Basically - Gleebooks
Transcription
Basically - Gleebooks
gleebooks gleaner news views reviews new releases events calendar Vol. 20 No. 10 November 2013 Christmas gifts and holiday reading New this month: Barracuda by Christos Tsiolkas 1 Australian Literature Farewell 2013 On the local scene, the stand outs for me until this month have been Coetzee's extraordinarily original and enigmatic Childhood of Jesus, Ashley Hay's poignant The Railwayman's Wife, Debra Adelaide's wise and witty collection (the title story is absolutely outstanding) called Letter to George Clooney, and Fiona McFarlane's splendidly poised and sensitive The Night Guest, the best first novel I've read in ages. And then, in October, along came Flanagan, Winton and Tsiolkas. Phew. Each asks a lot of the reader: they are demanding to read and cover tough terrain. But each is at the same time very rewarding. Eyrie has stayed with me, not least because Tim Winton is an immensely gifted writer, who makes beauty out of the grim subject he has set himself. And in The Narrow Road to the Deep North, I believe Richard Flanagan has created a novel of transcendent worth. He has taken a moment in history (the Burma Railway) and created something quite unforgettable. My book of the year. Seventeen-year-old Jed White lives with his mum and dad behind the Ampol service station in the small coastal town of Plenty. His girlfriend Chrissy works in the local fish cannery. When a foreign trawler crashes on the rocks one night, Jed and Chrissy figure from the rolls of stained bedding below deck that the boat must have been carrying a lot of people. They soon discover that dozens of refugees are sheltering at a nearby property. Thinking holiday reading? Why not catch up on some 2013 prize winners. The Winter Sea by Di Morrisssey ($32.99, PB) Escaping an unhappy marriage and an unsatisfactory job, Cassie Holloway moves to the little NSW coastal town of Whitby Point. Here she meets the Aquino family, whose fishing business was founded by their ancestor, Giuseppe, an immigrant Italian, some ninety years before. Life for Cassie on the south coast is sweet as she sets up a successful restaurant and falls in love with Giuseppe's great grandson Michael. But when the family patriarch dies, a devastating family secret is revealed which threatens to destroy her dreams. Cassie's future happiness now rests with her quest for the truth. PULITZER PRIZE WINNERS Fiction: The Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson—the ground-breaking story about a young man's passage through the prison camps and dictatorship of North Korea. ($19.95, PB) Biography: The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, and the Real Count of Monte Cristo by Tom Reiss—Reiss, like the novelist Dumas before him, triumphantly resurrects a lost hero, General Alexandre Dumas, the real count of Monte Cristo. ($19.95, PB) History: Embers of War: The Fall of an Empire and the Making of America's Vietnam by Fredrik Logevall—The Wall Street Journal says: 'monumental history . . . a widely researched and eloquently written account of how the US came to be involved in Vietnam . . . certainly the most comprehensive review of this period to date'. ($37.95, PB) General non-fiction: Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys & the Dawn of a New America by Gilbert King— Thurgood Marshall was on the verge of bringing the landmark suit Brown v. Board of Education before the US Supreme Court when he became embroiled in a case that threatened to change the course of the civil rights movement and cost him his life. ($20, PB) Poetry: Stag's Leap by Sharon Olds— In this emotional new collection from 'America's greatest living poet', Sharon Olds lays bare her divorce and the bones of lost love. Her most powerful collection yet. ($24, PB) THE WOMEN'S PRIZE FOR FICTION (the prize formerly known as Orange): May We Be Forgiven by A M Homes—Adultery, accidents, divorce and death, a savage and dizzyingly inventive vision of contemporary America, whose dark heart Homes penetrates like no other writer. ($20, PB) MILES FRANKLIN AWARD: Questions of Travel by Michelle de Kretser— de Kretser illuminates travel, work and modern dreams in this brilliant evocation of the way we live now. ($23, PB) Troy Bramston has worked as a policy and political adviser in government, opposition and the private sector. He is a former principal speechwriter for Kevin Rudd and an adviser to the Rudd government. He has also written speeches for several other Labor politicians, including Julia Gillard. Troy now works as a columnist and leader writer with The Australian newspaper and as a contributor to Sky News. CONTRIBUTORS Gough Whitlam Troy Bramston Michael Kirby Bob Carr Frank Bongiorno Graham Freudenberg Nick Cater Richard Farmer Malcolm Mackerras Gerard Henderson MAN/BOOKER PRIZE: The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton— Written in pitch-perfect historical register, richly evoking a mid-19th century world of shipping and banking and goldrush boom and bust, Luminaries is also a ghost story, and a gripping mystery. ($30, PB) He is the author of Looking for the Light on the Hill: Modern Labor’s Challenges (Scribe, 2011). The Canberra Times described it as ‘the best of the current crop of books charting new Labor’. The Courier-Mail said, ‘Troy Bramston’s book is a stand-out. His elegant prose and bold criticisms make it hard to put down, and its blend of history, current affairs and ideas for the future make it impossible to ignore’. Evan Williams Ralph Willis John Nethercote Eric Walsh Rodney Tiffen John O’Mahony John Deeble Michael Hogan Brian Howe Susan Ryan Troy is also editor of The Wran Era (The Federation Press, 2006) and co-editor of The Hawke Government: A Critical Retrospective (Pluto Press, 2003). His is currently finalising a book of essays on the Whitlam Government to be published in late 2012. His feature articles, opinion pieces and book reviews have been widely published in the nation’s leading newspapers, magazines and academic journals. Troy has an economics degree with honours from The University of Sydney and a master’s degree in politics and international relations from The University of New South Wales. NOBEL PRIZE: Choose from any of the many collections of Alice Munro's short stories. Try starting with her Booker winner Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage ($24.95, PB) In 2001, he was awarded the Centenary Medal by the Governor-General for his services towards the Centenary of Federation commemorations. He lives in Sydney and has two children, Madison and Angus. Special Lau The Whitlam Legacy - Troy Bramston (ed) Funding the Future considers the nature of the fiscal crisis confronting Australian local government, including the local infrastructure backlog, and seeks to answer the question: What can be done to place local government on a sound financial footing? The authors focus on Australian fiscal federalism and the place of local government in this structure, and distinguish between ‘holistic sustainability’ as distinct from the narrower ‘financial sustainability’. They provide a critical assessment of methodologies and findings of the various national and state public inquiries into financial sustainability in local government and make a detailed assessment of different approaches to local infrastructure funding, including an Australian municipal bond market, a Commonwealth local infrastructure fund, municipal banking and an Australian local infrastructure financing authority. While the emphasis falls squarely on Australian local government, Funding the Future draws extensively on both the international conceptual and empirical literature. It is essential reading for anyone interested in Australian local government. For the first time, Gough Whitlam, ministers, advisers, public servants, party and union insiders provide a unique account of this turbulent period in Australian politics. They reveal what worked and what didn’t, and shed light on the ISBN 9781862879034 personalities driving the engines of change. RRP $59.95 The Whitlam Legacy provides the definitive account of the government that changed Australia forever. Pa nus etume eos utem alignistis perissin rem rerro beruptam quatum velit ut labo. Nam vendis dolendis idit lit, quodis mos sit aliatquo omnima sitiur abor molor apis sunte si re etur aut velest hilit, quae vero voloribus, sequi occum eatem ea architatem natur milla sit pro cus modicil elloribusdae pro blaccumquae occulliquid qui reriatum eventem quamendi acitatibus dolorer orecabore et derum aciur ma volut eatustis nist prepra dis molupta tistet re repelluptat quid eumquas explaut ut Legal Limits - Nicholas Hasluck Acclaimed novelist and former judge, Nicholas Hasluck, delves into the relationship between law and literature in this thought-provoking book. ISBN 978-1-86287-898-3 Cover design Wide open Media Uptat endipid estis iurio elles eatatia esequia ne sit odit eos essit omnita voloris nis aut asit fuga. Ditiatis rae dolupta ssunduntin cus simaximolut magnatureped molupta turiam aperum quatus, quiscid el excearum fugitiore que sinis et faceste sendam nisquo conem ipid et as doluptas aut occus nus estest rerspiti as eum audiand ellorio nsequiam quiditiis doluptatus des dolo in cus autasperior acestia nos andi que con nimenis autempo sapelle nimolecab imenimi liquis et andaepudae necabor asimus. Dit, soluptat qui sandaecaepe verovidel mollent faccaecus, sit exped mod mo exeratet, ommolo que plam imi, quam iunt aut idiosap ediatem hillest restio eaque cus aribus et ipienemqui incta dendaniae consedis et, tem nimo testium quam rem venecae cores aut alibusda alit late nulpa simpore riorit et, volupta tiatat la quae quisqua errundes exerit dolupta tecustiume posandu ntorersperum alictisimi, odipsam fuga. Ut prat mil ma sapiet, iumque mossit quae ium adis voluptatem. Itatiiste con nimo occuptas est, aut omniasi ncimped moluptat. 9 781862 878310 Australian local government has faced relentless financial pressure for decades, with many councils maintaining current service levels at the cost of neglecting infrastructure renewal. The result has been the emergence of a local infrastructure backlog far exceeding the fiscal capacity of most local authorities. Various attempts have been made to relieve this pressure, including forced council mergers. However, these attempts at remediation have largely failed to achieve ongoing financial sustainability in local government. Other avenues must be pursued if the third tier of government is to remain viable. The election of the Whitlam government in 1972 marked a turning point in 20th century Australia. Shaking off the vestiges of two decades of conservative rule, Gough Whitlam brought new ideas, new policies and new people to the task of governing. Ducia velia que repe pre, simus volor si nusciis ratur, to odit exces dollect emquunt orempel laborpor solupta temqui omnis idemporem cone lit quam as ne sani aturesecta necerum quaestrum que reicabo restion consecte verestr umendic ilibustecea debitiae num aliam inctet eum aut hilitatem sunt, optatemquo molo odis et volore volupta tionect ectatur itiore incil iuntiis eosandant. Leigh Hatcher Kep Enderby Doug Everingham Bill Morrison Carol Johnson Geoff Kitney Paul Kelly Barry Jones Moss Cass Vivien Encel ISBN 978-1-86287-831-0 C O V E R D E S I G N Wide Open Media Edited by Troy Bramston Dollery • Kortt • Grant 2 THE FEDERATION PRESS funding the future nch Friday 22nd November 20 Tranby Abori 13: 4.30 for ginal College 5pm , cnr Mansfi eld and Boy Western Her ce Streets, G itage Group lebe Yamakarra! Liza Kennedy and the Kee wong Mob MC: Gayle K ennedy To be launch ed by TBC Other speake This unique rs TBC story weave (1902–1996 ) into a series s the memories of Liza K ennedy of group bush friends to re trips connect with ancestral coun by her relations and try south of Cobar. Jeff Angel Michael Easson John Kerin Mary Kalantzis Frank Brennan Patricia Amphlett Gordon Bilney George Williams Michael Sexton Peter van Onselen New Text Australian Classics, $12.95 each A Lifetime on Clouds by Gerald Murnane (introduced by Andy Griffiths) Down in the City by Elizabeth Harrower (introduced by Delia Falconer) Bramston Finally, I'm so pleased that for once I was genuinely delighted by the announcement of a Nobel prize. Gleebooks is full of readers utterly devoted to Alice Munro, the Canadian writer whose short stories across the last forty years have transformed the genre, while adding immeasurably to our pleasure and understanding. If you've missed her until now, you've a treat in store (start with Runaway or Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage) and if you've read everything she's written, you'd better take her word that she's put her pen away for good, and start rereading. She's worth it. David Gaunt Plenty by John Dale ($15, PB) GO FO UG REW H OR W D HIT BY LA M As a reader, 2013 has been dominated by some very good new fiction, much of it Australian. The outstanding international publication of the year for me was Phillip Meyer's The Son, set in 19th and 20th century Texas, across five generations of one family. It's a novel of enormous power, passion and deeply imagined truths about past and present. I didn't know George Orwell came to Sydney. But a quirky new website does—kind of. For books, subjects and people with a strong Sydney focus, check out: www.slowsydney.com WITH IDEAS BOOKS WITH IDEAS BOOKS WITH IDEAS It always seems odd to say Happy Christmas and farewell to the year, when it's months away, but, then again, it's a monthly newsletter which finishes in November each year. So, on behalf of Gleebooks, season's greetings to you, our readers and gleeclub members, and thanks for your loyal interest and custom for the year. Again, considering the turmoil and pace of change in the book industry, we're pleased to still be here, really, given how tough trading is. And, on behalf of Roger and myself, I'd like to thank our knowledgeable and dedicated staff, and acknowledge Viki, our gleaner editor, for producing a publication of which we're all proud. We love it and hope you do too. And, we hope you find lots of goodies (and plenty of bargains) in the publication which replaces the gleaner over summer, our Summer Reading Guide which our subscribers will get in mid November (it will be in The Sydney Morning Herald on Monday 18th as well). Shame and the Captives by Tom Keneally ($32.95, PB) In Gawell, NSW, a prisoner-of-war camp to house European, Korean & Japanese captives is built close to a farming community. Alice is a young woman living a dull life with her father-in-law on his farm while her new husband first fights, then is taken prisoner, in Greece. When Giancarlo, an Italian POW & anarchist from Gawell's camp, is assigned to work on their farm, Alice's view of the world and her self-knowledge are dramatically expanded. But what most challenges Alice & the town is the foreignness of the Japanese compound & its culture, entirely perplexing to the inmates' captors. Driven by a desperate need to validate the funerals already held for them in Japan, the prisoners vote to take part in an outbreak, and the bloodshed & chaos this precipitates shatter the certainties & safeties of all who inhabit the region. 9 781862 878983 ISBN 9781862879386 RRP $49.95 Traversing a wide range of topics including preventative detention of sexual offenders, postcolonial literature, restrictions on freedom of speech and the role of constitutional conventions in the Whitlam dismissal, Hasluck’s ruminations and insights provide a nuanced view on the workings of the legal system and show how literature can give meaning to the practice of the law. After all, due process depends upon stories being told well. www.federationpress.com.au Barracuda by Christos Tsiolkas His whole life, Danny Kelly's only wanted one thing: to win Olympic gold. Everything he's ever done takes him closer to that moment of glory, of vindication, when the world will see him for what he is: the fastest, the strongest and the best. His parents struggle to send him to the most prestigious private school with the finest swimming program; Danny loathes it there and is bullied and shunned as an outsider, but his coach is the best and knows Danny is better than all those rich boys, those pretenders. Danny's winat-all-cost ferocity gradually wins favour with the coolest boys— he's Barracuda, he's the psycho, he's everything they want to be but don't have the guts to get there. He's going to show them all. ($32.99, PB). An Elegant Young Man by Luke Carman For a long time Western Sydney has been the political flashpoint of the nation, but it has been absent from Australian literature. Luke Carman’s first book of fiction is a collection of monologues and stories, which tells it how it is on Australia’s cultural frontier. His young, self-conscious but determined hero navigates his way through the complications of his divorced family, and an often perilous social world, with its Fobs, Lebbos, Greek, Serbs, Grubby Boys & scumbag Aussies, friends & enemies. He loves Whitman & Kerouac, Leonard Cohen & Henry Rollins, is awkward with girls, and has an invisible friend called Tom. Carman’s style captures the voices of the street, and conveys fear and anger, beauty and affection, with a restless intensity. ($19.95, PB) The Birdwatcher by William McInnes ($29.99, PB) William McInnes' new book is about a bloke who's losing his hearing; a bird that can't fly but likes being read to; and a teenage daughter who doesn't know who to be angry at. It's about a woman living with the echo of illness, finding out how much fun it can be to trust someone; and a man called Murph who has a secret. It's part love story and part Hot Diggity moments of discovery, whether they happen in a rainforest or while sitting on a verandah, or in somebody's heart. It's about cold outdoor showers and people not quite being complete. But, most of all, it's about giving yourself the gift to be still while you wait for the lights to change or the rain to stop, so you have time to think. The Tailor's Girl by Fiona McIntosh ($29.99, PB) When a humble soldier, known only as Jones, wakes in a military hospital he has no recollection of his past. Jones's few fleeting memories are horrifying moments from the battlefield of Ypres. His identity becomes a puzzle he must solve. Then Eden Valentine arrives in his world, a stunning seamstress who dreams of her own high-fashion salon in London. Mourning the loss of her brother in the war, Eden cannot turn away the soldier in desperate need of her help. The key to Jones's past—and Eden's future— may lie with the mysterious Alex Wynter, aristocratic heir to the country manor Larksfell Hall. But the news that Alex bears will bring shattering consequences that threaten to tear their lives apart. Happy Eva After by Chris Harrison ($29.99, PB) As a teacher at the Fawlty Towers of London language colleges, Sebastian Pink is accustomed to confusion caused by the complexities of the English language. Married to Sarah, a career woman who has long been a total workaholic but is now desperate for a baby, Sebastian feels ambivalent about becoming a parent. These days his social life revolves around walking his dog & obsessively completing the daily cryptic crossword. When an alluring Czech student called Eva becomes one of Sebastian's students—and inadvertently provides him with the last solution in his morning crossword—he finds himself drawn into a sordid suburban tangle based mainly on his own misinterpretations & feverish imagination. Elianne by Judy Nunn ($32.95, PB) In 1881 ‘Big Jim' Durham, an English soldier of fortune & profiteer, ruthlessly creates for Elianne Desmarais, his young French wife, the finest of the great sugar mills of the Southern QLD cane fields, and names it in her honour. The massive estate becomes a self-sufficient fortress, a cane-consuming monster and home to hundreds of workers. But many years later, for 60s generation Durhams, Kate her brothers Neil & Alan, freedom is the catchword of the decade. And as the workers leave the great sugar estates as mechanisation lessens the need for labour, the Durham family, its secrets exposed, begins its fall from grace. Standing in the Shadow by Peter Corris ($24.95, PB) Peter Corris' new collection explores the sexual underside of life in Sydney. 