyer teaches how the aspects of flavour, aroma, texture, colour, contrast, balance, and even the sound a food makes, should be taken into consideration in the planning of a Vietnamese meal. Opening the door into the world of Vietnamese cooking methods and theories, Culinary Vietnam shows the astounding breadth of this cuisine. INTO THE SILENCE: THE GREAT WAR, MALLORY, AND THE CONQUEST OF EVEREST Wade Davis HB. Was $39.95 Now $16.95 In this magisterial work of history and adventure, Wade Davis vividly recreates Britain’s epic attempts to scale Mount Everest in the early 1920s. With new access to letters and diaries, Davis recounts the heroic attempts of George Mallory and his fellow climbers to conquer the mountain in the face of treacherous terrain and furious weather. New books are regularly added to our website – visit the bargains page at readings.com.au for more. AN UNLIKELY PRINCE: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF MACHIAVELLI Niccolo Capponi HB. Was $44 Now $15.95 Acclaimed historian Niccolo Capponi is a direct descendant of Machiavelli, and here he analyses his relative in the context of his own times. Capponi’s intimate portrait of Machiavelli shows how the famous political theorist’s behaviour was utterly un-Machiavellian, and how his vision of the world was limited by his own, very provincial outlook. THE LANGUAGE OF PASSION Mario Vargas Llosa & Natasha Wimmer (trans.) PB. Was $25.95 Now $12 Internationally acclaimed novelist Mario Vargas Llosa has contributed a lively and fascinating column to Spain’s major newspaper El País since 1977. In this collection of his columns from the 1990s, he weighs in on some of the burning questions of the last decade, makes a pilgrimage to Bob Marley’s shrine in Jamaica, and celebrates the sexual abandon of Carnaval in Rio. DOGS IN AUSTRALIAN ART Steven Miller PB. Was $39.95 Now $19.95 Steven Miller looks at the story of Australian art through the lens of dogs, showcasing over 150 masterworks and presenting the argument that all major shifts which have occurred in this story can be traced to the dogs themselves. His book is also a study of how the various dog breeds have been depicted from colonial times until the present. LOVE AND CAPITAL: KARL AND JENNY MARX AND THE BIRTH OF A REVOLUTION Mary Gabriel HB. Was $39.99 Now $15.95 Drawing upon years of research, acclaimed biographer Mary Gabriel brings to light the story of Karl and Jenny Marx’s marriage. He follows them as they roam Europe, on the run from hostile governments amidst a secret network of would-be revolutionaries, revealing Karl not only as an intellectual, but as a protective father, loving husband and a man of tremendous passions. WE OTHERS: NEW AND SELECTED STORIES Steven Millhauser HB. Was $39.95 Now $14.95 Pulitzer Prize-winning author Steven Millhauser writes fiction that consistently, and to dazzling effect, dissolves the boundaries between reality and fantasy, waking life and dreams, the past and the future, darkness and light. The stories collected here unfurl in settings as disparate as nineteenth-century Vienna, the corridors of a monstrous museum and Thomas Edison’s laboratory. HALFWAY TO HOLLYWOOD: DIARIES 1980—1988 Michael Palin HB. Was $39.95 Now $14.95 Halfway to Hollywood follows Michael Palin’s torturous trail through seven movies and ends with his final preparations for the documentary that was to change his life, Around the World in 80 Days. His life with Helen and the family remains a constant, as the children enter their teens. ARMY OF EVIL: A HISTORY OF THE SS Adrian Weale HB. Was $46.95 Now $15.95 Adrian Weale delves into materials not previously available, including recently released intelligence files as well as rare and never-before-published photographs, looking beyond the myths to reveal the reality of the SS as a cadre of unwavering political fanatics and power-seeking opportunists who slavishly followed an ideology that disdained traditional morality. SOUTH WITH THE SUN Lynne Cox HB. Was $44.95 Now $15.95 Roald Amundsen left his mark on the Heroic Era as one of the most successful polar explorers ever. Here, adventurer and swimmer Lynne Cox presents a full-scale account of the explorer’s life and expeditions, and how reading about ‘the last of the Vikings’ inspired her to follow her own bold