'These long stories have an effortless readability ... they show a bracing command of the range of human feeling, an alert sympathy to the kinship, under the skin, of every form of erotic itch and a fictional virtuosity in the range of sympathies evoked. The prose is expert, the dialogue is 'overheard' and there is, almost incidentally, a superb command of the nuances and differences of history in this record of human desire.' Peter Craven Now in B Format The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton, $23 33 Jeeves and the Wedding Bells by Sebastian Faulks ($32.95, PB) Jeeves is back! Bertie Wooster, recently returned from a very pleasurable sojourn in Cannes, finds himself at the stately home of Sir Henry Hackwood in Dorset. With marriage on his mind, Bertie has love-struck eyes for Sir Henry's ward Georgiana, but to maintain his beloved Melbury Hall, the impoverished Sir Henry has struck a deal that would see Georgiana becoming Mrs Rupert Venables. Meanwhile, Peregrine ‘Woody' Beeching, one of Bertie's oldest chums, is desperate to regain the trust of his fiancée Amelia, Sir Henry's tennis-mad daughter. Why would all this necessitate Bertie having to pass himself off as a servant when he has never so much as made a cup of tea? Could it be that the ever-loyal, Spinoza-loving Jeeves has an ulterior motive? wodehouse 3 for two Summer Lightning; Meet Mr Mulliner; Joy in the Morning; Cocktail Time; The Code of the Woosters; Right Ho, Jeeves; Uncle Fred in the Springtime; Carry On, Jeeves $19.95 each Buy 2, get one free The Mijo Tree by Janet Frame ($21.99, HB) 'But the mijo seed had other ideas for herself. She wanted so much immediately to live a life of ease and power.' The Mijo Tree is a never-before published novella from New Zealand literary great, Janet Frame. It was written between 1956 and 1957 during Frame's time in Ibiza and has remained in the Hocken Library archive since 1970. The Valley of Amazement by Amy Tan Shanghai, 1905. Violet Minturn is the young daughter of the American mistress of the city's most exclusive courtesan house. But when revolution arrives in the city, she is separated from her mother in a cruel act of chicanery & forced to become a 'virgin courtesan'. Through the lives of Violet and her mother, The Valley of Amazement spans 50 years & two continents to resurrect lost worlds: from the moment when China's imperial dynasty collapsed, a Republic arose, and foreign trade became the lifeblood of Shanghai, to the inner workings of courtesan houses and the lives of the foreign 'Shanghailanders' living in the International Settlement, both erased by World War II. ($30, PB) Doomed by Chuck Palahniuk ($29.95, PB) Watch out Dante, Madison Spencer, the snarkiest dead girl in the universe, continues the afterlife adventure begun in Chuck Palahniuk's Damned. After a Halloween ritual gone awry, Madison finds herself trapped in Purgatory—or, as mortals like you and I know it, Earth. No longer subject to physical limitations, her first stop is her parents' luxurious apartment, where she encounters the ghost of her long-deceased grandmother. For Madison, the encounter triggers memories of the awful summer she spent upstate with Nana Minnie & her grandfather, Papadaddy. As she revisits the painful truth of those months, her saga of eternal damnation takes on a new and sinister meaning. Madison has been in Satan's sights from the very beginning, as through her and her narcissistic celebrity parents he plans to engineer an era of eternal damnation—for everyone. The Lives of Stella Bain by Anita Shreve When an American woman, Stella Bain, is found suffering from severe shell shock in an exclusive garden in London, surgeon August Bridge and his wife selflessly agree to take her in. A gesture of goodwill turns into something more as Bridge quickly develops a clinical interest in his house guest. Stella had been working as a nurse's aide near the front, but she can't remember anything prior to four months earlier when she was found wounded on a French battlefield. Travelling from England to America and back again, Shreve has created an engrossing tale about love and the meaning of memory. ($30, PB) Steam by Terry Pratchett ($45, HB) A new invention has arrived in Ankh-Morpork and steam is rising over the 40th Discworld novel, driven by Mister Simnel, the man wi' t'flat cap and sliding rule who has an interesting arrangement with the sine and cosine. Master of the Post Office, the Mint and the Royal Bank, Moist von Lipwig will have to grapple with gallons of grease, goblins, a fat controller with a history of throwing employees down the stairs, and some very angry dwarfs if he's going to stop it all going off the rails. 4 International Literature The Two Hotel Francforts by David Leavitt It is the summer of 1940, and Lisbon is one of the only neutral ports left in Europe—a city filled with spies, crowned heads & refugees of every nationality, tipping back absinthe to while away the time until their escape. Awaiting safe passage to New York on the S. S. Manhattan, two couples meet: Pete & Julia Winters, expatriate Americans fleeing their sedate life in Paris; and Edward & Iris Freleng, elegant, independently wealthy, bohemian—beset by the social & sexual anxieties of their class. Swept up in the tumult, the hidden currents of the lives of these four characters—Julia's status as a Jew, Pete & Edward's affair, Iris's increasingly desperate efforts to save her tenuous marriage—begin to come loose as Europe sinks into war. ($30, PB) Granta 125: After the War ($28, PB) It is not just nations that are made & destroyed by war—families are scattered, boundaries of loyalty redrawn. This issue of Granta explores the aftermath of conflict. Patrick French writes of a great uncle whose death in WW2 transformed the family line. A powerful new story by Thomas McGuane tells of fraternal rivalry & the truth of a mother's past. A new essay by Aleksandar Hemon recounts a friend's separation from his father during the Balkan Wars. From the familial to the global, here is what happens when the weapons are set down, brought to life in fiction, poetry, reportage and memoir. Also New Paris Review Issue 206: Autumn 2013, $24.99 Sense and Sensibility by Joanna Trollope ($29.99, PB) When Fanny Dashwood descends on Norland Park with her Romanian nanny and her mood boards, Belle Dashwood's three daughters, Elinor, Marianne and Margaret must face the reality of life without their father, their home, or their money. As they come to terms with life without the status of their country house, or the comfort of an inheritance, Elinor and Marianne are also confronted by the cold hard realities of a world where sometimes people's attitudes can change as drastically as your circumstances. Joanna Trollope casts an elegant & fresh new light on the romance, bonnets & betrothals to create a wonderfully witty coming-ofage story about the stuff that really makes the world go around, and how when it comes to money, some things never change. The Good House by Ann Leary ($29.99, PB) Hildy Good has reached that dangerous time in a woman's life— middle-aged & divorced, she is an oddity in her small but privileged town. But Hildy isn't one for self-pity & instead meets the world with a wry smile, a dark wit and a glass or two of Pinot Noir. When her two earnest grown-up children stage 'an intervention' & pack Hildy off to an addiction centre, she thinks all this fuss is ridiculous. After all, why shouldn't Hildy enjoy a drink now & then? But as the story progresses, we start to see another side to Hildy Good, and to her life's greatest passion—the lies and self deceptions needed to support her drinking, and the damage she causes to those she loves. When a cluster of secrets become dangerously entwined, the reckless behaviour of one threatens to expose the other, with devastating consequences. Legend. Adventure. Place. Survival. Inspiration. The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles by Katherine Pancol When her chronically unemployed husband runs off with his mistress to start a crocodile farm in Kenya, his wife, mother of two, Josephine Cortès must make ends meet on her meagre salary as a medieval history scholar. Meanwhile, Josephine's charismatic sister Iris seems to have it all, a wealthy husband, gorgeous looks, & a trés chic Paris address, but secretly she dreams of bringing meaning back into her life. And then a dinner party changes the sisters' destinies. Iris is seated next to a famous book publisher to whom she spins a tale of the 12th century romance she's writing. Iris charms him into offering her a lucrative deal for her book, then offers her sister a deal of her own: Josephine will write the novel & pocket all the proceeds, but the book will be published under Iris's name. All is well—until the book becomes the literary sensation of the season.($30, PB) Local Souls by Allan Gurganus ($41, HB) Gurganus returns to Falls, N.C., the setting of his Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All, with this trio of linked novellas. Fear Not subjects a smalltown golden girl to horrific loss, an unplanned pregnancy, and a lifetime of wondering about the fate of her baby. The protagonist of Saints Have Mothers reluctantly sees her luminous, gifted daughter off on a global adventure, and has her worst fears realised. In Decoy, a family history gets spun out as a backdrop to the retirement of the town's senior physician, a friend and confidant to the narrator, Bill Mabry. Now in B format Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald by Therese Anne Fowler, $19.99 A Week in Winter by Maeve Binchy, $19.995 Cook. Travel. Feast. 5 THE WILDER AISLES A customer with whom I used to work in another bookshop, brought a book to my attention which I recognised immediately by the cover image before I even saw author or title. It was the The Broken Road by Patrick Leigh Fermor —its cover matching the two previous books of his travels. This is the final part of the three volumes covering his walk from the Hook of Holland to Constantinople. The first parts of this journey are covered in A Time of Gifts & Between the Woods & the Water. I have read these books many times, and I was thrilled to see this third volume. Broken Road was actually put together by Colin Thubron & Artemis Cooper, his literary executors, from notes he had been working on at the time of his death. Leigh Fermor was 18 in 1933 when he set out on his big adventure. The Time of Gifts covers the first part of his trek across Europe. His plan was to get away from his troubles (he had been expelled from his school) by taking to the road. Carrying little & living on about one pound a day, he slept in barns, haylofts & cheap hotels, consorting only 'with peasants & tramps'. This journey took him up the Rhine & down the Danube, covering the history & culture of a now vanished world. Along the way he visited the great cities of Hamburg, Munich, Vienna & Prague. His journey is continued in Between the Woods & the Water. After crossing the Danube, where the previous volume left off, he arrives at the Iron Gates in Romania, after going through Slovakia, Hungary & the now lost province of Transylvania. Again he meets a wonderful cast of characters whilst staying in cottages & castles. So onto the new volume, which I am absolutely loving. Between 1964 & 1965 Leigh Fermor started writing something he called A Youthful Journey. This forms the basis of The Broken Road, which takes him from The Iron Gates to Mount Athos. Leigh Fermor had also kept a 'Green Diary' & this, written at the time of the journey, not years later as with the two previous volumes, is what the story of his time on Mount Athos is based on. The authors say that it was always Greece that he wanted to reach, for although he did reach Constantinople, he wrote very little about it & its Byzantine or Ottoman splendour—after only eleven days he left for Greece. These books abound with Leigh Fermor's personality, his keen observational powers, his ability to make friends & feel at home wherever he finds himself. I must mention another of his books, A Time to Keep Silence. This I have also read many times. It tells of his several stays in some of Europe's oldest monasteries. He stays at St Wandrille, known for great art & learning, Solemnes, famous for its Gregorian chants, & at La Grande Trappe, where monks take a vow of silence. He also visits the rock monasteries of Cappadocia, seeking traces of the earliest Christian anchorites. More than a travel book, this is a meditation on the meaning of silence & solitude for a modern world. Then, lastly, there is the biography of Leigh Fermor by Artemis Cooper, who confessed that as a 37-year-old she fell in love with a man in his late eighties. William Dalrymple, another favourite of mine, says 'Cooper's book is the perfect memorial to this remarkable man'. Leigh Fermor's three books of travel are not his only claim to fame. On the outbreak of war he fought in Greece & Crete & was involved in the daring abduction of German general in 1944. Some time ago, I was staying with an old school friend, to whose mother I gave the two volumes of the travels to read. This she did with a big atlas on the table in front of her to trace Leigh Fermor's routes through the countries of Europe. She said she had a wonderful time, feeling herself his fellow traveller. I will just mention a few books I have read & loved this year. Starting with Telling the Bees—the story of a lonely, isolated man, his philosophy & his bees, and the trouble that ensues when he becomes involved with the women next door. I loved the description of the bees going about their very busy lives. Also, a book that has stayed with me is Maggie O'Farrell's The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox, a disturbing story in which the 'bad character', Esme, refuses to marry the man chosen for her, and is placed in a home, severed from all contact with her family. At the moment I am almost finished the latest O'Farrell, Instructions For A Heatwave (I do tend to read more than one book at a time ). The story of an Irish family living in London, which begins with the father going out to buy the paper & never returning home. It is 1976 & England is in the grip of a great drought & the heat & lack of rain, along with the shadow of IRA bombings affects the whole family. Something I found particularly disturbing is the inability of one of the daughters to read. I cannot for a moment imagine what this would be like. I was looking forward to reading the latest Andrea Camillleri, The Treasure Hunt, featuring the wonderful Inspector Montalbano & picked it up with great glee when it arrived in store. It has the funniest (and most tragic) beginning of any of Camilleri's books & I actually laughed out loud at Montalbano, gun in hand, on a fire engine's ladder dodging bullets from the apartment above. Imagine my disappointment, when not long into the book, I realised I'd seen it on DVD. This book was first published in 2010, but it has taken until now to become available in Australia. However, I have to say it is one of his best & I read it again, anyhow. These are great books to read over the holiday season—to take to the beach, or just sitting in your living room with a nice cool drink beside you. Happy holiday reading to all our Gleaner readers. Janice Wilder 6 Crime Fiction Critical Mass by Sara Paretsky ($29.99, PB) V. I. Warshawski's closest friend in Chicago is the Viennese-born doctor Lotty Herschel, who lost most of her family in the Holocaust. Lotty escaped to London in 1939 on the Kindertransport with a childhood playmate, Kitty Saginor Binder. When Kitty's daughter finds her life is in danger, she calls Lotty, who, in turn, summons V. I. to help. The daughter's troubles turn out to be just the tip of an iceberg of lies, secrets & silence, whose origins go back to the mad competition to develop the first atomic bomb. V. I.'s 16th case! Lineup by Liad Shoham ($29.95, PB) After a brutal rape disturbs a quiet Tel Aviv neighbourhood, baffled detectives find no clues, no eyewitnesses, and no suspects. But the father of the shattered victim refuses to rest until justice is done, and begins his own investigation. Keeping watch over his daughter’s apartment from the street, he notices Ziv Nevo lurking in the shadows, and hands him over to the police. All circumstances, and the victim, point to Nevo’s guilt—case closed. Detective Eli Nachum is eager to wrap up this high profile case, which has threatened to thwart his career. But why does the suspect keep silent during the interrogation? What secret is he hiding? Cartwheel by Jennifer Dubois ($29.95, PB) When Lily Hayes arrives in Buenos Aires for her semester abroad, she is enchanted by everything: the colourful buildings, the street food, the elusive guy next door. Her studious roommate, Katy, is a bit of a bore, but Lily hasn't come to Argentina to hang out with other Americans. Five weeks later, Katy is found brutally murdered in their shared home, and Lily is the prime suspect. But who is Lily Hayes? It depends on who's asking. As the case takes shape—revealing deceptions, secrets, and suspicious DNA—Lily appears alternatively sinister & guileless through the eyes of those around her. The Mangle Street Murders by M.R.C. Kasasian After her father dies, March Middleton has to move to London to live with her guardian, Sidney Grice, the country's most famous personal detective. It is 1882, and no sooner does March arrive than a case presents itself: a young woman has been brutally murdered, and her husband is the only suspect. The victim's mother is convinced of her son-in-law's innocence, and March is so touched by her pleas she offers to cover Sidney's fee herself. The investigations lead the pair to the darkest alleys of the East End: around them London reeks with the stench of poverty & gossip, the case threatens to boil over into civil unrest and Sidney Grice finds his reputation is not the only thing in mortal danger. ($29.99, PB) Sycamore Row by John Grisham ($39.99, HB) In the sequel to A Time to Kill, Jake Brigance returns to the courtroom in a dramatic showdown as Ford County again confronts its tortured history. Filled with the intrigue, suspense and plot twists that are the hallmarks of the world's favourite storyteller, Sycamore Row is the thrilling story of the elusive search for justice in a small American town. Bellman & Black: A Ghost Story by Diane Setterfield ($29.99, PB) As a boy, William Bellman kills a rook with his catapult & this one small cruel act appears to have unforeseen & terrible consequences. By the time he is grown, with a wife and children of his own, he seems, indeed, to be a man blessed by fortune. Until tragedy strikes, & the stranger in black comes, and William Bellman starts to wonder if all his happiness is about to be eclipsed. Desperate to save the one precious thing he has left, he enters into a bargain. A rather strange bargain, with an even stranger partner, to found a decidedly macabre business. And Bellman & Black is born. The Mistletoe Bride and Other Haunting Tales by Kate Mosse ($29.99, PB) A wonderfully atmospheric collection of short stories, rooted deep in the landscape and inspired by traditional folk tales and country legends from England and France. These tales are richly populated by ghosts and spirits seeking revenge; by grief-stricken women and haunted men coming to terms with their destiny—all rooted deep in the elemental landscapes of Sussex, Brittany and the Languedoc. Cockroaches: An Early Harry Hole Case by Jo Nesbo ($32.95, PB) Harry Hole arrives in a steaming hot Bangkok. But it's work not pleasure. The Norwegian ambassador has been found dead in a seedy motel room, and no witnesses have come forward. The ambassador had close ties to the Norwegian Prime Minister, and to avoid a scandal Harry is sent there to hush up the case. But he quickly discovers that there is much more going on behind the scenes and very few people willing to talk. When Harry lays hands on some CCTV footage that will help him unravel what happened that night, things only get more complicated. The man who gave him the tape goes missing, and Harry realises that failing to solve a murder case is by no means the only danger in Bangkok. DUE IN DECEMBER. 6 The Tournament by Matthew Reilly ($40, HB) In 1546 Suleiman the Magnificent, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, issues an invitation to every king in Europe to send their finest player to compete in a chess tournament to determine the champion of the known world. The English delegation is led by esteemed scholar Roger Ascham, accompanied by his pupil Bess. But on the first night of the tournament, a powerful guest of the Sultan is murdered, and Ascham is tasked with finding the killer. Barbaric deaths, unimaginable depravity and diplomatic treachery unfold before Bess' eyes, indelibly shaping her character and determining how she will perform her future role... as Queen Elizabeth I. Even a pawn can become a queen. NOVEMBER RELEASES Bitter Wash Road by Garry Disher ($30, PB) When Hirsch heads up Bitter Wash Road to investigate gunfire he finds himself cut off without back-up. A pair of thrill killers has been targeting isolated farmhouses on lonely back roads, but Hirsch's first thought is that 'back-up' is nearby—and about to put a bullet in him. That's because Hirsch is a whistleblower, formerly a promising metropolitan officer, now demoted and exiled to a one-cop station in South Australia's wheatbelt. But the shots on Bitter Wash Road don't tally with Hirsch's assumptions. The truth turns out to be a lot more mundane. And the events that unfold subsequently, a hell of a lot more sinister. Under a Silent Moon by Elizabeth Haynes ($29.99, PB) The 1st in a new crime series featuring DCI Louisa Smith. In the crisp, early morning hours, the police are called to a suspected murder at a farm outside a small English village. A beautiful young woman has been found dead, blood all over the cottage she lives in. At the same time, police respond to a reported female suicide, where a car has fallen into a local quarry. As DCI Louisa Smith and her team gather the evidence, they discover a link between these two women, a link which has sealed their dreadful fate one cold night, under a silent moon. The Double by George Pelecanos ($29.99, PB) Spero Lucas is a young Iraq vet working as a PI in Washington DC who has a sideline in finding lost items—the kind of items the owners can't go to the police about. This time Spero is trying to find a painting belonging to a sexy young woman who was scammed out of it by a super-smooth con artist, part of a team of ruthless thugs. When Spero tracks the painting down the woman is brutally attacked to warn him off. However, when Spero takes the gang out one by one in their isolated house in the woods, the question must be asked: have his experiences in Iraq turned him into an amoral killer no better than the crooks he's up against? A unique picture book for young and old that celebrates inspirational women from around the world and across generations. A novel of propulsive psychological suspense and rare moral nuance ‘An astonishing, breathtaking, and harrowing read.’ THE NEW YORK JOURNAL OF BOOKS The search for the real Douglas Mawson ‘Typical David Day. Wonderfully constructed. Extraordinarily incisive. Regularly revelatory.’ PETER FITZSIMONS The Prey by Tony Park ($29.99, PB) Deep underground in the Eureka mine, South Africa's zama zamas illegally hunt for gold. King of this brutal underworld is Wellington Shumba, who rules his pirate miners through fear of torture & death. Running Eureka's legitimate operation is former recce commando Cameron McMurtrie. When one of his engineers is taken hostage, Cameron intends a rescue, and manhunt for Wellington— until corporate interference from the mine's Australia head office, in the shape of ambitious high-flyer Kylie Hamilton, gets in his way. But she & Cameron end up forced into a partnership to fend off an environmental war above ground, and a deadly battle with a ruthless killer below. Takedown Twenty by Janet Evanovich ($29.99, PB) New Jersey bounty hunter Stephanie Plum knows better than to mess with family. But when powerful mobster Salvatore 'Uncle Sunny' Sunucchi goes on the lam in Trenton, it's up to Stephanie to find him. Uncle Sunny is charged with murder for running over a guy (twice), and nobody wants to turn him in—not his poker buddies, not his bimbo girlfriend, not his two right-hand men, Shorty and Moe. Even Trenton's hottest cop, Joe Morelli, has skin in the game, because (just Stephanie's luck) the godfather is his actual godfather. And while Morelli understands that the law is the law, his old-world grandmother, Bella, is doing everything she can to throw Stephanie off the trail. The Axe Factor by Colin Cotterill ($30, PB) On the gulf of Thailand, the Juree family are managing their run-down beach resort for the second year, still stalked by disaster. Daughter Jimm has a new love in her life, but finds herself pursued by another man with a markedly different agenda in mind. Meanwhile, Jimm's new case is that of Dr Somluk, a champion for the rights of rural mothers, who is missing following a run-in with the marketeers of infant formula. As ever, there is blood, brine and bedlam aplenty at the Gulf Bay Lovely Resort. Dust by Patricia Cornwell ($39.99, HB) The body of a young woman has been discovered inside the sheltered gates of MIT, draped in ivory linen and posed in a way that is too deliberate to be the killer's first strike. A preliminary examination reveals that the body is covered in a fine dust that under ultra-violet light fluoresces blood-red, emerald-green and sapphire-blue, and physical evidence links this to another series of disturbing homicides in Washington, DC. As she pieces together the fragments of evidence, Scarpetta discovers that the cases connect, yet also seem to conflict, drawing herself and her team deeper into the dark world of designer drugs, drone technology, organised crime, and shocking corruption at the highest level. The English-language debut of the internationally bestselling author Liad Shoham ‘A brilliantly constructed crime thriller.’ PUBLISHERS WEEKLY ‘A fantastic story from an incredible Australian [and] a must read for everyone who loves Australia.’ DICK SMITH The year in politics as seen by Australia’s funniest and most perceptive political cartoonists — brilliantly witty, and always insightful. 7 Moving among Strangers: Randolph Stow and My Family by Gabrielle Carey ($29.95, PB) As her mother Joan was dying, Gabrielle Carey wrote a letter to Joan's childhood friend, the reclusive novelist Randolph Stow. This letter set in motion a literary pilgrimage that revealed long-buried family secrets. Like her mother, Stow had grown up in Western Australia. After early literary success & a Miles Franklin Award win in 1958 for his novel To the Islands, he left for England and a life of self-imposed exile. Living most of her life on the east coast, Carey was also estranged from her family's West Australian roots, but never questioned why. A devoted fan of Stow's writing, she became fascinated by his connection with her mother, but before she could meet him he died. With only a few pieces of correspondence to guide her, Carey embarked on a journey from the red-dirt landscape of Western Australia to the English seaside town of Harwich to understand her family's past and Stow's place in it. Roth Unbound: A Writer and His Books by Claudia Roth Pierpont ($34.95, PB) Philip Roth has produced some of the greatest literature of the past hundred years. And yet there has been no major critical work about him. Claudia Roth Pierpont delves into the many complexities of Roth's work and the controversies it has raised to tell the story of Roth's creative life. This is not exactly a biography—though it contains many biographical details—but an attempt to understand a great writer through his art. Pierpont, who has known Roth for several years, peppers her account with conversational details, providing insights & anecdotes previously accessible only to a very few, touching on Roth's family, his inspirations, his critics, the full range of his fiction, and his literary friendships with such figures as Saul Bellow and John Updike. Penelope Fitzgerald: A Life by Hermione Lee Penelope Fitzgerald (1916–2000) was a great English writer, who would never have described herself in such grand terms. Her novels were short, spare masterpieces, self-concealing, oblique and subtle. She won the Booker prize for her novel Offshore in 1979, and her last work, The Blue Flower, was acclaimed as a work of genius. Fitzgerald's life is as various and as cryptic as her fiction. It spans most of the twentieth century, and moves from a Bishop's Palace to a sinking barge, from a demanding intellectual family to hardship and poverty, from a life of teaching and obscurity to a blaze of renown. She was first published at sixty and became famous at eighty. She liked to mislead people with a good imitation of an absent-minded old lady, but under that scatty front were a steel-sharp brain and an imagination of wonderful reach. Hermione Lee pursues her life, her writing, and her secret self, with fascinated & infectious interest. ($52.95, HB) Letters of Note: Correspondence Deserving of a Wider Circulation (ed) Shaun Usher This is a collection of over 100 letters: from Virginia Woolf's heart-breaking suicide letter, to Queen Elizabeth II's recipe for drop scones sent to President Eisenhower; from the first recorded use of the expression 'OMG' in a letter to Winston Churchill, to Gandhi's appeal for calm to Hitler; and from Iggy Pop's beautiful letter of advice to a troubled young fan, to Leonardo da Vinci's remarkable job application letter. Correspondents include Zelda Fitzgerald, Iggy Pop, Fidel Castro, Leonardo da Vinci, Bill Hicks, Anais Nin, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Amelia Earhart, Charles Darwin, Roald Dahl, Albert Einstein, Elvis Presley, Dorothy Parker, JFK, Groucho Marx, Charles Dickens, Katharine Hepburn, Kurt Vonnegut, Mick Jagger, Steve Martin, Emily Dickinson and many more. ($49.99, HB) Wild Tales: A Rock and Roll Life by Graham Nash ($45, HB) Graham Nash, lead singer and principal songwriter of the Hollies, then member of supergroup Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, made the incredible and possibly unique journey from 60s Manchester to Swinging London to sunny California. In this candid autobiography, Nash tells it all: growing up in poverty in postwar Manchester, founding the Hollies with schoolfriend Allan Clarke and the incredible success that followed, friendships with all the great British bands of the 60s including the Beatles, the Stones and the Kinks, decamping to America and becoming the lover and muse of Joni Mitchell (for whom he wrote Our House), achieving superstardom with David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Neil Young. From London to Laurel Canyon, Nash's is one of the great rock and rock stories—befitting someone who has been inducted not once but twice into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. 8 Now in B Format or Paperback The Fishing Fleet: Husband-Hunting in the Raj by Anne de Courcy, $23 C. S. Lewis: A Life—Eccentric Genius, Reluctant Prophet by Alister Mcgrath, $22.99 Cezanne: A Life by Alex Danchev, $35 Biography Elizabeth of York by Alison Weir ($34.95, PB) Elizabeth of York would have ruled England, but for the fact that she was a woman. The eldest daughter of Edward IV, at 17 she was relegated from pampered princess to bastard fugitive. The probable murders of her brothers (The Princes In The Tower), left Elizabeth heiress to the royal House of York and, in 1486, Henry VII, first sovereign of the House of Tudor, married her, thus uniting the red and white roses of Lancaster and York. Elizabeth is an enigma. She had schemed to marry Richard III, the man who had deposed and probably killed her brothers, and it is likely that she then intrigued to put Henry Tudor on the throne. Yet after marriage, a picture emerges of a model consort, mild, pious, generous and fruitful. Alison Weir builds an intriguing portrait of this beloved queen, placing her in the context of the magnificent, ceremonious, often brutal, world she inhabited, and revealing the woman behind the myth, showing that differing historical perceptions of Elizabeth can be reconciled. Priscilla: The Hidden Life of an Englishwoman in Wartime France by Nicholas Shakespeare When Nicholas Shakespeare stumbled across a box of documents belonging to his late aunt he was completely unaware of where this discovery would take him. The Priscilla he remembered was very different from the glamorous, morally ambiguous young woman who emerged from the many love letters and journals, surrounded by suitors and living the dangerous existence of a British woman in a country controlled by the enemy. He had heard rumours that Priscilla had fought in the Resistance, but as he investigated his aunt's life, dark secrets emerged. What caused the breakdown of Priscilla's marriage to a French aristocrat? Why had she been interned in a prisoner-of-war camp and how had she escaped? And who was the 'Otto' she was having a relationship with as Paris was liberated? Priscilla's story shows the precariousness of life in occupied France, when loyalties were compromised and life could change in an instant. ($24.95, PB) Banana Girl by Michele Lee ($29.95, PB) Michele Lee describes herself as the ‘fence-sitting’ middle child in a large Hmong-Australian family. Banana Girl is the explosive and poignant memoir of her rites of passage. Sexy, irreverent and nuanced, Lee isn’t afraid to lay herself and her relationships bare. Intimacy in an on-line world, sexual adventures and Gen Y yearnings, turning thirty as an Asian-Australian woman in inner city Melbourne, and the travails of becoming an artist, all capture Lee’s riveting gaze. The result is a book that is erotic, witty and revealing, a gutsy true story of self-acceptance that takes hold and won’t let go. Report from the Interior by Paul Auster ($28, PB) Having recalled his life through the story of his physical self in Winter Journal, internationally acclaimed novelist Paul Auster now remembers the experience of his development from within, through the encounters of his interior self with the outer world. From his baby's-eye view of the man in the moon to his childhood worship of the movie cowboy Buster Crabbe, to the composition of his first poem at the age of nine to his dawning awareness of the injustices of American life, Report from the Interior charts Auster's moral, political and intellectual journey as he inches his way toward adulthood through the post-war fifties and into the turbulent 1960s. Travel Writing A Country in Mind by Saskia Beudel ($30, PB) After a period of loss, and much change, Saskia Beudel began walking. Within 18 months she had walked in the Snowy Mountains, twice along the South Coast of Tasmania, the MacDonnell Ranges west of Alice Springs, the Arnhem Land plateau in Kakadu, the Wollemi National Park in New South Wales, and in Ladakh in the Himalayas. Throughout the course of her journeys, she experienced passages of reverie, of forgetfulness, of absorption in her surroundings, of an immense but simple pleasure, and of rhythm. Her book contrasts her internal landscape with the external landscape, considering her relationships with her family in the context of environmental and anthropological histories. Amsterdam: A History of the World's Most Liberal City by Russell Shorto ($33, PB) Amsterdam is not just any city. Despite its relative size it has stood alongside its larger cousins—Paris, London, Berlin—and has influenced the modern world to a degree that few other cities have. Sweeping across the city's colourful thousand year history, Russell Shorto brings Amsterdam to life: its sights and smells; its politics and people. Concentrating on two significant periods—the late 1500s to the mid 1600s, and then from the Second World War to the present—Shorto's masterful biography looks at Amsterdam's central preoccupations. Just as fin-de-siècle Vienna was the birthplace of psychoanalysis, seventeenth century Amsterdam was the wellspring of liberalism, and today it is still a city that takes individual freedom very seriously. A wonderfully evocative book that takes Amsterdam's dramatic past and present and populates it with a host of colourful characters, Amsterdam is the definitive book on this great city. Le Shop Guide: The Best of Paris for the Fashion Traveller by Michi Girl ($40, PB) There's no denying that French women know how to dress. And this book tells you where they shop. Michi and her friends have scoured the streets of Paris to bring you the coolest, the chicest, the very best shops in this fashionable city—for fabulous, accessible fashion. Here is pure shopping gold: names, addresses, opening hours and website details of over 100 places for clothes, bags, shoes, flea markets, department stores and vintage goods. These are shops that many of us won't have heard of but they are established and well-regarded brands in France. With perfectly designed days to suit your every mood, Michi will guide you from blow outs to budget bliss, flea markets to Fendi, with cafés and food stops included. Also New Rome Secrets by Susan Wright ($59.99, HB) Traveling in Place: A History of Armchair Travel by Bernd Stiegler ($42.95, HB) Armchair travel may seem like an oxymoron. Doesn’t travel require us to leave the house? Then again—no passport, no currency, no security screening required—the luxury of armchair travel is accessible to all. Organised into 21 'legs', or short chapters, Traveling in Place begins with a consideration of Xavier de Maistre's 1794 Voyage de autour de ma chambre, an account of the forty-two-day 'journey around his room' that de Maistre undertook as a way to entertain himself while under house arrest. Stiegler is fascinated by the notion of exploring the familiar as though it were completely new and strange. He engages writers as diverse as Roussel, Beckett, Perec, Robbe-Grillet, Cortázar, Kierkegaard, and Borges, all of whom show how the everyday can be brilliantly transformed. Like the best guidebooks, Traveling in Place is more interested in the idea of travel as a state of mind than as a physical activity, and Stiegler reflects on the different ways that travelling at home have manifested themselves in the modern era, from literature and film to the virtual possibilities of the internet, blogs, and contemporary art. Naples: A Way of Love by Carla Coulson & Lisa Clifford ($50, HB) Naples: City of Blood, City of Miracles. City of Contradictions and Secrets, Luck and Superstition, Danger and Incredible Kindness. Photographer Carla Coulson and writer Lisa Clifford know this dazzling, magical city intimately: in this book they take you on a journey through the Naples most tourists never see. Walk with them down hidden cobblestoned alleyways lit by shrines to the saints and into ancient crypts filled with skulls; taste the myriad sweets and pastries for which the city is famous, and learn the art of arrangiarsi—all fuelled by pizza, the city's signature dish, and coffee, always coffee. Ride Like Hell and You'll Get There: Detours Into Mayhem by Paul Carter ($23, PB) Attempting 300 kph on an untested experimental motorcycle could be considered a perfect way to kill yourself, but Paul Carter is still, well, Paul Carter, and danger at high speed is his second name. Whether discovering that being dyslexic means delivering your lines to camera back to front in the midst of filming a TV series, or starting a new business and travelling the world, or dealing with life's more sober moments like the birth of a son or the loss of a father, Paul Carter is still the funniest man in the bar and the nicest alpha male you'll ever meet as he risks all for the sake of a good story. Music at Midnight: The Life and Poetry of George Herbert by John Drury ($50, HB) George Herbert was born in 1593 and died at the age of 39 in 1633, before the clouds of civil war gathered, his family aristocratic and his upbringing privileged. He showed worldly ambition and seemed sure of high public office and a career at court, but then for a time 'lost himself in a humble way', devoting himself to the restoration of the church at Leighton Bromswold in Buckinghamshire and then to his parish of Bemerton, three miles from Salisbury, whose cathedral music he called 'my heaven on earth'. Because he published no English poems during his lifetime, and dating most of them exactly is impossible, writing Herbert's biography is an unusual challenge. In this book John Drury sets the poetry in the whole context of the poet's life and times, so that the reader can understand the frame of mind and kind of society which produced it, and depth can be added to the narrative of Herbert's life. The Bucket: Memories of an Inattentive Childhood by Allan Ahlberg ($24.99, HB) In his first book for adults, Allan Ahlberg sets out to recover or otherwise conjure up the early years of an oddly enchanted childhood lived out in a Black Country town in the 1940s. He writes of 'fugitive memories, the ones that shimmer on the edges of things: trapdoors in the grass, Dad's dancing overalls'. He writes of childhood and the end of childhood, Flash Gordon and the Claymen, Sir Isumbras at the Ford, and the memorable circumstance of his own four parents: 'Two mothers, two fathers and me like a parcel or a baton (or a hot potato!) passed between them.' In a mix of prose and verse, supported by documents, drawings and old photographs, The Bucket retrieves a childhood which lovers of the Ahlbergs' classic picture book Peepo! might feel they have glimpsed before but which is now exquisitely brought to life. 9 A NEW GAME OF AUSTRALIAN POLITICS Despite the fact that they often ended in board & game pieces flying, I fondly remember the school holiday board game tournaments my brothers & I used to hold. The only distinctly Australian game ever to enter into these fierce competitions was Squatter—apparently the most successful board game ever developed in Australia. Until now! I was recently honoured to be a tester for a game a couple of friends, Tess Shannon and Libby Blainey, were developing: QuestionTime!®—a game about Australian politics and political history. It's being launched at Gleebooks on Sunday November 10th. Viki: Obviously they exist, but I've never met anyone who developed a board game—how did it all start? Tess Shannon: I created the game some years ago as a birthday present for, John Faulkner, who I've known for a long time. At that stage it was just a question and answer game. We had a great time playing it that night, and afterwards John encouraged me to develop it further, saying that it 'had legs'. I thought it would be great to create a game that might inspire Australians to re-engage with politics (and learn about it) whilst being entertained. So I set to work researching Australian politics and political history and amassed more than 1,500 questions. Enter Libby Blainey. Libby is a board game enthusiast, and her first question to me was: 'Where's the strategy?' This was a key moment in development, where the game became more than just general knowledge, but a game of politics and strategy. A lot of people, including friends, would confess to not knowing much about Australian politics or political history, so we introduced strategy cards into the game play—and Bingo! Anyone could win provided they used these cards wisely and played them with rat cunning against other players! The idea is to win, at any cost—just like the real thing! Libby also brought her experience and skills as an accomplished graphic artist to the game, and the reults speak for themselves. Her graphics beautifully reflect the ambiance of the Australian House of Representatives, as well as the history of the Australian parliament with all the past Prime Ministers represented on the board. Viki: Plus artwork from cartoonist Jenny Coopes! The game looks seriously like—the real thing. So how do you play? Or more importantly, how do you win? Tess: To win you need to be the first player (or team) to present three Acts to Parliament. You travel the game board from the Backbenches to the Frontbench (or Ministry), where you can present the Acts. You dice your way around the Backbench and depending on where you land you have to answer questions (don't worry, they're mostly multiple choice), or follow instructions on cards such as The Party Room or The Press Gallery—being rewarded (or punished) with various Bill cards & strategy cards along the way. Land on the Filibuster space and you have to make a speech for one minute on a set subject. Viki: The Filibuster is a great element—and good practice for public speaking. The game can get pretty rowdy with all the horse trading and back-stabbing and coalition-forming going on. Tess: Yes, you need a strong Speaker to keep order. Especially when you're playing in teams—which is a great way to play for those who don't feel confident about their politics and history knowledge. You can help each other out— timing, strategy, luck and rat cunning can beat even the most knowledgeable of opponents. Viki: So, John Faulkner is launching the game at Gleebooks on Sunday 10th—will you be playing an exhibition game? Tess: Yes, we will play the game but not the full game. Instead we'll have a set up like a TV game show. John Faulkner will be the Speaker of the House. He'll ask for contestants to volunteer from the audience and form teams of three. I've had a chocolate wheel made (a whole other story!), which John will spin. The subject it lands on decides the question John will direct to the contesting teams. It could be a portfolio question—Sport, The Arts, etc. Could be a question about Australian political history. Could even be a Filibuster.... But beware! The Rat could pilfer all your hard earned points. The winning team will win a copy of the game! 10 Australian Studies Sir Henry Parkes: The Australian Colossus by Stephen Dando-Collins ($45, HB) Henry Parkes, the father of federation, received little schooling—he worked on a rope-walk, breaking stones, as an ivory & bone turner, ironmonger & on the wharves before trying business life & ultimately politics. He & his first wife travelled to Australia on an assisted passage. His friends included Thomas Carlyle, fellow poet Lord Tennyson and British Prime Minister Gladstone. He convinced Florence Nightingale to send trained nurses to Australia, and conceived the international rabbit competition, which led to the Pasteur affair and put Australia at the forefront of microbiology. Whenever he received begging letters, (which he did, daily), Parkes always wrote back enclosing money. No wonder he went bankrupt three times! Yet he was Premier of NSW five times, leaving its finances well in the black every time. Stephen Dando-Collins' brings this colossus to life. Coast: A History of the New South Wales Edge by Ian Hoskins ($64.99, HB) From Eden to Byron Bay the NSW coast is more than 2000 kilometres long, with 130 estuaries, 100 coastal lakes and a rich history. Ian Hoskins' history of the coast traces our relationship with this stretch of land and sea starting millennia ago when Aboriginal people feasted on shellfish & perfected the art of building bark canoes, to our present obsession with the beach as a place to live or holiday. The book leads the reader through the European fascination with marine life, the attempts to establish a whaling industry, the fear of sea borne invasion which led to the creation of a navy of our own in 1911 through to the rise of our unstoppable enthusiasm for surfing and fishing. A Country Too Far: Writings on Asylum Seekers (eds) Rosie Scott & Thomas Keneally ($29.95, PB) One of the central moral issues of our time is the question of asylum seekers, arguably the most controversial subject in Australia today. In this anthology, 27 contributors, including Anna Funder, Christos Tsiolkas, Elliot Perlman, Gail Jones, Raimond Gaita, Les Murray, Rodney Hall & Geraldine Brooks, focus on the theme of the dispossessed, bringing new perspective to what has become a fraught, distorted war of words. This anthology of fiction, memoir, poetry and essays confirms that the experience of seeking asylum—the journeys of escape from death, starvation, poverty or terror to an imagined paradise—is part of the Australian mind set and deeply embedded in our culture and personal histories. Broken Nation: Australians in the Great War by Joan Beaumont ($55, HB) The Great War is, for many Australians, the event that defined our nation. The larrikin diggers, trench warfare, and the landing at Gallipoli have become the stuff of the Anzac 'legend'. But it was also a war fought by the families at home. Joan Beaumont brings the war years to life: from the well-known battles at Gallipoli, Pozières, Fromelles and Villers-Bretonneux, to the lesser known battles in Europe and the Middle East; from the ferocious debates over conscription to the disillusioning Paris peace conference and the devastating 'Spanish' flu the soldiers brought home. We witness the fear and courage of tens of thousands of soldiers, grapple with the strategic nightmares confronting the commanders, and come to understand the impact on Australians at home and at the front of death on an unprecedented scale. The Forgotten Rebels of Eureka by Clare Wright The story of the Eureka Stockade is one of Australia's foundation legends, but until now it has been told as though only half the participants were there. What if the hot-tempered, free-wheeling gold miners we learnt about in school were actually husbands & fathers, brothers & sons? And what if there were women & children inside the Eureka Stockade, defending their rights while defending themselves against a barrage of bullets? As Clare Wright reveals, there were thousands of women on the goldfields and many of them were active in pivotal roles. The stories of how they arrived there, why they came and how they sustained themselves make for fascinating reading in their own right. But it is in the rebellion itself that the unbiddable women of Ballarat come into their own. ($45, HB) The Australian Welfare State: Who benefits now? by Greg Marston et al ($59.95, PB) In 1992, Australian sociologist Lois Bryson published what proved to be an important book entitled Welfare and the State: Who benefits? The central feature of this text was an exploration of the actual, as opposed to assumed, nature of the redistribution of resources via the Australian welfare state. Following on from Bryson’s work, this book assesses trends in poverty and inequality in Australia from 1992 to the present and describes and evaluates the institutions that make up the Australian welfare state. Taking Bryson’s initial analysis as the baseline, the authors illustrate the major structural & institutional developments in the Australian welfare state, and in the Australian economy & society, over this same period. The book analyses political and policy responses to poverty and inequality in Australia and assesses the extent and direction of redistribution in key areas of state activity. It also outlines the links between Australians’ conceptions about welfare and the redistributive outcomes of the welfare state, canvassing theoretical explanations about why many Australians develop and maintain misconceptions of the broad distributive mechanisms of the Australian welfare state and hold negative attitudes towards its social welfare element. Ned Kelly: The Story of Australia's Most Notorious Legend by Peter FitzSimons (49.95, HB) Historians still disagree over virtually every aspect of the eldest Kelly boy's brushes with the law. Did he or did he not shoot Constable Fitzpatrick at their family home? Was he a lawless thug or a noble Robin Hood, a remorseless killer or a crusader against oppression and discrimination? Was he even a political revolutionary, an Australian republican channelling the spirit of Eureka? From Kelly's early days in Beveridge, Victoria, in the mid-1800s, to the Felons' Apprehension Act, which made it possible for anyone to shoot the Kelly gang, to Ned's appearance in his now-famous armour, Peter FitzSimons brings the history of Ned Kelly and his gang exuberantly to life, weighing in on all of the myths, legends and controversies generated by this compelling and divisive Irish-Australian rebel. Spooked: The Truth About Intelligence in Australia (ed) Daniel Baldino (34.99, PB) Terrorist acts, most notably 9/11 and the Bali bombings, transformed our attitudes to the secretive world of intelligence, surveillance & security. In this book a selection of writers including Michael Mori, Ben Saul, Anne Aly and Peter Leahy lay bare the facts about spying & security in post-9/11 Australia. The collection cuts through panic & fear-mongering to ask the questions: Is ASIO unaccountable? Is the money we spend on security worth it? Is cyber-terrorism an urgent threat? Are our spies up to the job, and how do we know anyway as we only hear about their failures? Is WikiLeaks good for human rights? Are we trading our privacy for a false sense of security? Spooked untangles the half-truths, conspiracy theories & controversies about the ‘war on terror’. The Reef: A Passionate History by Ian McCalman Ian McCalman describes twelve key encounters between people, places, ideas and biosystems. In the 19th century the region was infamous for shipwrecks, and when Indigenous clans rescued survivors like Eliza Fraser, their actions were misrepresented in the popular press. Later, the whole world caught the fiery debate between Darwinists and creationists over the origins of this colossal structure. Artists and visionaries celebrated its beauty and fought its exploitation; marine scientists catalogued the threats to its existence. The first social, cultural and environmental history of this World Heritage-listed site, The Reef is an effortlessly readable work by a born storyteller. (45, HB) New This Month: The Best Australian Political Cartoons 2013 (ed) Russ Radcliffe, $29.95 Behind the Lines 2013: The Year's Best Cartoons, $19.99 End of the Road? by Gideon Haigh ($10, PB) Australia is one of just thirteen countries in the world equipped to take a car from design concept all the way to a showroom— a remarkable achievement in a market so small. Yet the industry has few friends, and many vociferous critics who argue that the country should not make cars at all. In this engaging and insightful analysis for the lay reader, Gideon Haigh explains why the industry has become an ideological battleground, and reveals the more complex and surprising truth behind the partisan rhetoric. The Stockmen: The Making of an Australian Legend by Evan McHugh ($49.95, HB) Evan McHugh presents the fascinating history of the stockmen & women who have carved a living from the rugged ranges of the high country to the vast arid heart of the outback. Richly illustrated with archival images & documents, as well as stunning contemporary photographs, the book tells the story of the stockmen throughout the ages, taking in legendary stock routes like the Murranji & Birdsville Track, the roles of Aboriginal workers & stockwomen, and the trials & triumphs of life in the stock camp. The voices of stockmen throughout the ages are woven together to capture the epic scale of the famous cattle stations, how the industry has shaped the country, and the unique pleasures of the stockman's life. Aboriginal Studies Clan: The Bangarra Dance Theatre by Greg Barrett & Stephen Page ($60, HB) By having its feet in both worlds of old and modern, Bangarra, Australia's premier Indigenous performing arts company, creates contemporary theatrical experiences that are influenced by timeless stories and customs. The land shapes the people, the people shape the language, the language shapes the songs, and the songs then determine the dance—and the spirit flows through it all. 2014 marks Bangarra's twenty-fifth year, and this lavish photographic look at one of Australia's foremost dance companies, honours this milestone and those people who have inspired Bangarra over the years. NEW from Cambridge Australia 1943: The Liberation of New Guinea Edited by Peter Dean Australia 1943 explores the high point of Australia’s influence on operations and strategy in the South West Pacific, a campaign that has been traditionally overshadowed by the drama of Kokoda. Hardback $59.95 © 2013 ISBN 9781107037991 The Australian Army from Whitlam to Howard John Blaxland The Australian Army from Whitlam to Howard is the first critical examination of Australia’s post-Vietnam military operations, spanning the 35 years between the election of Gough Whitlam and the defeat of John Howard. Hardback $59.95 © 2013 ISBN 9781107043657 Anzac Journeys: Returning to the Battlefields of World War Two Bruce Scates With characteristic empathy, Bruce Scates charts the history of pilgrimages to Crete, Kokoda, Sandakan and Hellfire Pass. He explores the emotional resonance that these sites have for those who served and those who remember. Hardback $49.95 © 2013 ISBN 9781107020672 www.cambridge.edu.au Coranderrk: We will show the country by Giordano Nanni & Andrea James ($24.95, PB) The battle for Coranderrk was one of the first sustained campaigns for justice, land rights and self-determination. Proud of their culture, their community and their award-winning farm, the Kulin people (led by William Barak) lobbied against the Aboriginal Protection Board and greedy local landowners, who wanted them removed. The authors foreground the events which led to the protest campaign, the 1881 Parliamentary Inquiry, and the aftermath. In verbatim-theatre, professional actors rescue Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal witnesses from dusty archives, allowing them to speak to a contemporary audience. Coranderrk now allows all readers that same access. A Boy's Short Life: The true Story of Warren Braedon / Louis Johnson by Anna Haebich & Steve Mickler ($17.99, PB) Warren Braedon, named by his adoptive parents Louis St John Johnson, was taken from his mother in Alice Springs at just three months old. Told he had been abandoned, Louis’s adoptive parents, Bill & Pauline Johnson raised him in a loving family in Perth. Despite a happy childhood, Louis was increasingly targeted by school bullies & police for his Aboriginality. As he grew older, his need to meet his natural family prompted visits to Alice Springs with his parents, but they were thwarted by bureaucracy. He was planning to return to Alice Springs when, walking home on his 19th birthday, he was brutally murdered by a group of white youths whose admitted motive was ‘because he was black’. Originally published in the seminal history of the Stolen Generations, Broken Circles by Anna Haebich, this story captures the dark heart of racism in modern Australia. First Footprints: The epic story of the First Australians by Scott Cane ($35, PB) Some 60,000 years ago, a small group of people landed on Australia's northern coast. They were the first oceanic mariners and this great southern land was their new home. Australia's first inhabitants were the first people to believe in an afterlife, cremate their dead, engrave representations of the human face, and depict human sound and emotion. They created new technologies, designed ornamentation, engaged in trade, and crafted the earliest documents of war. Ultimately, they developed a sustainable society based on shared religious tradition and farreaching social networks across the length and breadth of Australia. First Footprints chronicles this using astonishing archaeological discoveries, ancient oral histories and the largest and oldest art galleries on earth. 11 books for kids to young adults NOT just for children compiled by Lynndy Bennett, our children's correspondent As ever, there are far more books to enthuse about than there is space on these pages, but we’ve highlighted some of our recommendations of books you might not see everywhere, and of course we hope you will come in to experience the full splendour of literary offerings. Thank you to all our customers who continue to shop with us, supporting an independent bookshop and keeping Australians employed, instead of contributing to the demise of ‘real’ specialists by financing overseas online companies. Happy Christmas, and keep reading! Lynndy Picture Books Sam and Julia at the Theatre: Book 2 of Mouse Mansion by Karina Schaapman One of our bestselling books last year and selling well through this year as well was the first Mouse Mansion book, featuring the adventures of timid young Sam and feisty inquisitive Julia in just a few of the 100+ rooms of Mouse Mansion. Now the inseparable mouse friends are back, and once again you have the chance to wonder at the intricacy of the handmade rooms, art and characters of this architectural marvel, while following the pair’s latest exploits. These books are unusual, absorbing and highly collectable treats! ($25, HB) Lynndy Up & Down by Britta Teckentrup for newly confident readers A welcome trend by some publishers, in consultation with literacy experts, is to reformat a range of picture books (often with slightly more sophisticated content) into junior readers. Books by authors such as Julia Donaldson and Chris Riddell now encourage young readers to read favourites themselves as they build vocabulary and reading fluency, without completely forgoing illustrations. I was pleased to see Who Ate Auntie Iris? by Sean Taylor, (ill) Hannah Shaw amongst the latest crop. Full-colour entertaining pictures foreshadow, and misdirect the gaze as a trepidatious young chinchilla and her mum visit the peril-ridden apartment block where Auntie Iris lives, to discover she is missing! How will they determine which of the neighbouring carnivores ate her? Ask for the Time to Read and Let’s Read series, for a step above more pedestrian early fiction. ($7–$12.95, PB) Two Trickster Tales from Russia retold by Sophie Masson (ill) David Allan ($22.95, PB) This very handsome addition to our folk tale selection is the first book from new Australian publishing house Christmas Press, the aim of which is to produce fine picture books of traditional tales from diverse cultures. The quality of their debut, featuring a simple retelling of Masha & the Bear and The Rooster with the Golden Crest, bodes very well for their future, with its superb design. There is drama and whimsy in the colour and sepia artwork, which is rendered in classic European style and offset by Russian motifs bordering each page. In place of endpapers are photographs showing details of an rustic cottage, taken by Masson on one of her trips to Russia. If you aren’t already familiar with these tales, this is a splendid introduction. Following soon are character toys to accompany the book, as well as further collections of folk tales. Next stop, Scotland! So many reference books now are also arrestingly presented picture books that beg to be dipped into and repeatedly consulted. Quite coincidentally, these two demonstrate the relevance of mathematics in the study of the natural world and each is visually striking. Highly recommended! Lifetime: The Amazing Numbers in Animal Lives by Lola M. Schaefer (ill) Christopher Silas Neal 12 12 A little penguin misses his friend, and swims an epic journey to get to her. This is a flap book of opposites, a tale of perseverance and adventure, all told in very few words, with superb illustrations, and brilliantly simple paper engineering. With a palette that is quite muted and dark, and shapes that are graphic and simple, the story has great clarity, and even drama, in its restrained way. Wonderful book design—the font used, the shape of the book, even the rounded corners—all contribute to this outstanding book. ($15, PB) Louise miscellaneous gems Anorak Magazine A quarterly publication aimed at children aged 6–12, UK magazine Anorak contains new illustrated stories, activities, games and items relevant to today’s child readers. In keeping with their wholesome principles, the Anorak team use vegetable inks on recycled paper to create their distinctive style. 