dreams. R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 New Film & TV with Lou Fulco SCATTER MY ASHES AT BERGDORF’S $34.95 It’s the most mythic of all American emporiums – featuring interviews with Karl Lagerfeld, Giorgio Armani, Candice Bergen and Joan Rivers to name but a few, Scatter My Ashes at Bergdorf offers a rarified chance to peek into Bergdorf’s fascinating inner workings. KEATING: THE INTERVIEWS $29.95 Paul Keating is one of the most significant and contentious figures in Australian political history. In this candid four-part interview series with Kerry O’Brien, he reveals the forces that shaped his ambitions, and shares the inside stories of a tumultuous period of economic and social reform. RICK STEIN’S INDIA $29.95 Released 5 February Determined to track down the perfect curry, Rick Stein embarks on a spectacular journey though the Indian sub-continent to trace the origins of dishes, ingredients and spices that are celebrated the world over. His series offers viewers a feast of delights, alongside captivating cultures and religious communities. RED OBSESSION $39.95 With the fierce purchasing power of its elite class, China has become the biggest importer of wines from the Bordeaux region of France. Red Obsession examines tensions that have arisen from this arrangement as staid Bordeaux winemakers struggle to embrace a new clientele whose sensibilities do not always align with French tradition. MONTY DON’S FRENCH GARDENS $29.95 Released 5 February In this three-part series, Monty Don, the much-loved presenter of BBC television series Gardeners’ World, visits historical gardens in France. Through his explorations, Monty reveals how these gardens have been used to express both money and power, and the myriad ways French food and art are reflected in the country’s horticulture. ANDREW MARR’S HISTORY OF THE WORLD $34.95 Released 5 February Andrew Marr presents this incredible series that brings 70,000 years of human history to life, though dramatic reconstructions and gripping storytelling. This epic series tells the story of civilisations, cultures, successes and crashing failures, a story that charts progress and development through the centuries, exploring crucial turning points in history. THE LOOK $29.95 This biographical study of legendary actress Charlotte Rampling is told through her own conversations with artist friends and collaborators, including Peter Lindbergh, Paul Auster and Juergen Teller, and intercut with footage from some of Rampling’s most famous films. This ‘self-portrait through others’ is a revealing look at one of our most iconic screen stars. 17 Release of the Month BLUE JASMINE Was $39.95 $29.95 Woody Allen hits another home run with this funny, startling reimagining of Tennessee Williams’ seminal stage play A Streetcar Named Desire. Positing the titular Jasmine (Cate Blanchett) in the role of Blanche DuBois, Allen uses Williams’ paradigm to frame his own devastating but blackly funny vision of the social effects of the global financial crisis; in particular, the fall of New York’s elite after indictments for insider trading. Having had the carpet quite literally pulled from under her feet, Jasmine jumps on a plane to San Francisco to stay with her adoptive sister Ginger (Sally Hawkins) in her modest home filled with cheap knick-knacks and rowdy children. Unwilling to park her Chanel-covered derriere for too long, Jasmine makes plans to work in interior design, and takes on employment as a dentist’s receptionist in the meantime. Determined to help Ginger by insulting her lifestyle as well as her choice in men, Jasmine puts one awkward designer-clad foot in front of the other until the stress of pretending to be who she thinks she is, socially and emotionally, finally becomes too much. Discovering a few home truths about how her excessively privileged lifestyle came at the cost of ordinary folk like her sister, Jasmine’s realisation is one of the greatest dramatic moments recently captured on film. Comfortably cushioned by an excellent supporting cast including Andrew Dice Clay, Bobby Cannavale and Alec Baldwin, Blanchett gives an incredible, heart-stopping performance that will have you gasping for breath under the weight of its gravitas. As always with Allen, the city plays its part too and San Francisco is