'Anorak’s main philosophy is to encourage children to tap into their imagination, use their creativity to learn and is here to amplify their voices. It has at the core of its offering a passion for words and images that challenge and stimulate'. ($14.95, PB) Wayland: The Tale of the Smith From the Far North by Tony Mitton (ill) John Lawrence Artfully retelling the Viking tale of Wayland the blacksmith in lyrical rhyme, Mitton brings to life the talents and tribulations of Wayland in this keepsake gloriously illustrated by master woodcarver artist John Lawrence. This is a real treasure for anyone from 8–adult. Simply gorgeous. ($29.95, HB) non-fiction Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card; City of Bones by Cassandra Clare; The Maze Runner by James Dashner; The Last Apprentice by Joseph Delaney; If I Stay by Gayle Forman; The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman; The Fault in Our Stars by John Green; The Selected Works of T S Spivet by Reif Larsen; The Knife That Killed Me by Anthony McGowan; Vampire Academy by Richelle Mead; The 100 by Kass Morgan; Trash by Andy Mulligan; The Sea of Monsters by Rick Riordan; Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin; Divergent by Veronica Roth; The Spectacular Now by Tim Tharp; The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak. it's beginning to look a lot like christmas The Naughtiest Reindeer by Nicki Greenberg With Rudolf sick in bed who will guide Santa’s sleigh? Rudolf suggests his sister Ruby, and despite a chorus of complaints from the other reindeer about her underwhelming behaviour, there is no alternative. Keen to prove herself Ruby makes a demure start but her natural exuberance soon emerges, and Santa’s progress becomes a trail of misfortune and chaos. Buoyant verse, winsomely expressive illustrations and a surprise ending make this a Christmas story for everyone including those children concerned about appearing in the less exemplary column of Santa’s list of naughty or nice. ($16, HB) The Night Before Christmas by Clement C. Moore (ill) Holly Hobbie Long ago I started collecting Christmas books, I was not discriminate and ended up with shelves of them. So now I try very hard not to buy them, and with a few notable exceptions, I have succeeded in my restraint. But I must, I really must, buy this exquisite book from Holly Hobbie (the illustrator not the greeting card character), it is an absolute treat. Clement Moore's familiar poem comes to life with the beautiful illustrations of a truly old fashioned, gentle Christmas. Yes there is snow, and crackling fires, but the warm detailed pictures transcend the clichés, and are closer to the family Christmas ideal than nearly any similar book. ($25, HB) Louise View from the 32nd Floor by Emma Cameron Just a Second: A Different Way to Look at Time by Steve Jenkins (24, HB) You will be amazed at what can happen in one second: a bat can make 200 high-pitched calls, a hummingbird beats its wings 50 times, a very fast human can run 39 feet (12 metres). And in one minute, a hungry horned lizard can eat 45 ants, one at a time. And did you know that Mount Everest rises half an inch (1.25 cm) in one year? Packed with bite-sized fascinating facts, each accompanied by an illustration in Jenkins’ usual cut-paper collage style, this book takes an unusual look at how time passes and how we measure it. In the last few pages, you’ll find a spiral diagram depicting the history of the universe, a graph showing Earth’s human population from 1750 projected to 2050, a timeline with the average life spans of plants and animals, and a brief history of time and timekeeping. There’s also a short list of additional reading. Perfect for 5-8 year-olds, or anyone curious about our world. Mandy This stunning book is full of fascinating details: a giraffe will grow 508 centimetres tall, and have 200 spots on its body; a male seahorse will have 1000 baby seahorses—and you can count them all on the page. And it's full of beautiful pictures. The illustrator has managed to depict animals in their habitat, with veracity and accuracy, and yet in an appealingly graphic, visually satisfying way. Although this is a very North American book (a woodpecker will drill 30 roosting holes in the woods), it has universal appeal, and it’s encouraging to see red kangaroos have their own pages (with a rather surprising birth rate). There’s also a very interesting afterword explaining the assiduous research and maths that went the calculation for each animal fact. (24.95, HB) Louise Two Boys Kissing by David Levithan ($20, PB) Two Boys Kissing follows the stories of several boys, whose lives are all changing. Not one knows where they're going, or if they've gone too far, but they do keep fighting... or they don't. Levithan somehow manages to rip out the heart of the reader, then sew it up and kiss it better with only a few words. Two Boys Kissing is a set of stories that pushes its way into your heart, and leaves you thinking. A phenomenon—a life changing novel. Axel (age 14) A point of discussion amongst the kids’ shop staff here has been the prevalence of blockbuster movies (to use cinema parlance) based on youth literature. Think of the past few years: Shrek, The Hunger Games, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, nearly every Disney film… Next time you’re ensconced in that comfy cinema seat with the refreshments of your choice (supersize that?), transported into other worlds or other lives, consider moseying into the teen/YA section of our bookshop to explore the galaxies of talent, some of which is already recognised by film-makers. Lynndy & Meaghan teen fiction Picture Me Gone by Meg Rosoff ($20, PB) On the eve of their trip to visit Matthew, Mila’s father’s friend, they learn he’s gone missing without a word. Mila accompanies her father regardless and they arrive in the midst of a mystery hoping they can help unravel it. Twelve year old Mila is up for the challenge, as she discloses early on: 'Like my namesake, Mila the dog, I have a keen awareness of where I am and what I’m doing at all times. I am not given to dreaminess, have something of a terrier’s determination. If there is something to notice, I will notice it first'. But as the mystery deepens and revelations seem only to conjure more questions Mila discovers that the adult world is more complex than she was prepared for and learns that even the most observant person can notice the wrong things. A return to form for Rosoff, this is a road trip mystery featuring an intelligent, slightly offbeat but instantly likeable narrator. James 'Something special has been gifted to you. Join your neighbours, Saturday, 6 pm, on the roof'. From his home on the 32nd floor, William—or Gregory Faust as he is calling himself that day—watches with interest as a new family moves into the apartment block across the street… New tenant Rebecca, who happens to be around William’s age, immediately captures his attention through a quirk of physiognomy—he notices with interest that her left leg moves in an unusual way when she walks—and when he sees her unpacking boxes of books onto shelves in her room… well, that seals it. Would she go to his school, might he see her at the gardens, would they be friends? It turns out the two have much in common & a firm friendship springs up between them. William is brimming with good humour & energy, & Rebecca’s arrival becomes a real catalyst for change in the neighbourhood as their friendship starts to ripple outward to include neighbours of all ages. And it’s here that William’s keen observations of the neighbourhood come in handy…If you’re looking for intricate plotting, breakneck action & high drama I’m afraid this is not the book for you. But if it’s a gentle tale of friendship, respect, creating community & overcoming loneliness you want – oh, and lots of delicious food – then you’re in the right place. From delightful cover to satisfying end, this short novel comes highly recommended. Suited to readers from to the confident 6 or 7 year old reading independently, to those of about 9 or 10 years old. ($16.95, PB) Liesel For similar books, try Hazel Green & others in the series by Odo Hirsch; The Mystery of Antonio Guzman, also by Odo Hirsch; Five Times Dizzy & Dancing in the Anzac Deli by Nadia Wheatley, all by Australian authors & all of which are still available. Rebecca Stead’s magnificent New York mystery When You Reach Me, has much in common with all of these and, as one of my favourite books of the past three or more years, comes under the heading of 'indispensable'. All are for a slightly older readership but the parallels—urban settings & atmosphere, similar themes & a winning balance of simplicity & sophistication make them all worth seeking out. The Christmas Quiet Book by Deborah Underwood (ill) Renata Liwska A staff favourite last year, unanimously deemed the best book so far by Underwood and Liwska, this gentle reflective picture book is a cosy antidote to some of the more strident Yuletide stories. The characters wrought in Liwska’s soft pencil illustrations are shown preparing for Christmas in a series of familiar activities such as decorating the tree, baking, and trying to stay awake to greet Santa; and quietness is depicted as the gasp of ‘Shattered ornament quiet’ or anticipatory ‘Listening for sleigh bells quiet’. As a book, this is modest perfection quiet.. ($20, HB) toys & crafts We have some wonderful craft books and craft supplies at the moment. Super-Cute Felt Animals by Laura Howard ($27.95, PB) has 35 projects to make from felt, mainly animals, and they are cute. Each design has clear step-by-step instructions, with projects for all skill levels. I also like the Todd Oldham All About Series from Kid Made Modern—collage, dyeing, embroidery and fabric printing each have their own volume ($13.95, PB). These are fun and very contemporary, and are aimed at boys as well as girls. For a really comprehensive (and beautiful) book for young people with some sewing skills, Jane Bull’s Crafty Creatures ($25, HB) is excellent. There are patterns of animals to knit and sew, pictures to cross stitch, a sewing kit to make, and a fabulous glossary of embroidery and knitting stitches. (I’m thinking of taking this one home myself, there are some very charming little animals I’d like to make). We always stock children’s knitting needles, French knitting dolls, handmade crochet hooks and we also have some very nice sewing kits, with everything a young sewer might need, including handmade pincushions made from vintage fabrics and felt strawberry needle sharpeners. Exclusive to Gleebooks, each of these charming kits is individually created, nestling in a medium ($19.95) or larger basket ($25.95), and supply is limited so we suggest you swoop in quickly. Dinosaur and fairytale shadow puppet sets have always sold well at Gleebooks. Their simplicity and innate charm (they are French toys after all), have kept them in high demand. So we are thrilled to have two more styles to add to our range—Paris at Night (complete with roofs, a moon and a chimney sweep), and The Circus (with all the usual suspects), both $31.95. There is also a printed fabric theatre backdrop ($39.95) for putting on really professional shadow plays. 13 13 Food, Health, Garden The Icing on the Cake by Annabel Morley With her grandmother the society beauty Dame Gladys Cooper, and her father the renowned actor Robert Morley, Annabel Morley was always going to lead an extraordinary life. Evoking an English childhood from a bygone era, Annabel Morley brings back to life the magic and charm of growing up in a bohemian artistic & quintessentially English family. Their house in Berkshire is the backdrop to a wonderful array of events, peopled with the likes of Vivien Lee, Lawrence Olivier and Spencer Tracy. Morley's memoir features not only unpublished photographs of the Morley lives, private letters and personal memories of her travels to Sydney, Venice and Hollywood during the glamorous 1940s and 50s, but also includes recipes served at family get togethers on both sides of the world. ($29.95, PB) Tom Keneally at his storytelling best The Bread and Butter Project by Paul Allam & Paul McGuinness ($39.99, PB) Following the success of their first book, Bourke Street Bakery: The Collection, Paul Allam & Paul McGuinness joined forces with government & community groups to establish The Bread & Butter Project, an accredited social enterprise & wholesale bakery providing training & employment for refugees & asylum seekers—teaching them to be bakers. Containing basic dough recipes, clear technique and a raft of mouthwatering variations on different styles of bread including polenta & rosemary, kipfler potato & parmesan, and orange, poppy seed & yoghurt loaves, this book gives you a fully illustrated guide that will teach you to bake at home like a professional. New in the Global History of Food Series $25 each, HB Salmon by Nicolaas Mink; Pineapple by Kaori O'Connor Mushroom by Cynthia Bertelsen; Game by Paula Young Lee Will Mozart Make My Baby Smart? And other myth-busting tales of pregnancy and childhood by Andrew Whitehouse ($30, PB) Is there a more remarkable process than the creation of human life? Aided by little more than a bottle of wine, a Barry White tune and an agreeable mood, a woman and man can create a truly extraordinary organism. In this book about the wonders of human development, Dr Andrew Whitehouse takes on thirteen pregnancy and parenting myths: from whether tight jocks reduce sperm health, to baby brain for pregnant mothers; from the imaginary friends children create, to the impact of violent video games. Seven Flowers & How They Shaped Our World by Jennifer Potter ($45, HB) The lotus, lily, sunflower, opium poppy, rose, tulip and orchid. Seven flowers: seven stories full of surprise and secrets. These are flowers of life and death; of purity and passion; of greed, envy and virtue; of hope and consolation; of the beauty that drives men wild. Where and when did these flowers originate? What is the nature of their power and how was it acquired? What use has been made of them in gardens, literature and art? These are both histories and detective stories, full of incident, unexpected revelations, and irony. Clean Living by Luke Hines & Scott Gooding It is widely accepted that it takes around 21 days to change a habit. Clean Living provides the perfect three-week overhaul that will kickstart the journey to a healthy new you. With a fully illustrated exercise program and a three-week menu plan of mouth-watering, paleo-style food, Clean Living is the guide for anyone who wants to change their life right now to be the very best they can be. ($29.95, PB) Toro Bravo: The Making, Breaking, and Riding of a Bull by John Gorham & Liz Crain ($45, HB) At the heart of Portland’s red-hot food scene is Toro Bravo, a Spanish-inspired restaurant whose small plates have attracted a fiercely loyal fan base. At Toro Bravo, each dish reflects a time, a place, a moment. For chef John Gorham, it’s personal. Gorham believes that there’s more to food than mere sustenance. The Toro Bravo cookbook tells that story: from Gorham’s birth to a 14 year-old mother who struggled all her life with drug addiction, to time spent in his grandfather’s crab-shack dance club, to formative visits to Spain, to becoming a father, to opening a restaurant. World's Best Cakes: 250 Great Cakes from Raspberry Genoise to Chocolate Kugelhopf by Roger Pizey ($50, HB) This book is a fabulous collection of globally inspired classic bakes, from national favourites such as American Boston cream pie and British Chelsea buns to exquisite small treats including Russian walnut tea cakes and French madeleines. Each recipe has been meticulously researched and perfectly baked by Roger Pizey one of the world’s leading pastry chefs. The Vintage Sweets Book by Angel Adoree Take a delicious journey back to your favourite childhood treats, with Angel Adoree who provides a mouth-watering selection of retro sweet recipes to make with your friends and family. And don't forget to add the vintage touch: presentation suggestions throughout help you get the maximum impact when you serve up your sweets. ($24.99, HB) Le Livre Blanc by Anne-Sophie Pic ($69.99, HB) Anne-Sophie Pic has taken the long-established culinary traditions of her family & her country & re-imagined them through a contemporary & exhilarating approach to texture, form & flavour. The book includes 50 recipes that, like those of another culinary inventor, Heston Blumenthal, both inspire & amaze. From foams & emulsions, to working with sous-vide & siphons, the recipes transform the everyday, and the not-so-everyday, into the extraordinary. 14 Edible Garden Design: Delicious Designs from the Ground Up by Jamie Durie ($50, HB) Based on the Cowra Breakout of 1944, it explores the life of WWII POWs and the impact they had on communities, through a love story between a local woman and an Italian POW. There’s so much more at randomhouse.com.au /randomhouseau Hidden Kitchens of Sri Lanka by Bree Hutchins Take an evocative journey into the heart of the real Sri Lanka with intrepid photographer and writer, Bree Hutchins. On the reawakening Jaffna Peninsula, war widows cook crab curry and fry spicy snacks, while in a remote eastern village, Sumith stirs vats of smoky milk toffee over an open fire in a factory behind his home. Bamini cooks thosai for the Hindu temple feast, and old William boils up his Ceylon tea at Colombo's dawn wholesale market, just as he's done every day for sixty years. And at Monaragala Prison, in one of the poorest districts in Sri Lanka, the inmates prepare a fragrant fish curry with pol roti. ($49.99, HB) Wholehearted Food by Brenda Fawdon ($49.99, PB) Founder of Australia's first licensed organic restaurant, Brenda is passionate about using organic, unrefined & sustainable produce to create nourishing meals that promote vitality, good health & wellbeing without losing out on flavour. This book includes recipes for health-promoting fresh juices, nutritious breakfasts & delicious meals that can be sourced from your veggie garden or local market, with alternatives for people who want their meals dairy—and wheat-free. Chapters are devoted to sustainable seafood & ethical meat & poultry. The mouth-watering desserts & lunch-box snacks have been created using only unprocessed sugars. The New Classics by Donna Hay ($59.99, HB) Like Stephanie Alexander's The Cook's Companion or Maggie Beer's Maggie's Harvest, this is the definitive Donna Hay cookbook. Absolutely up to the minute, featuring stunning photography and hundreds of mouthwatering recipes, the book contains old family favourites as well as new delights, everything from beef and ale pies to dulce de leche, from mac n' cheese to macarons. The Agrarian Kitchen by Rodney Dunn ($60, HB) When former Australian Gourmet Traveller food editor Rodney Dunn moved from Sydney to Tasmania, he and his wife Severine set about transforming a nineteenth-century schoolhouse into a sustainable farm-based cooking school. Nestled in a misty valley outside Hobart, The Agrarian Kitchen struck a chord with people seeking respite from fast-paced lives and a meaningful connection with the food we eat and the land that produces it. This collection of recipes from the phenomenally popular cooking school celebrates the simple pleasures of cooking and eating in tune with the seasons, and the rhythm of a life lived close to the earth. Also New Lucky Peach, Issue 9, 16.99 Botany for Gardeners by Geoff Hodge, $45, HB Jamie Durie shows you how to create productive edible gardens that look great. He gives you the lowdown on the design function of each plant, and reveals how to incorporate edibles into even the smallest of outdoor spaces without sacrificing style, using real-life case studies in Australia and the US, from Jamie's mum's beloved vegie patch and kids' community plots in Chicago to Matt Moran's classic kitchen garden in Sydney and New York's buzzing green produce markets. Little Veggie Patch Deck of Cards ($19.99, BX) For years Fabian Capomolla and Mat Pember have helped clients set up edible gardens in polystyrene boxes on balconies, in crates you can put anywhere in your backyard, or by creating no-dig, raised garden beds. This deck features 26 individual cards on the most popular vegetables from Apples to Zucchini, each complete with detailed planting information, ongoing maintenance advice, and tips on best companions & when to harvest. There are also 6 fold-out recipe cards, featuring dishes like beetroot & chocolate cake, zucchini & dill fritters with whipped feta & pasta with broccoli. My Little French Kitchen: Over 100 Recipes from the Mountains, Market Squares and Shores of France by Rachel Khoo ($39.99, HB) From the snow-topped mountains and spice-laden Christmas markets of Alsace to the winemaking region of the Dordogne, the dreamy vistas & sun-drenched vegetable dishes of Provence & the well-stocked larders & coastlines of Brittany & Normandy, Rachel Khoo visits some of the best-known foodie places as well as uncovering some hidden gems to share with you. Her delicious recipes include chicken in a pot with crispy garlic rice, pork & clams with cider & butter beans, spicy aubergine sticks with couscous, baked figs with walnuts, a beer-doused ham hock, buttery red currant pastries & spiced almond biscuits. Seasonal Baking by Fiona Cairns ($49.99, HB) Royal cake maker, Fiona Cairns, knows how important the seasons are when creating delicious cakes. Not only are ingredients at their very best and cheapest, but it also makes sense to be in tune with the changing colours, moods and celebrations of the seasons. In the spring, why not try baking early rhubarb and vanilla custard cupcakes. On a hot summer's day enjoy a mango pavlova, and on a cold winter's afternoon curl up by the fireside and share a slice of chocolate and cardamom tart. Virginia Woolf's Garden: The Story of the Garden at Monk's House by Caroline Zoob ($49.99, HB) Graham Nash, lead singer and principal songwriter of the Hollies, then member of supergroup Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, made the incredible and possibly unique journey from 60s Manchester to Swinging London to sunny California. And along the way he created many of the iconic songs that defined a generation. In this candid and riveting autobiography Nash tells it all: friendships with the Beatles, the Stones and the Kinks; the love, the sex, the jealousy, the drugs, and the magical music-making. Wild Tales is one of the great rock and roll stories. Iain McCalman’s brilliant history of the Great Barrier Reef, told in twelve extraordinary tales, charts our changing perceptions of it, from labyrinth of terror to fragile global treasure. ‘History doesn’t get any more lively than this. A stylish, racing read, The Reef surprises with every turn of the page, investing one of the world’s greatest natural structures with human drama... Creates an entirely new account of a natural marvel.’ Philip Hoare, author of Leviathan, winner of the Samuel Johnson Prize. In this landmark anthology, twenty-seven of Australia’s finest writers focus their intelligence and creativity on the theme of the dispossessed, bringing a whole new perspective of depth and truthfulness to what has become a fraught, distorted war of words. This anthology confirms that the experience of seeking asylum – the journeys of escape from death, starvation, poverty or terror to an imagined paradise – is part of the Australian mindset and deeply embedded in our culture and personal histories. In the teeming, disordered, and sexually charged square half-mile centred on London’s Covent Garden something extraordinary evolved in the eighteenth century: the world’s first creative ‘Bohemia’. Artists, actors, poets, novelists, and dramatists rubbed shoulders with rakes, prostitutes, craftsmen, and shopkeepers. It was a world full of criminality, poverty and feuds, but was also as culturally creative as any other in history. Illustrated by many rarely seen pictures, Gatrell’s spectacular book recreates this time and place, celebrating one of the most fertile eras in artistic history. Leonard and Virginia Woolf bought Monk's House in Sussex in 1919 as a country retreat, somewhere they came to read, write and work in the garden. From the overgrown land behind the house they created a brilliant patchwork of garden rooms, linked by brick paths, secluded behind flint walls and yew hedges. Virginia wrote most of her major novels at Monk's House, at first in a converted tool shed, and later in her purpose-built wooden writing lodge tucked into a corner of the orchard. Caroline Zoob lived with her husband, Jonathan, at Monk's House for over a decade as tenants of the National Trust, and has an intimate knowledge of the garden the Woolfs tended and planted. This book of photographs and text is enriched with rare archive images and embroidered garden plans, and takes the reader on a journey through the various garden 'rooms', (including the Italian Garden, the Fishpond Garden, the Millstone Terrace and the Walled Garden). Each garden room is presented in the context of the lives of the Woolfs, with fascinating glimpses into their daily routines at Rodmell. 15 events s Eve nt ar d n e Cal SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY r Gabrielle Gouch allows Were Free Once, Only the Sw Amanda Hampson To be launched by 5 Event—6 for 6.30 Panel: Rosie Scott, Gail Jones and Debra Adelaide Chair: Tom Keneally 6 Launch—3.30 for 4 11 QuestionTime The new board game of Australian politics To be launched by Senator John Faulkner There'll be a chocolate wheel and prizes! See Page 10 for an interview with one of the game developers, Tess Shannon. 17 Launch—3.30 for 4 Kate Middleton Ephemeral Waters To be launched by Chris Andrews ‘Half elegy, half ode, this beautiful book follows the course of the Colorado River, one of the great rivers of the North American West, from its headwaters in the Rocky Mountains through the canyons and histories it has sculpted to its final giving-up in the Sonora desert.' 24 Launch—3.30 for 4 Pitt St Poetry Double Geoff Page Improving the News Melinda Smith Drag down to unlock or place an emergency call To be launched by TBC 16 18 25 13 Event—6 for 6.30 Breaking News: Sex, Lies and the Murdoch Succession In conv. with Jonathan Holmes Murdoch watcher, journalist Paul Barry, casts his eye on the Murdoch succession as Rupert Murdoch gears up for the toughest challenge of his life—which of his children to hand the empire to. The Holy Fool: Artworks Filled with his trademark, lunacy, poignancy and arrow to the heart wisdom here are the collected works —from paintings, to sculpture, from prints to drawings—of Australia's most admired cartoonist together in one book for the first time ever. 19 Event—6 for 6.30 20 Launch—6 for 6.30 Paul Barry Event—6 for 6.30 David Day Event—6.30 for 7 Geoffrey Robertson 9 Dreaming Too Loud: Reflections on a Race Apart in conv. with Meredith Burgmann An incisive and witty collection of Geoffrey Robertson's best writing, including the transcript of a previously banned ‘hypothetical', and reflections on worldwide problems such as torture, terrorism and the Catholic church. The Best Australian Oliver Fartach-Naini (guitar) and Science Writing 2013 Peter Handsworth (clarinet), with Poets, psychologists, comedians, cliguest appearance by accordion mate commentators, neuroscientists, player Amelia Granturdo. star-gazers, novelists & science jourTickets $10 nalists contribute essays about life & No free entry. the universe. 21 Event—6 for 6.30 22 23 iss out! Don’t m leemail! for g Sign up llen’s weekly hA Elizabet mail update. events e ooks.com.au gleeb asims@ Claire Wright 26 27 Found in Translation (QE 52) In conv. with Benjamin Law This is a free-ranging essay, personal and informed, about translation in its narrowest & broadest senses, about culture, difference & communication and about looking at international relations through the prism, and occasionally prison, of culture. 8 16 Event—3pm Panel: Natasha Mitchell, Glebe Music Festival Concert Jane McCredie, Becky Crew Concert Tangos by Piazzolla, Pujol, & Chris Turney Nelegatti, Charlton & Whittington. Beloved Land: Stories, Struggles and The Forgotten Rebels of Eureka Secrets From Timor-Leste In conv. with Chris Masters Blending narrative history, travClaire Wright tells the story of the elogue, and personal reminiscences this book shows the daunting hur- thousands of women present at the dles that the people of Timor-Leste Eureka Stockade, many of whom were active in pivotal roles. must overcome to build a nation from scratch. Linda Jaivin 5 15 Free Event—6 for 6.30 14 Detour from the Rat Race In conv. with Craig Reucassel Changing Gears is a high-spirited adventure charting ex inner-city advertising yuppie Greg Foyster’s remarkable, life-transforming cycling challenge from Hobart to Cairns. Event—6 for 6.30 Launch—6 for 6.30 Megan Watkins & Greg Noble Michael Leunig Panel: Gordon Peake, Maire Greg Foyster Changing Gears: A Pedal-Powered Sheehan, Rob Wesley-Smith SATURDAY Disposed to Learn: Schooling, Ethnicity and the Scholarly Habitus To be launched by Maxine McKew This book explores the relationship between ethnicity and dispositions towards learning, with a focus on primary school students of Chinese, Pasifika and Anglo Australian backgrounds. Flaws in the Ice: In Search of Douglas Mawson in conversation with Tim Bowden David Day draws upon new evidence, the vast research he undertook for his international history of Antarctica, and his own experience of sailing to the Antarctic to search for the real Douglas Mawson. 12 Event—6 for 6.30 FRIDAY 1 7 A Country Too Far 27 essays focused on the theme of the dispossessed and seeking asylum. All profit from book sales on the night will go to the Bridge for Asylum Seekers Foundation. 10 THURSDAY Monday Nov. 25, 6pm. Tickets $7 / $5 / Gleeclub free Peter FitzSimons—Ned Kelly: The Story of Australia's Most Notorious Legend Peter FitzSimons brings the history of Ned Kelly & his gang exuberantly to life, weighing in on all of the myths, legends and controversies generated by this Irish-Australian rebel. Phillips Hall, Blackheath Area Neighbourhood Cntre Gardiner Cres, Blackheath Sunday Decembe 4 WEDNESDAY Blackheath Event In December Launch—3.30 fo8tr h4 3 All events listed are $10/$7 concession. Book Launches are free. Gleeclub members free entry to events at 49 Glebe Pt Rd November Events are held upstairs at #49 Glebe Point Road unless otherwise noted. Bookings—Phone: (02) 9660 2333, Email: events@gleebooks.com.au, Online: www.gleebooks.com.au/events 2013 28 29 Launch—6 for 6.30 Marty Branagan Global Warming, Militarism & Nonviolence: The Art of Active Resistance To be launched by Lee Rhiannon Marty Branagan uses Australian and international case studies to show that non-violence is a viable alternative to militarism for national defence and regime change. 30 Launch—3.30 for 4 Wagga Wagga Writers Anthology fourW twenty-four: New Writing To be launched by Mark O'Flynn At 24, fourW is one of Australia's longest running annual anthologies of new poetry & prose. Contributors include Christopher Barnes, B.R. Dionysius, Sulari Gentil, Keri Glastonbury & Corey Wakeling 17 New Releases DVDs with Scott Donovan Edith Piaf: The Documentary & The Perfect Concert Dead Europe: Dir. Tony Krawitz This 2 disc set offers an hour long documentary on Piaf's life and career which is accompanied by live performances of her most popular songs, including La Vie en Rose and Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien. A compilation of 17 of her songs, all recorded live in various concerts, is edited together to produce The Perfect Concert. ($32.95) Christos Tsiolkas’ haunting novel Dead Europe has been adapted for the big screen by Tony Krawitz (Jewboy, The Tall Man). It is the story of Isaac, a thirty something photographer from Sydney, who travels to Greece to return his father’s ashes to his ancestral homeland. During a visit to his parents’ village he is told about the ‘curse’ which led his father to flee to Australia never to return. He dismisses the story as superstitious nonsense but as he travels first to Paris and then to Budapest, where his brother is involved in the murky world of drugs and child prostitution, Isaac pieces together the truth about his father—revelations that would perhaps have been better left buried in the past. Dead Europe is not for the faint hearted – an uncomfortable dream-like film that is impossible to forget. Scott ($21.95) Chasing Ice: Dir. Jeff Orlowski National Geographic photographer James Balog travels across the Arctic as he deploys time-lapse cameras designed for one purpose: to capture a multi-year record of the world's changing glaciers. As frightening and fascinating as it is breathtakingly beautiful, Chasing Ice is a hymn to our changing planet, and a plea for its salvation. Special features include: Audio Commentary with director Jeff Orlowski and Extreme Ice Survey director James Balog and coordinators Adam LeWinter & Svavar Jonatansson; Making of Chasing Ice; Making the Time-Lapses; Glacier Watching; and Film Festival Q&As. ($32.95) The Place Beyond the Pines: Dir. Derek Cianfrance The Hunt: Dir. Thomas Vinterberg Thomas Vinterberg won the Jury Prize at Cannes in 1998 at the tender age of 19. His winning film, The Celebration, was anything but tender: a dark tale of an abusive relationship between father and son in an upper middle-class Danish family. Vinterberg returns to the theme of child abuse in The Hunt—the story of Lucas (Mads Mikkelsen), a pre-school teacher in a small Danish town, who is accused of molesting one of his students (the 6 year old daughter of his closest friend). Lucas is a respected and popular member of the community who is loved by his students and a devoted father of a teenage son living with his ex-wife in a nearby town. All this counts for naught, however, as fear and panic takes over the town and the innocent Lucas is shunned by former friends and colleagues and subjected to a campaign of intimidation and physical violence. Vinterberg's understated direction and the uniformly brilliant performances from an unknown cast make for a convincing and chilling exploration of the darker excesses of human nature. Highly recommended. ($32.95) Scott Beware of Mr Baker: Dir. Jay Bulger Ginger Baker is the mad, bad drummer best known for playing in Cream and Blind Faith. One of rock's most colourful characters, his reputation for drugs, violence and all forms of excess preceded him everywhere. Beware of Mr Baker includes revealing interviews with Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, Carlos Santana and others, which paint a fascinating portrait of Cream's legendary scarlet-maned, hell-raising drummer. This no-holdsbarred, at time sad, and often hilarious portrait of the man referred to as rock's first great drummer (and perhaps still its best) lets him tell his own story, intercut with footage of his continent-hopping life, from London to LA, Nigeria, Italy, South Africa, and (way) beyond. ($32.95, Region 2) Top 5 TV series Broadchurch: Filmed on the 'Jurassic Coast' at West Bay in Dorset, David Tennant & Olivia Colman star in this excellent crime drama involving the death of a young boy and the search for his killer. $43.95 (Region 2 Import) The Fall: Jamie Dornan is truly creepy as the serial killer, and Gillian Anderson is mesmerising as the cop who is hunting him, in this crime drama set in Belfast. $42.95 (Region 2 Import) Justified Series 4: Marshall Raylan Givens picks at the thread of a 30 year old cold case to unravel a riddle that echoes all the way back to his boyhood and his criminal father’s bad dealings. Plus there's a Pentecostal preacher interfering with Boyd Crowder's criminal affairs. $49.95 Hollow Crown: Richard II, Henry IV (Parts 1 & 2) & Henry V: A series that re-imagines the classic tetralogy of William Shakespeare’s most celebrated history plays. $39.95 (Region 2 Import) In the Footsteps of Alexander: Michael Wood embarks on a journey of 20,000 miles tracing the expedition of Alexander the Great in this captivating documentary. $19.95 Books The Imposter: Dir. Bart Layton ($32.95) In 1994 a 13-year-old boy disappears without a trace from San Antonio, Texas. Three and a half years later he is found alive, thousands of miles away in a village in southern Spain with a story of kidnap and torture. His family is overjoyed to bring him home. But all is not quite as it seems. The boy bears many of the same distinguishing marks he always had, but why does he now have a strange accent? Why does he look so different? And why doesn't the family seem to notice these glaring inconsistencies? It's only when an investigator starts asking questions that this strange tale takes an even stranger turn. If this was a fiction film you'd have trouble suspending disbelief. Frédéric Bourdin, the unrepentant 23 year old French con artist who perpetrates the fraud, is a character right out of a Hitchcock thriller. The family he suckers, is something Tobe Hooper might have created. Special features include an audio commentary with Bart Layton, and a making of doco. My Favourite viewing for 2013 Top 5 feature films NO: Pablo Larrain revisits the Pinochet regime in the hilarious/frightening true story of the media campaign that toppled a dictatorship. $34.95 (Region 2 Import) In the House: Francois Ozon's black comedy about the creative process and the seductive power of literature. $33.95 (Region 2 Import) The Hunt: See above $32.95 Tiny Furniture: Lena Dunham's first feature, a practice run for her awarding winning TV series, Girls. $29.95 (Region 2 Import) Weekend: A romantic drama about two men who meet and begin a sexual relationship the week before one of them plans to leave the country. $32.95 Top 5 documentaries Dust Bowl: Ken Burns' chronicle of the worst manmade ecological disaster in American history. $32.95 Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel: A fascinating portrait of an enduring icon whose influence changed the face of fashion, beauty, art, publishing and culture forever. $32.95 McCullin: Investigative photo-journalist Don McCullin covered humanitarian disasters & wars for the Sunday Times from 1966 to 1983. $35 (Region 2 Import) Searching for Sugar Man: Academy Award winner about the stranger than fiction search for singer/songwriter, Sixto Rodriguez. $32.95 Marley: Director Kevin Macdonald joined forces with the Marley family to make the defininitive film about iconic musician Bob Marley. $24.95 In the wake of economic crisis on a global scale, more & more people are reconsidering their role in the economy and wondering what they can do to make it work better for humanity and the planet. In this innovative book, J. K. Gibson-Graham, Jenny Cameron & Stephen Healy contribute complex understandings of economics in practical terms: what can we do right now, in our own communities, to make a difference? Full of exercises, thinking tools, and inspiring examples from around the world, Take Back the Economy shows how people can implement small-scale changes in their own lives to create ethical economies. ($24.99, PB) Pink Sari Revolution: A Tale of Women and Power in the Badlands of India by Amana Fontanella-Khan Sampat Pal was married at 12, essentially illiterate. Today she leads a vigilante group fighting for women's rights: the Pink Gang. When Sheelu was arrested for stealing from a powerful politician in the notoriously crooked region of Uttar Pradesh, she was sure that she would be forced to accept a prison sentence, not least because she had alleged that she had been assaulted by a man in the politician's household. But then Sampat Pal heard word of the charges, and the pink-sariwearing, pink-baton-wielding, 20,000-strong 'Pink Gang' decided to shake things up. Narrating the story of Sampat Pal and the Pink Gang's fight for Sheelu, as well as for others facing injustice & oppression, journalist Amana Fontanella-Khan delivers a riveting portrait of women grabbing fate with their own hands—and winning back their lives. ($29.95, PB) The Poverty of Capitalism: Economic Meltdown and the Struggle for What Comes Next by John Hilary B o w l e r s bohemians & b lo o d s h e d the 1930s were to die for Capitalist growth is widely heralded as the only answer to the crisis still sweeping the global economy. Yet the era of corporate globalisation has been defined by unprecedented levels of inequality and environmental degradation. A return to capitalist growth threatens to exacerbate these problems, not solve them. John Hilary reveals the true face of transnational capital in its insatiable drive for expansion and accumulation. He exposes the myth of ‘corporate social responsibility’ (CSR), and highlights key areas of conflict over natural resources, labour rights and food sovereignty. He also describes the growing popular resistance to corporate power, as well as the new social movements seeking to develop alternatives to capitalism itself. ($34.95, PB) The Last Vote: The Threats to Western Democracy by Philip Coggan ($45, HB) In The Last Vote, Philip Coggan shows how democracy today faces threats that we ignore at our own risk. Amid the turmoil of the financial crisis, high debt levels, and an ever-growing gap between the richest and the rest, it is easy to forget that the ultimate victim could be our democracy itself. Tracing democracy's history and development, from the classical world through the revolution of the Enlightenment and on to its astounding success in the 19th and 20th centuries, Coggan revisits the assumptions on which it is founded. What exactly is democracy? Why should we value it? What are its flaws? And could we do any better? The Last Vote is an illuminating defence of a system, which, in Churchill's words, is the worst possible form of government, except for all the others that have been tried. The Endtimes of Human Rights by Peter Hopgood 'We are living through the end times of the civilising mission. The ineffectual International Criminal Court and its disastrous first prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, along with the failure in Syria of the Responsibility to Protect are the latest pieces of evidence not of transient misfortunes but of fatal structural defects in international humanism. Whether it is the increase in deadly attacks on aid workers, the torture and 'disappearing' of al-Qaeda suspects by American officials, the flouting of international law by states such as Sri Lanka & Sudan, or the shambles of the Khmer Rouge tribunal in Phnom Penh, the prospect of one world under secular human rights law is receding. What seemed like a dawn is in fact a sunset. The foundations of universal liberal norms and global governance are crumbling.' In Endtimes of Human Rights, Peter Hopgood makes a plea for a new understanding of where hope lies for human rights, a plea that mourns the promise but rejects the reality of universalism in favour of a less predictable encounter with the diverse realities of today's multipolar world. ($48.95, HB) Chinese Whispers: Why Everything You’ve Heard About China Is Wrong by Ben Chu ($33, PB) We have been getting China and the Chinese wrong for centuries. From the Enlightenment philosophers, enraptured by what they imagined to be a kingdom of reason, to the Victorians who derided the 'flowery empire', outsiders have long projected their own dreams and nightmares onto this vast country. With China's economic resurgence today, many have fallen once more under the spell of this glittering new global hegemon, while others foretell terrible danger in China's return to the centre of the world stage. By examining the central myths, or 'whispers', that have come to dominate our view of China, Ben Chu forces us to question everything we thought we knew about the world's most populous nation. Set against the backdrop of the turbulent 1930s, the Rowland Sinclair Mysteries dive into the life of ‘Rowly’ — a charming gadabout and artistic black sheep who plays amateur detective, stumbling across murder and mayhem from the pleasure clubs of Sydney Society to darkest wartime Europe. Penned by Award-Winning author Sulari Gentill. “ M akes us think of Miss Marple or Inspector Poirot...” ABC RAdio NAtioNAl – the Book Show fi RSt 4 Bo o kS AlSo AvAi lAB le P t ER A h c E E R f Download a M/ROWLAND SS.cO PANtERAPRE amba3577gg 18 18 New in the BFI film classics series, $24.95 Cat People by Kim Newman Pan's Labyrinth by Mar Diestro-Dopido Nosferatu (1922) by Kevin Jackson The Shining by Roger Luckhurst Vampyr by David Rudkin Das Cabinet Des Dr Caligari by David Robinson Written and directed by Derek Cianfrance (Blue Valentine), this gripping thriller sees mythical motorcycle racer, Luke (Ryan Gosling), desperately trying to connect with a former lover, Romina (Eva Mendes), who secretly gave birth to the stunt rider's son. In an attempt to provide for his new family, Luke quits the carnival life and commits a series of bank robberies aided by his superior riding ability. The stakes rise as Luke is put on a collision course with an ambitious police officer, Avery Cross (Bradley Cooper), looking to quickly move up the ranks in a police department riddled with corruption. Derek Cianfrance provides an audio commentary. ($39.95) Politics Take Back the Economy: An Ethical Guide for Transforming Communities by Jenny Cameron et al 19 History Year Zero: A History of 1945 by Ian Buruma A SINGULAR VISION: HARRY SEIDLER A SINGULAR VISION: By HelenSEIDLER O’Neill HARRY By Helen O’Neill $49.99 $49.99 A The power, passions and private life of passions the A The power, and architect who shaped private life of the modern Australia. architect who shaped modern Australia. Drawing on hundreds of eye-witness accounts and personal stories, this sweeping book examines the seven months (in Europe) and four months (in Asia) that followed the surrender of the Axis powers, from the fate of Holocaust survivors liberated from the concentration camps, and the formation of the state of Israel, to the incipient civil war in China, and the allied occupation of Japan. It was a time when terrible revenge was taken on collaborators and their former masters; of ubiquitous black markets, war crime tribunals; and the servicing of millions of occupation troops, former foes in some places, liberators in others. It was also a new beginning, of democratic restorations in Japan and West Germany, of social democracy in Britain and of a new world order under the United Nations. If construction follows destruction, Year Zero describes that extraordinary moment in between, when people faced the wreckage—an old world had been destroyed; a new one was yet to be built. ($30, PB) The First Bohemians: Life and Art in London's Golden Age by Vic Gatrell ($49.99, HB) In the teeming, disordered, and sexually charged square half-mile centred on London's Covent Garden, something extraordinary evolved in the eighteenth century. It was the world's first creative 'Bohemia'. The nation's most significant artists, actors, poets, novelists, and dramatists lived here. From Soho & Leicester Square across Covent Garden's Piazza to Drury Lane, and down from Long Acre to the Strand, they rubbed shoulders with rakes, prostitutes, market people, craftsmen, and shopkeepers. It was an often brutal world full of criminality, poverty and feuds, but also of high spirits, and an intimacy that was as culturally creative as any other in history. Vic Gatrell's new book recreates this time & place by drawing on a vast range of sources, showing the deepening fascination with 'real life' that resulted in the work of artists like Hogarth, Blake, and Rowlandson, or in great literary works like The Beggar's Opera & Moll Flanders. Mapping Our World: Terra Incognita to Australia ($49.99, PB) Renowned for its sheer size, over 2.3 metres square, and stunning colours, Fra Mauro's Map of the World was made at a time of transition between the medieval world view and new knowledge uncovered by the great voyages of discovery. Brilliantly painted and illuminated on sheets of oxhide, the sphere of the Earth is surrounded by the sphere of the Ocean in the ancient way. Yet Fra Mauro included the latest information on exploration by Portuguese and Arab navigators. Commissioned by King Afonso V of Portugal, it is the last of the great medieval world maps to inspire navigators in the Age of Discovery to explore beyond the Indian Ocean. WE ARE WATER ByARE Wally Lamb WE WATER By Wally$29.99 Lamb $29.99 From New York Times bestselling Wally From Newauthor York Times Lamb, a disquieting and bestselling author Wally ultimately uplifting novel Lamb, a disquieting and about a marriage, ultimately uplifting novela family,a and humana about marriage, resilience in the face family, and human resilience of in tragedy. the face of tragedy. The Men Who United the States by Simon Winchester THE MEN WHO UNITED STATES THE MENTHE WHO By SimonTHE Winchester UNITED STATES $29.99 By Simon Winchester $29.99 The bestselling author of ATLANTIC the The bestsellingtells author extraordinary of how of ATLANTICstory tells the America was united extraordinary story of how into a single America was nation. united into a single nation. How did America become one single nation? What unified a growing number of disparate states into the modern country we recognise today? Simon Winchester addresses these questions, examining the extraordinary achievements that helped forge and unify both the citizens and the geography of America. He follows in the footsteps of America's most essential explorers, thinkers and innovators, including Lewis and Clark and their Corps of Discovery Expedition to the Pacific Coast, the builders of the first transcontinental telegraph, and the powerful civil engineer behind the Interstate Highway System. Some of these men will be familiar, some forgotten, some hardly known—yet they all played a pivotal role in creating today's United States. Throughout the book, Winchester ponders whether the historic work of uniting the States has succeeded, and to what degree. ($30, PB) Also New Apologies to Thucydides: Understanding History as Culture and Vice Versa by Marshall Sahlins, $33.95 Citizen Emperor: Napoleon in Power by Philip Dwyer SENSE AND SENSIBILITY SENSE AND By Joanna Trollope SENSIBILITY By Joanna Trollope $29.99 $29.99 The long-awaited contemporary reworking of The long-awaited Jane Austen’s SENSE AND contemporary reworking of SENSIBILITY by Jane Austen’s SENSE AND Joanna Trollope will SENSIBILITY by be oneTrollope of the most Joanna will talked be oneabout of thebooks most 2013. talked aboutofbooks of 2013. We love love aa good good story story We 20 This second volume of Philip Dwyer's biography of Napoleon sheds further fresh light on one of the great figures of modern history. After a meteoric rise, a military-political coup in 1799 established Napoleon Bonaparte in government, aged just thirty. Dwyer examines the man in power, from his brooding obsessions and capacity for violence, to his ability to inspire others and realise his visionary ideas. One of the first truly modern politicians, Napoleon skilfully fashioned the image of himself that laid the foundation of the legend that endures to this day; Philip Dwyer's ambitious, definitive work separates myth from history to offer us anew one of history's most charismatic and able leaders. ($40, HB) The Blood Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger, and a Forgotten Genocide by Gary Jonathan Bass ($45, HB) The Blood Telegram is an unprecedented chronicle of a pivotal but little-known chapter of the Cold War. Gary Bass gives the first full account of the involvement of Richard Nixon & Henry Kissinger in the 1971 atrocities in Bangladesh that led to war between India & Pakistan, shaped the fate of Asia & left in their wake a host of major strategic consequences for the world today. He shows how Nixon and Kissinger supported Pakistan's military dictatorship as it brutally quashed the results of a historic free election. Unswayed by detailed warnings of genocide from American diplomats witnessing the bloodshed, they stood behind Pakistan's military rulers—driven not just by Cold War realpolitik but by a bitter personal dislike of India and its leader Indira Gandhi. Nixon and Kissinger silenced American officials who dared to speak up, secretly encouraged China to mass troops on the Indian border, and illegally supplied weapons to the Pakistani military, an overlooked scandal that presages Watergate. Drawing on previously unheard White House tapes, recently declassified documents, and extensive interviews with White House staffers and Indian military leaders, The Blood Telegram tells this thrilling, shadowy story in full. Now in B Format or Paperback On Politics: A History of Political Thought from Herodotus to the Present by Alan Ryan, $27 Leningrad Symphony: Siege and Sympathy by Brian Moynihan, $34.99 Shady Characters by Keith Houston ($35, HB) Every character we write or type is a link to the past, and in today's writing—be it printed, electronic or scrawled handwriting—their history stares right back at us. The full stop, for instance, is a plainspeaking herald of the creative freedom once enjoyed at the library of Alexandria, while its younger siblings the asterisk and dagger are ominous reminders of the literary crusades prosecuted by early Christians. Keith Houston charts the lives of some of the most intriguing examples, from the pilcrow to the ampersand and reveals the bust and boom endured by punctuation with each new technological innovation. Egyptomania: Our Three Thousand Year Obsession with the Land of the Pharaohs by Bob Brier The world has always been fascinated with ancient Egypt. When the Romans conquered Egypt, it was really Egypt that conquered the Romans. Cleopatra captivated both Caesar and Marc Antony and soon Roman ladies were worshipping Isis and wearing vials of Nile water around their necks. For forty years, Bob Brier, one of the world's foremost Egyptologists, has been amassing one of the largest collections of Egyptian memorabilia and seeking to understand the pull of Ancient Egypt on our world today. In this book he explores our 3,000-year-old fixation with recovering Egyptian culture & its meaning, with 24 pages of colour photos from the author's collection (from Napoleon's 20 volume Egypt encyclopedia to Howard Carter's letters to an actual mummy). ($39.95, HB) Churchill's Bomb: A Hidden History of Science, War and Politics by Graham Farmelo ($45, HB) Winston Churchill made brave efforts to understand the exciting & sinister new world opened up by quantum physics in the 1920s & 30s, and wrote repeatedly about the coming of unimaginably dangerous new explosives. Britain then was the world leader in nuclear research. But when the awful possibility of actually building an atomic bomb raised its head, Churchill made crucial errors that ensured Britain's exclusion from the American-led project to build the bomb. He neglected an offer by Roosevelt to give Britain equal footing on the project and marginalised the real elite of British science, relying instead on the counsel of Frederick Lindemann, a wayward Oxford physicist hungry for power & resentful of scientists more brilliant than he was. As a result, Britain lost its leadership of this cutting-edge science & was denied access to the latest research. Graham Farmelo's new book shows a new & less flattering side to the great war leader. The King's Grave: The Search for Richard III by Michael Jones & Philippa Langley ($39.99, HB) Hess, Hitler and Churchill: The Real Turning Point of the Second World War—A Secret History by Peter Padfield Rudolf Hess' peace mission to Britain in May 1941 remains one of the Second World War's greatest mysteries. As this book reveals, far from being a disillusioned renegade, he had Hitler's backing—recently discovered Soviet archives confirm it. Award-winning historian Peter Padfield unearths evidence revealing that Hess carried a draft peace treaty committing Hitler to the evacuation of occupied European countries. Made public, this would have destroyed Churchill's campaign to bring the US into the war. The treaty remains suppressed, final proof of a continuing official cover-up on Hess' mission. Pacey and authoritative, the book touches on Lord (Victor) Rothschild and the Cambridge spy ring, British foreknowledge of Operation Barbarossa and the Final Solution, and MI6's use of Hess to prevent the bombing of London. Padfield's book is a real eye-opener. ($49.99, HB) 20 On 22 August 1485, Richard III was killed at Bosworth Field, the last king of England to die in battle. Richard's body was displayed in undignified fashion for two days in nearby Leicester and then hurriedly buried in the church of the Greyfriars. Fifty years later, at the time of the dissolution of the monasteries, the king's grave was lost—its contents believed to be emptied into the river Soar—and Richard III's reputation buried under a mound of Tudor propaganda, culminating in Shakespeare's portrayal of a deformed & murderous villain, written over 100 years after Richard's death. Now, in an incredible find, Richard III's remains have been uncovered beneath a car park in Leicester. In alternate chapters, Philippa Langley, whose years of research and belief that she would find Richard in this exact spot inspired the project, reveals the inside story of the search for the king's grave, and historian Michael Jones tells of Richard's 15th century life & death. The book offers a complete re-evaluation of Richard, one that discards the distortions of later Tudor histories and puts the man firmly back into the context of his times. Science & Nature An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth by Chris Hadfield ($33, PB) Colonel Chris Hadfield has spent decades training as an astronaut and has logged nearly 4,000 hours in space. During this time he has broken into a Space Station with a Swiss army knife, disposed of a live snake while piloting a plane, and been temporarily blinded while clinging to the exterior of an orbiting spacecraft. Through eye-opening stories filled with the adrenaline of launch, the wonder of spacewalks and the measured, calm responses mandated by crises, he explains how conventional wisdom can get in the way of achievement, and happiness. His own extraordinary education in space has taught him some counterintuitive lessons: don't visualise success, do care what others think, and always sweat the small stuff. You might never be able to build a robot, pilot a spacecraft, make a music video or perform basic surgery in zero gravity like Col. Hadfield, but his insights will teach you how to think like an astronaut, and will change the way you view life on Earth. White Beech: The Rainforest Years by Germaine Greer ($40, HB) In December 2001, Germaine Greer found herself confronted by an irresistible challenge in the shape of 60 hectares of dairy farm, one of many in SE QLD that, after a century of logging, clearing and downright devastation, had been abandoned to their fate. Beyond the acres of exotic pasture grass, soft weed & the impenetrable curtains of tangled Lantana canes there were Macadamias dangling their strings of unripe nuts, and Black Beans with red & yellow pea flowers growing on their branches—and the few remaining White Beeches: stupendous trees up to 40 metres in height, logged out within 40 years of the arrival of the first white settlers. To have turned down even a faint chance of bringing them back to their old haunts would have been to succumb to despair, and when the first replanting shot up to make a forest, and rare caterpillars turned up to feed on the leaves of the new young trees, Greer knew beyond doubt that at least here biodepletion could be reversed. Serving the Reich: The Struggle For the Soul of Physics Under Hitler by Philip Ball ($49.95, HB) While some scientists in Nazi Germany tried to create an Aryan physics that excluded any ‘Jewish ideas', many others made compromises and concessions as they continued to work under the Nazi regime. Among them were three world-renowned physicists: Max Planck, pioneer of quantum theory, who regarded it as his moral duty to carry on under the regime; Peter Debye, a Dutch physicist, who rose to run the Reich's most important research institute before leaving for the US in 1940; and Werner Heisenberg, who discovered the Uncertainty Principle and became the leading figure in Germany's race for the atomic bomb. Mixing history, science and biography, Philip Ball has written a gripping exploration of moral choices under a totalitarian regime. The Best Australian Science Writing 2013 (eds) Jane McCredie, Natasha Mitchell ($30, PB) Could the dodo make a comeback? What does science tell us about the sex in Fifty Shades of Grey? Is giving up meat really the greenest option? Can you use tweets to spot a psychopath? Do birds make art? What do the Cold War and climate science have in common? And can a psychologist interpret your farts? The Best Australian Science Writing 2013 brings together great writing about life and the universe, and includes contributions from poets and psychologists, comedians and climate commentators, neuroscientists and novelists, star-gazers and science journalists. Bosnia's Million Bones: Solving the World's Greatest Forensic Puzzle by Christian Jennings 'Solving the world's greatest forensic puzzle' was how one leading forensic scientist described the vast operation to exhume from mass graves and identify the remains of the thousands of victims of the 1995 Srebrenica massacre in Bosnia. In 2000, one DNA laboratory run by the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP) in Sarajevo set about cracking the code to this puzzle. Thirteen years later, the ICMP are world leaders in using DNA-assisted technology to help identify the thousands of worldwide victims of wars, mass human-rights abuses, and natural disasters. Captivating and cutting edge, this is a story of modern forensics and the quest for truth. ($49.95, HB) From Dust to Life: The Origin and Evolution of Our Solar System by J. Chambers & J. Mitton From Dust to Life is a must-read for anyone who would like to know more about how the solar system came to be. It takes the reader to the very frontiers of modern research, engaging with the latest controversies and debates. It reveals how ongoing discoveries of far-distant extra solar planets and planetary systems are transforming our understanding of our own solar system's astonishing history and its possible fate. ($51.95, HB) Also new Game of Knowns by Dr Karl Kruszelnicki, $32.99 The Simpsons and Their Mathematical Secrets by Simon Singh, $29.99 2121 Philosophy & Religion Death Penalty, V. I by by Jacques Derrida ($58.95, HB) The Other Hundred The Forbes 100, the Fortune 500, Bloomberg’s Billionaire Index... the list of rich lists is endless. Here instead are the stories of The Other Hundred - those people who aren’t among the world’s rich, but whose lives deserve to be celebrated. ISBN 9781780743752 Oneworld Publications Out of Time Out of Time looks at the perils and potential pleasures of growing old. It is a brave and powerful refusal to disappear, a rallying cry for the persistence of life after sixty, and a convincing rebuttal of the war of the generations and the end of babyboomer bashing. ISBN 9781781681398 Verso You Can Beat Your Brain David McRaney once again delves into the assorted ways we mislead ourselves, but more than that, he helps us to overcome our quirks and think more effectively. You Can Beat Your Brain is a pocket-sized primer informed by the latest studies in psychology and packed with wry humour and astonishing facts. ISBN 9781780743745 Oneworld Publications William Shakespeare & Others Could Shakespeare really have written these plays? Why were they excluded from the First Folio of his collected works? This collection brings together for the first time in a hundred years the fascinatingly varied body of plays that became known as The Shakespeare Apocrypha. ISBN 9781137271440 Palgrave Macmillan Who is Who? The Philosophy of Doctor Who Doctor Who is 50 years’ old in 2013. Through its long life on television and beyond it has inspired much debate due to the richness and complexity of the metaphysical and moral issues that it poses. This is the first indepth philosophical investigation of Doctor Who in popular culture. ISBN 9781780765532 I.B.Tauris Publishers The View from the Train In his sequence of films, Patrick Keiller retraces the hidden story of the places where we live, the cities and landscapes of our everyday lives. This book features essays by the iconic British filmmaker on the relationship between film, cities and landscape. ISBN 9781781681404 Verso palgravemacmillan.com.au 22 22 Now in B format & Paperback Travels with Epicurus by Daniel Klein, $19.99 Book Forged in Hell: Spinoza's Scandalous Treatise and the Birth of the Secular Age by Steven Nadler, $34.95 In this newest instalment in Chicago’s series of Jacques Derrida’s seminars, the renowned philosopher attempts one of his most ambitious goals: the first truly philosophical argument against the death penalty. While much has been written against the death penalty, Derrida contends that Western philosophy is massively, if not always obviously, complicit with a logic in which a sovereign state has the right to take a life. Haunted by this notion, he turns to the key places where such logic has been established—and to the place it has been most effectively challenged: literature. Derrida examines everything from the Bible to Plato to Camus to Jean Genet, with special attention to Kant & post–World War II juridical texts, to draw the landscape of death penalty discourses. Above all, he argues that the death penalty & its attendant technologies are products