nicely poised as the colourful and lively alternative to steely NYC. A dramatic delight, this is Allen at the top of his game. Tara Kaye Judah is from Readings St Kilda THE RETURNED FRANCES HA $39.95 Released 5 February $39.95 A stylish take on the zombie genre that verges on Lynchian, French drama series The Returned looks at how an idyllic French village is thrown into emotional turmoil when a crowd of dead people, seemingly alive and normal, return home. As the returned attempt to resume their lives, their arrival coincides with a series of gruesome murders which bear a chilling resemblance to the work of a serial killer from the past. Frances (Greta Gerwig) lives in New York, but she doesn't really have an apartment. Frances is an apprentice for a dance company, but she's not really a dancer. Frances has a best friend named Sophie, but they aren't really speaking anymore. Frances throws herself headlong into her dreams, even as their possible reality dwindles. Frances wants so much more than she has but lives her life with unaccountable joy and lightness. Frances Ha is a modern comic fable that explores New York, friendship, class, ambition, failure and redemption. 18 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 New M us ic Pop/Rock DIZZY HEIGHTS Neil Finn release, revealing a departure from their debut album The Fool. Most of the tracks were reportedly born of free-form jamming sessions on stage and the result is exquisitely brooding, intricately layered and exceedingly chilled-out. $21.95 Jazz & Soul Finn travelled in two bursts to producer Dave Fridmann’s Tarbox Road studio in upstate New York, to record songs composed at his Auckland studio, Roundhead. With Fridmann (The Flaming Lips), and with contributions from New Zealand musician SJD, and wonderful string arrangements by Victoria Kelly, Finn has assembled a textured, heady sound, elevated by woozy strings and soaring vocals. GIVE THE PEOPLE WHAT THEY WANT THE BRINK The Jezabels $24.95 Following the outstanding success of Prisoner, Australian band the Jezabels settled in London to work on their sophomore album, a sweeping blend of alternative-rock and pop that was seemingly summoned from a very dark place. The result is an utterly fearless record of youthful optimism, taut with gleaming hooks and indelible melodies, all hammered out by a group of young musicians during dark days in a strange new city. FLESH & BLOOD John Butler Trio $24.95 Flesh & Blood is the sixth studio album release from Australian roots and jam band led by guitarist and vocalist John Butler. Recorded at The Compound, Butler’s studio in Fremantle, the album took a mere 20 days to record and though beautifully structured in sonic terms, there is a rawness and honesty to the tracks that reflects the brevity of its laying down. The trio will tour with the album in early 2014. TALES FROM THE REALM OF THE QUEEN OF PENTACLES Suzanne Vega $24.95 With her first new studio album in seven years, Tales from the Realm of the Queen of Pentacles, Suzanne Vega has crafted a stunning collection of songs that showcase the singer-songwriter’s trademark wit and poetic language. The new album taps into Vega’s broad range of musical tastes, classic folk to soul-packed background vocals, from lush orchestral strings to hip-hop sampling. WARPAINT Warpaint $21.95 The self-titled sophomore album from American indie rock band Warpaint was one of the most eagerly anticipated early releases for 2014. Produced together with Flood, the all-female quadrant let loose new and exciting experimental sounds on this Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings $22.95 Album number five from the inimitable Ms Jones and her DapKings was slated for release last August, though these plans were put on hold when Jones was diagnosed with cancer in June. With the cancer now thoroughly licked, it’s time for soul sister number one and her crack band to get back to doing what they do better than anyone: namely, being the slickest, most bad-ass soul-funk outfit on the planet. Album opener ‘Retreat!’ is a statement of intent if ever there was one and a song which has surely taken on new meaning since Jones’s grapple with illness. It’s classic Motown with a twist – all echo, big horns and bigger drums, and as Jones wails, ‘I’ll chew you up and spit you out’, consider yourself warned, be you an errant man or insidious disease. Other highlights include the Northern soul stomper ‘Stranger To My Happiness’, and ‘We Get Along’, a message song which perhaps best encapsulates what makes these guys so damn special – the ability to draw on a form so firmly rooted in the past and place it smack bang in the here and now with complete authenticity. Sharon Jones had her final chemotherapy treatment on New Year’s Eve and will soon return to performing live. If that ain’t soul I don’t know what is. Declan Murphy is from Readings Carlton EXTENDED CIRCLE Tord Gustavsen Quartet $24.95 The superstar Norwegian pianist’s sixth album is his most diverse and yet cohesive musical statement yet: it’s full of circular motifs, such as the way the album-closing ‘The Prodigal Song’ recalls opener ‘Right There’, as if inviting you to continue playing the album forever. The quartet (with Tore Brunborg on tenor saxophone, Mats Eilertsen on bass and Jarle Vespestad on drums) has matured into a unit able to follow every musical thought to its conclusion and develop a wider variety of sound-worlds than before. The tunes are mainly gospel pieces and ballads, but there is a directness and slow-burning fire to pieces like the immensely stirring ‘Staying There’, which harks back to the classic seventies quartets of Jan Garbarek and Bobo Stenson, and Keith Jarrett. As the group’s mutual understanding has grown, so has the freedom allotted to the players. Witness Brunborg’s ravishing intro to ‘Devotion’; the way Eilertsen supports and counters the melody of ‘Right There’; or the way Vespestad bubbles under the propulsive, syncopated arrangement of the Norwegian folk tune ‘Eg Veit I Himmerik Ei Borg’ (‘A Castle in Heaven’), the drummer as ever- Album of the Month HIGH HOPES Bruce Springsteen CD $19.95 CD & DVD $24.95 The American myth gets a reboot! On Springsteen’s eighteenth studio album (if this could indeed be called a studio album) we are introduced to a collection of covers, outtakes and re-workings of collection of tracks from past albums. Alongside guest guitarist Tom Morello, this album features the E Street Band, Clarence Clemons and Danny Federici, but its genesis is centred on Springsteen’s relationship with the former Rage Against the Machine guitarist, Morello. His soaring and at times strange and bizarre guitar play on politically charged numbers juxtapose nicely with more laid-back tracks, which include a couple of great cover versions of Suicide’s ‘Dream Baby Dream’ and ‘Just Like Fire Would’ from Australia’s own the Saints. Long time live favourites ‘High Hopes’, ‘American Skin (41 Shots)’ and the rebooted ‘Ghost Of Tom Joad’ (with an out of control Morello soaring through an amazing lead guitar break) all stand out, but it’s the wonderfully optimistic ‘Frankie Fell In Love’ that sits right in the middle of this collection and gets you thinking, ‘Yeah! That’s the classic Springsteen right there!’ This is not the most cohesive of albums, but as a Springsteen fan, I am – as always – happy to hear any release from the Boss. Is this a new direction or just an interim before he goes back into the studio to write the next great American songbook? Well, firstly he will have to get off the road, but not before touring Australia again for the second time in a year. The DVD extra is a live performance of Born in the U.S.A., which was recorded in London in 2013. By the time you get to ‘Downbound Train’ (one of my favourite Springsteen songs), ‘I’m On Fire’ and ‘No Surrender’, you remember what made this such a massive seller and took Bruce to another stratosphere in the consciousness of existing and new fans alike. This DVD is a great companion to the CD, serving as a reminder that maybe, just maybe, the next Born in the U.S.A. is just around the corner. Lou Fulco is from Readings Hawthorn changing motion, like a boxer circling his opponent looking for an opening that never presents itself. Extended Circle is a document of a group at the tipping point, perfecting a way of working sans formula or template – may there be much, much more to come. Richard Mohr is from Readings Carlton KIN () Pat Metheny Unity Group $24.95 Over the course of more than three decades, guitarist Pat Metheny has set himself apart from the jazz mainstream, blurring boundaries between musical styles. Now he presents the Pat Metheny Unity Group which features Metheny together with Chris Potter on sax and bass clarinet, Antonio Sanchez on drums and Ben Williams on bass, as well as multiinstrumentalist Giulio Carmassi. Their first release, Kin (), is a shifting, explosive album that provides ever-changing opportunities for each musician to shine. Country THE RIVER & THE THREAD Rosanne Cash 2CD deluxe edition $24.95 Rosanne Cash’s first album of original songs in eight years is sweeping in its breadth, capturing a multi-generational cast of characters such as a Civil War soldier off to fight in Virginia, and a New Deal-era farmer in Arkansas. Together with her husband, musician and producer John Leventhal, Cash draws inspiration from swampy Delta blues, gospel, Appalachian folk, country and more, as she tackles the delicate orchestral passages of ‘Night School’, to the ghostly keyboards of album closer ‘Money Road’. BLUE SMOKE Dolly Parton Was $24.95 $19.95 To coincide with her Blue Smoke World Tour, Dolly Parton has released an album of new music, Blue Smoke. Dolly is arguably the most successful female country singer, well known for both her musicianship and stage presence, as well as her philanthropy. Blue Smoke sits with some of her very best recorded work and includes duets with long-time collaborators Willie Nelson and Kenny Rogers. World EVE Angelique Kidjo $24.95 Rich with melody and rhythm, Eve is Angelique Kidjo’s tribute to the women she grew up with in her West African homeland of Benin. Kidjo performs in an array of native Beninese languages alongside an eclectic line-up of talents, including women’s choirs from African villages in Benin and Kenya, as well as Rostam Batmanglij from the indie rock band Vampire Weekend. OU T ON VINY L New Orleans Funk: Volume 3 Various $44.95 Pet Sounds The Beach Boys $39.95 Satan is Real The Louvin Brothers $34.95 A Love Supreme John Coltrane $24.95 R E A D I N G S M O N T H LY F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 BEETHOVEN: CELLO SONATAS New C la ss i ca l M u s i c Hyperion. CDA679812. $49.95. 2CD DESTINO MEXICANO La Compañia LCR. LCR4632. $24.95 In 2012, the Melbourne-based Baroque group La Compañia released their album, Ay Portugal. An homage to fifteenthcentury Portuguese music, it was a triumph – and I still enjoy listening to it. So it was with great excitement that I received their most recent release, Destino Mexicano. Subtitled ‘Baroque Rhythms from the New World’, it’s a fusion of classical Baroque as we know it and the rhythms of South America. When the Spanish invaded Mexico there was a melding of two worlds, not just in culture and peoples, but also music. In Destino Mexicano, La Compañia have focused on a particular song style from this melding, the villancico, a repetitive, secular song that uses dance rhythms with a sense of three beats, and in doing this have given cohesiveness to the whole album. Although the liner notes are detailed with interesting background on each work, I found this recording was more something I put on just to listen without needing any academic knowledge. It was terrific to have on in the background as I cooked, finding myself cutting up vegetables and moving around the kitchen in time to their sprightly percussive dance rhythms. Lotte Betts-Dean and Daniel Thomson soar as the singing soloists, expertly accompanied by the rest of La Compañia. In the few instrumental moments, La Compañia acquit themselves with great aplomb, but it’s when the singers join in that the toes start tapping. Their harmonies blend so effortlessly that sometimes it seems like there are three solo singers, rather than just the two. If you’re a fan of Baroque music, but looking for something beyond Bach and Handel, this is a must. On the other hand, if you’re just a fan of some good rhythmic ideas, this will be extremely pleasing to the ears. Kate Rockstrom is a friend of Readings C.P.E. BACH: WÜRTTEMBERG SONATAS FOR HARPSICHORD Mahan Esfahani Hyperion. CDA67995. $24.95 Iranian-American harpsichordist Mahan Esfahani has recorded C.P.E. Bach’s six ‘Württemberg’ sonatas, published in 1744, and his thrillingly intense performances make the best possible case for this dramatic, endlessly imaginative but for some reason under-performed music. The sonatas range stylistically from initial stirrings of Sturm und Drang in keyboard music to sublime imitations of the human voice, with nods to the High Baroque and the idiom of C.P.E. Bach’s more famous father. SCHUBERT: SYMPHONIES NOS. 3, 4 & 5 Thomas Dausgaard & Swedish Chamber Orchestra BIS. BIS1786. $24.95 Working their way backwards through the symphonic output of Franz Schubert, Thomas Dausgaard and his Swedish Chamber Orchestra have now reached Symphonies Nos. 3, 4 and 5. These works were all composed before Schubert had turned 20, though they nevertheless demonstrate the composer’s astonishing command of the orchestral medium. Schubert doesn’t seem to have taken much interest in the works after having composed them; however, today it is hard to imagine being without the irrepressible tarantellafinale of the Third Symphony, the dramatic tension of the opening of the ‘Tragic’ No. 4, or the Mozartian minuet of the Fifth. ESSENTIAL TAVENER Various Decca. 4786424. $16.95 This compilation was originally created to celebrate the composer’s 70th birthday in January; however, with his passing in early November of last year, it is now a tribute to his profound musical voice. John Tavener’s unique composing career has featured some surprising and dramatic spiritual and stylistic changes since the early success of his cantata, ‘The Whale’, in 1968. Famously, it was ‘Song for Athene’, performed at the funeral of Princess Diana, that secured his international reputation. Alongside the original choral version of the work, which opens this recording, he later arranged the work for violinist Nicola Benedetti and this is presented as the closing track on the album. You can also browse and buy at our secure website: www.readings.com.au Opera Highlights Series Steven Isserlis & Robert Levin Classical Album of the Month 19 In this new chamber recording, Steven Isserlis, together with his regular collaborator, fortepianist Robert Levin, presents a magisterial and long-awaited compendium of Beethoven’s complete works for cello and piano, including Beethoven’s arrangement of his Op. 17 horn sonata. The use of the fortepiano opens up a wealth of sonic possibilities for these works. The five cello sonatas span Beethoven’s compositional epochs and comprise the most important cycle of cello sonatas in the entire repertoire. INCANDESCENCE Michael Duke Saxophone Classics. CC4002. $26.95 Australian saxophonist Michael Duke presents his second CD on the Saxophone Classics label, this time with long-time collaborator pianist David Howie to form HD Duo. Opening and closing this CD are two polar opposite trio works by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Jennifer Higdon. While ‘Dash’ leaps off the page with unceasing high energy, ‘Lullaby’ sings with a calming beauty. Revelling in the harmonic influences of Debussy and Ravel are the two compositions of Fernande Decruck. Stacy Garrop’s ‘Fragmented Spirit’ shows why she is such a powerful force in new music; the deeply emotive work truly runs the gamut. Commissioned specifically for this project, Australian composer Katy Abbott’s ‘Undercurrent’ juxtaposes everlasting, lyrical phrases with potent rhythmic energy. One of the most prolific contributors to the saxophone repertoire, Ida Gotkovsky’s work presents a tour de force of lyricism and virtuosity with the premiere recording of ‘Incandescence’. VIVALDI: A TALE OF TWO SEASONS These are the first six titles of Opera Highlights in the Virtuoso range – an excellent opportunity to delve into the world of opera. VERDI: LA TRAVIATA Joan Sutherland, Carlo Bergonzi & John Pritchard Decca. 4786410. $11.95 ‘... a Traviata of beautiful voices all right ... and John Pritchard conducting with real sympathy.’ Gramophone VERDI: RIGOLETTO Renato Bruson & Neil Shicoff Decca. 4786408. $11.95 ‘Bruson ... does more than produce a stream of velvety tone ... responding to the conductor and combining beauty with dramatic bite.’ The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music PUCCINI: LA BOHÈME Renata Tebaldi & Tullio Serafin Decca. 4786406. $11.95 ‘… astonishingly vivid, with a very convincing theatrical atmosphere.’ The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music BIZET: CARMEN Agnes Baltsa, José Carreras & Herbert von Karajan DG. 4786400. $11.95 ‘... a sophisticated traversal of the piece that doesn’t exclude a realisation of its more intimate side.’ Gramophone MOZART: LE NOZZE DI FIGARO Anne Sofie von Otter & James Levine DG. 4786402. $11.95 Adrian Chandler & La Serenissima AVIE. AV2287. $25.95 Adrian Chandler and La Serenissima, with virtuoso soloist mezzo-soprano Sally Bruce-Payne, continue their enlightening exploration of Vivaldi. Focusing on two Venetian operatic seasons of 1717 and 1733, the program juxtaposes the work of an eager young man with that of an older, more cunning composer. Vivaldi specialists, Chandler’s and La Serenissima’s hallmark qualities of erudition have made them one of the most acclaimed period-instrument bands performing today. ‘Levine scores with one of the most attractive Cherubinos on disc in Anne Sofie von Otter, nicely palpitating in both arias.’ Gramophone MOZART: DIE ZAUBERFLÖTE Christoph Strehl & Claudio Abbado DG. 4786404. $11.95 ‘Anyone who loves Die Zauberflöte should hear this performance, especially as preserved in DG’s crisp and full sound.’ AllMusic POST TO: PO Box 1066, Carlton, VIC, 3053 FAX TO: (03) 9347 1641 ORDER FORM PLEASE SUPPLY THE FOLLOWING ITEMS : PLEASE SEND TO : _____ X ____________________________________________________________________ $ __________ Name : ____________________________________________________________________________________ _____ X ____________________________________________________________________ $ __________ Address : __________________________________________________________________________________ _____ X ____________________________________________________________________ $ __________ ____________________________ Postcode : ____________ Phone : _______________________________ _____ X ____________________________________________________________________ $ __________ Order No. : ____________________________ _____ X ____________________________________________________________________ $ __________ Card No. : __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ CCV : __ __ __ Postage (see rates below) : $ __________ TOTAL : $ __________ Payment enclosed or please charge my VISA MC ( Last three numbers of the security code on the back of your card ) Expiry Date : __ __ / __ __ Signature : _______________________________________________________ Send me Readings Monthly e-news My email : _______________________________________ POSTAGE is FREE to anywhere in Australia for all items purchased from our website: www.readings.com.au. POSTAGE RATES IF ITEM SENT FROM SHOPS: Australia: Melb. Metro: 1-6 items $6.50; Other VIC: 1–6 items $7.50; Anywhere else in Aust: 1-6 items: $7.95 ~ Purchase 7 or more items and we will pay the surface freight to anywhere in Australia ~ New Zealand: Freight for 1-3 items: $7.95; 4 or more items: $10. ~ NOTE: Prices correct at time of printing but subject to change ~ Readings ABN : 45 005 153 533. The Readings New Australian Writing Award The Readings New Australian Writing Award supports published Australian authors working in fiction Vision To increase the promotion and sales of Australian author’s work to the wider community Eligibility? • A work of published fiction that may be either a novel or collection of short stories by a single author • The author must be an Australian citizen or hold permanent residency • Book must be the author’s first or second published work only • Work must have been published between 1 August 2013–31 July 2014 2014 Readings New Australian Writing Award • Shortlist to be published in the October 2014 Readings Monthly • Winning titles to be published in the November 2014 Readings Monthly and Summer Reading Guide The Readings Children’s Book Prize These will be books that families love reading together, or that children read under the covers with a torch late into the night because they can’t bear to put it down – books they tell their friends about. Vision To raise the profile of an Australian children’s author Eligibility? • The author must be an Australian citizen or hold permanent residency • The author should have published no more than four children’s books • Work must be written for children aged 5–12 Winners of both awards receive $4000 For more information on both awards, visit readings.com.au
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