of a desire to put an end to one of the most fundamental qualities of our finite existence: the radical uncertainty of when we will die. Also New Who is Who? The Philosophy of Doctor Who by Kevin S. Decker, $34.95 Futurama and Philosophy (eds) Courtland Lewis & Shaun P. Young, $29.99 Frankenstein and Philosophy (ed) Nicolas Michaud, $29.99 lllness: The Cry of the Flesh by Havi Carel ($24.95, PB) What is illness? Is it a physiological dysfunction, a social label, or a way of experiencing the world? How do the physical, social and emotional worlds of a person change when they become ill? And can there be well-being within illness? In this remarkable and thought-provoking book, Havi Carel explores these questions by weaving together the personal story of her own serious illness, with insights and reflections drawn from her work as a philosopher. Truth: Philosophy in Transit by John C. Caputo In today's freewheeling, pluralistic, moving world, where we can travel anywhere and get information at any time, there are no certainties. Without fixed ideas, can we still love the truth? In this first in a new series of digestible, commute-length books of original thought, John D. Caputo explores different notions of truth, and how we can define it today. Is truth, as for St Augustine, the same as God? Does it lie in the Reason of Descartes and Kant? Is it Derrida's idea of an event, still being made? Or, according to postmodern prophet Nietzsche, a mere ensemble of fictions and metaphors? ($19.99, PB) Lectures on the History of Moral and Political Philosophy by G. A. Cohen ($55.95, HB) Throughout his career G. A. Cohen regularly lectured on a wide range of moral and political philosophers of the past. This volume collects these previously unpublished lectures. Starting with a chapter centred on Plato, but also discussing the pre-Socratics as well as Aristotle, the book moves to social contract theory as discussed by Hobbes, Locke and Hume, and then continues with chapters on Kant, Hegel and Nietzsche. The book also contains some previously published but uncollected papers on Hobbes, Kant and Marx, among other figures, and concludes with a memoir of Cohen written by the volume editor, Jonathan Wolff, who was a student of Cohen's. Finding Ourselves at the Movies: Philosophy for a New Generation by Paul W. Kahn ($54.95, HB) Academic philosophy may have lost its audience, but the traditional subjects of philosophy—love, death, justice, knowledge and faith— remain as compelling as ever. To reach a new generation, Paul W. Kahn argues, philosophy must be brought to bear on contemporary discourse surrounding these primal concerns, and he shows how this can be achieved through a turn to popular film. First, he uses film to explore the nature of action and interpretation, and narrative, not abstraction, emerges as the critical concept for understanding both. Second, he explores the narratives of politics, family, and faith as they appear in popular films. Engaging with genres as diverse as romantic comedies, slasher films, and pornography, Kahn gains access to the social imaginary, through which we create and maintain a meaningful world. The Quotable Kierkegaard by Gordon Marino The father of existentialism, Søren Kierkegaard (1813–1855) was a philosopher who could write like an angel. With only a sentence or two, he could plumb the depths of the human spirit. In this collection of some 800 quotations, the reader will find dazzling bon mots next to words of life-changing power. Organised by topic, the volume covers notable Kierkegaardian concerns such as anxiety, despair, existence, irony and the absurd, but also erotic love, the press, busyness and the comic. Illuminating and delightful, this engaging book also provides a substantial portrait of one of the most influential of modern thinkers. ($46.95, HB) Also now in paperback Parting Ways: Jewishness and the Critique of Zionism by Judith Butler, $33.95 Psychology Call of Character: Living a Life Worth Living by Mari Ruti ($39.95, HB) Should we feel inadequate for failing to be healthy, balanced and welladjusted? Is such an existential equilibrium realistic or even desirable? Condemning our cultural obsession with cheerfulness and 'positive thinking,' Mari Ruti calls for a resurrection of character that honours our more eccentric frequencies, arguing that sometimes the most tormented and anxiety-ridden life can also be the most rewarding. Ruti shows what counts is not our ability to evade existential uncertainty but to meet adversity in such a way that we do not become irrevocably broken. We are in danger of losing the capacity to cope with complexity, ambiguity, melancholia, disorientation and disappointment, leaving us feeling less 'real,' less connected, and unable to metabolise a full range of emotions. Heeding the call of our character may mean acknowledging the marginalised, chaotic aspects of our being, for they carry a great deal of creative energy. Overcoming Depression and Low Mood: A Five Areas Approach, 4th Ed by Chris Williams This book uses the proven and trusted 5 areas model of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) to help people assess & manage depression & low mood to change how they feel. It comprises a series of chapters for therapists to work through with their patients, addressing issues ranging from low mood through to severe depressive episodes. The book’s patient-friendly approach features illustrations, questions and exercises to enhance the therapeutic experience. This 4th edition includes new material on care-givers, medication, staying well, planning for the future, and low-intensity and very low-intensity self help. ($54.95, PB) Marbles: Mania, Depression, Michelangelo and Me by Ellen Forney ($29.99, PB) Shortly before her 30th birthday, Forney was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Suffering from (but enjoying) extreme mania, and terrified that medication would cause her to lose her creative edge, she began a long struggle over many years to find mental stability while retaining her creativity. Searching to make sense of the popular idea of the 'crazy artist', she finds inspiration from the lives and work of other artists and writers who suffered from mood disorders, including Vincent van Gogh, Georgia O'Keeffe, William Styron and Sylvia Plath. She also researches the clinical aspects of bipolar disorder, including the strengths and limitations of various treatments and medications, and what studies tell us about the conundrum of attempting to cure an otherwise brilliant mind. T his, the first history written of the New South Wales coast, traces our relationship with this stretch of land and sea starting millennia ago when Aboriginal people feasted on shellfish and perfected the art of building bark canoes, to our present obsession with the beach as a place to live or holiday. Focus: The Hidden Driver of Excellence by Daniel Goleman ($30, PB) In Focus, Daniel Goleman delves into the science of attention in all its varieties, presenting a long overdue discussion of this little-noticed and under-rated mental asset that matters enormously for how we navigate life. Goleman boils down attention research into three parts: inner, other, and outer focus. He shows why high-achievers need all three kinds of focus, as demonstrated by rich case studies from fields as diverse as competitive sports, education, the arts and business. Those who excel rely on what Goleman calls 'Smart Practices' such as mindfulness meditation, focused preparation and recovery, positive emotions and connections, and mental 'prosthetics' that help them improve habits, add new skills, and sustain excellence. The Alzheimer Conundrum: Entanglements of Dementia and Aging by Margaret Lock ($46.95, HB) The Alzheimer Conundrum exposes the predicaments embedded in current efforts to slow down or halt Alzheimer's disease through early detection of pre-symptomatic biological changes in healthy individuals. Based on a careful study of the history of Alzheimer's disease, and extensive in-depth interviews with clinicians, scientists, epidemiologists, geneticists and others, Margaret Lock highlights the limitations and the dissent implicated in this approach. She stresses that one major difficulty is the well-documented absence of behavioural signs of Alzheimer's disease in a significant proportion of elderly individuals, even when Alzheimer neuropathology is present in their brains. This incongruity makes it difficult to distinguish between what counts as normal versus pathological and, further, makes it evident that social and biological processes contribute inseparably to aging. Lock argues that basic research must continue, but it should be complemented by a realistic public health approach available everywhere that will be more effective and more humane than one focused almost exclusively on an increasingly frenzied search for a cure. Conversations with a Pedophile: Inside the Mind of a Sexual Predator by Dr Amy Hammel-Zabin How does the mind of a paedophile work? How does a paedophile lay the groundwork that lures children into his web and succeed in abusing them to satisfy his own sick needs? As a therapist in the prison where sex offender 'Alan' was incarcerated, Dr Amy Hammel-Zabin had unparalleled access to the uncensored voice of a paedophile who sexually abused more than a thousand boys. As both a trained therapist and a victim of childhood sexual abuse herself, Zabin is uniquely qualified to articulate the development, maintenance and sorrowful impacts of paedophilia, to better understand & prevent this horrendous crime. ($24.99, PB) T he Best Australian Science Writing 2013 brings together great writing about life and the universe, including contributions from poets and psychologists, comedians and climate commentators, neuroscientists and novelists, star-gazers and science journalists. www.newsouthbooks.com.au Now in B format & Paperback Far From The Tree: Parents, Children & the Search for Identity by Andrew Solomon, $32.95 2323 American Wife ...Clever Girl If one reads enough books, for a long enough time, one can't help but notice a pattern forming, not just with the books one likes, but the books that are out there. I guess it's a literary zeitgeist of sorts. Two books that I have just read have clearly reminded me of this 'only connect' aspect of reading, and both are surprising. Curtis Sittenfeld's An American Wife is not what it appears to be. The author clearly states that it is based on the life of the wife of an American president, and that wife is Laura Bush. Not the subject for an interesting novel, are you thinking? You would be wrong; it is a riveting book. Alice Blackwell, née Lindgren, is the name of the central character, and in painstaking detail we follow her through childhood, and adolescence, to early adulthood. As a teenager, Alice caused a car accident, and her childhood friend, a boy named Andrew, was killed. This tragedy changed the course of Alice's life, and Andrew's presence is felt from the beginning to the end of the book. When she meets Charlie Blackwell (modelled on George Bush), she is a successful 30 year old librarian—single, and about to buy a house on her own. The novel is extremely detailed up to this point, the reader well versed in the minutiae of Alice Lindgren's life, and we watch helplessly as she is drawn inexorably away from one path, and into another with the larger than life, entitled, Charlie. Not until the last paragraphs of the book do we see just how Alice has been compromised, which doesn't change what has gone before, but deepens the whole story. Tessa Hadley's Clever Girl is also a story about a girl, a very clever girl, Stella. Growing up in England in the 1970s, Stella is set on a familiar path: she will do well, and she will go to university. But like Alice in An American Wife, Stella's course changes— the cause of the change being, of course, a boy. This boy, Valentine, is so well drawn that his shadow casts a pall over the whole book. Although he ignobly runs off early in the piece, he leaves a legacy in the shape of a baby, and Stella's die is cast. Wonderfully well written, with very three dimensional characters and a strong sense of place, Clever Girl is the story of a thwarted life, but a rich life never-the-less. Stella lurches from one situation to another, and from one set of people to the next, until middle-age when she finally stops still. Like the aforementioned Alice, Stella loves books, and both these novels describe the influence literature can have in our lives. Both books are written in the first person, and both describe the tyranny of circumstance with great clarity. And for my catch-up reading of the month ... Apparently I was a few years shy of reading this for my HSC—and I'm so pleased that I didn't, and that I read it as an adult. What a luminous book, rich and fanciful, and entirely thought provoking. Are we just ants, or does every random act have a meaning, and are we all part of a meaningful pattern? Set in Peru in the early 1700s, where a Franciscan monk witnesses the collapse of an Incan rope bridge, killing five seemingly unrelated people. Brother Juniper, the monk, then sets out to write about the victims of the bridge's collapse, and to find a higher reason behind this random accident. Extraordinarily imaginative and detailed, it's incredible to think this book was written when Wilder was only 30, and a school French teacher. Unsurprisingly, it was highly acclaimed at the time, and he won a Pulitzer Prize for it in 1928. Louise Pfanner Now B Format By The Book: A Reader's Guide to Life by Ramona Koval, $22.99 Hatching Twitter by Nick Bilton ($32.99, PB) Since 2006, Twitter has grown from 100 obsessive users to more than 100 million today. But how did such a radical transformation happen in just five years, and what does it mean for business, politics and the internet? With unprecedented access to some of the major players in this unique drama, New York Times business and technology columnist Nick Bilton chronicles the key figures who helped build the company, and who ultimately struggled to manage the influence and power they had been handed. A business story like no other, or, in 140 characters, 'How a company built on betrayal and battles for power became a multibillion dollar business and accidentally changed the world'. 24 Criticism & Once Upon A Time In Oz: Griffith REVIEW 42 (ed) Julianne Schulz ($27.99, PB) Fairy tales speak to the heart. They are the foundation stories that embody darkness and light, good and evil, and use magic to convey essential truths. Griffith REVIEW 42 holds up an enchanted mirror to explore the role of fairy and folk tales across cultures in Australia, and create new ones. How have the European tales transported in the nineteenth century affected Australian literature? What role do the legends of the Aboriginal Dreamtime, and the stories of Asia, South America, the Pacific and Africa, play in the Australian imagination? Is it wise to censor traditional stories for the good of children? How do the stories change, and why? Are fairy tales really only for children? This collection presents new stories by renowned writers, and examines through essay and memoir some of the mysteries of storytelling. Dreaming Too Loud: Reflections of a Race Apart by Geoffrey Robertson ($34.95, PB) Christopher Hitchens described Geoffrey Robertson as ‘the greatest living Australian', and the satirical magazine Private Eye calls him ‘an Australian who has had a vowel transplant'. This collection of his essays covers such topics as the schoolteacher who stopped Ned Kelly's planned terrorist atrocity at Glenrowan, and the squadron leader who led ‘the few'—the airmen who held the Japanese at bay after the fall of Singapore. He gives insights into Australian education, tells the story of wrongly jailed Aboriginal mother Nancy Young, and relates encounters with Vaclav Havel, Rupert Murdoch, Michael Kirby, John Mortimer & Julian Assange. Along with the transcript of a previously banned ‘hypothetical', are reflections on worldwide problems such as torture, terrorism & the Catholic church, and much else besides. Out of Time: The Pleasures and Perils of Aging by Lynne Segal ($39.95, HB) In the footsteps of Simone de Beauvoir, Diana Athill and writers, poets and thinkers who have all written about the fears, liberation and experience of ageing, Lynne Segal looks at the perils and potential pleasures of growing old. Her book is a brave and powerful refusal to disappear, a rallying cry for the persistence of life after sixty, and a convincing rebuttal of the war of the generations and the end of baby-boomer bashing. Combining memoir, analysis and politics, Segal explores the problems of dealing with loss and how to find victory in survival. She also raises the possibilities of continued desire and identity where often the aged are become forgotten and increasingly invisible. Stuff I've Been Reading by Nick Hornby ($27.99, PB) Whether plunging into a biography of Dickens whilst his children are destroying something in the room next door, or devouring a whole series of children's books whilst on holiday, Nick Hornby is an intelligent, committed but sceptical reader. Admiring Ian McEwan's On Chesil Beach, he points out a surprising anachronism. Reading Cormac McCarthy's The Road, he wonders why 'unflinching' is a term of praise among critics. And who but Nick Hornby could successfully juxtapose a discussion of a book on Bob Dylan's backing group, The Band, with one on the Stasi? Floating City by Sudhir Venkatesh ($45, HB) In Gang Leader for a Day, an electrifying insider's study of Chicago crack gangs, sociologist Sudhir Venkatesh learned the critical lesson of urban poverty—your neighbourhood is your fate. Venkatesh has since spent a decade immersed in New York's illicit underbelly, studying the call girls, drug dealers, off-the-books immigrants & strivers that make up this booming underground economy. In Floating City, he explores New York from high to low, tracing the invisible threads that bind a handful of urban hustlers—from a Harvard-educated uptown socialite running a high-end escort service to a Puerto Rican teenager trying to make the transition from prostitute to call girl with disastrous consequences. As these characters move from trust-funder cocktail parties to midtown strip clubs to downtown art parties, Venkatesh finds something truly unexpected: a fluid city where neighbourhoods mean nothing and networks mean everything, where the distinctions between race and class simply dissolve—a dynamic that can be found in global cities everywhere. Market in Babies: Stories of Australian Adoption Marian Quartly, Shurlee Swain & Denise Cuthbert This book tells the history of adoption in Australia from its beginnings in the 19th century to its decline at the beginning of the 21st. In the early years supply outstripped demand; needy children were hard to place. In mid-20th century demand & supply grew together, with adoption presented as the perfect solution to two social problems: infertility & illegitimacy. Supply declined in the 1970s & demand turned to new global markets. Now these markets are closing, but technology provides new opportunities & Australians are buying babies in the surrogacy markets of India & the US. As the rate of adoptions in Australia falls to a historic low, and parliaments across the country are apologising to parents and children for the pain caused by past practices, this book identifies an historical continuum between the past and the present and challenges the view that the best interests of the child can ever be protected in an environment where the market for children is allowed to flourish. ($34.95, PB) Cultural Studies Writing on the Wall: Social Media—The First 2,000 Years by Tom Standage ($30, PB) Today we are endlessly connected: constantly tweeting, texting or e-mailing. This may seem unprecedented, yet it is not. Throughout history, information has been spread through social networks, with far-reaching social and political effects. Writing on the Wall reveals how an elaborate network of letter exchanges forewarned of power shifts in Cicero's Rome, while the torrent of tracts circulating in 16th century Germany triggered the Reformation. Tom Standage traces the story of the rise, fall and rebirth of social media over the past 2,000 years, offering an illuminating perspective on the history of media, and revealing that social networks do not merely connect us today they also link us to the past. The Novel: An Alternative History, 1600–1800 by Steven Moore ($49.99, HB) In the first volume of his history of the novel, Steven Moore unearthed and told the stories of remarkable works of fiction that have been neglected in conventional histories. His new book picks up the story in 1600 when the novel, an established literary genre was to experience a remarkable growth spurt for the next two centuries as authors experimented with different approaches, transforming the novel from a rather disreputable form of entertainment into the respectable genre it became in the 19th century. For most readers, their familiarity with pre-1800 European fiction is limited to Don Quixote, Candide, The Sorrows of Young Werther, The Pilgrim's Progress or Gulliver's Travels. Regarding Oriental fiction, few readers are aware of perhaps the greatest novel of that period (The Dream of Red Mansions), much less any of the dozens of other fascinating works published in the 17th and 18th centuries. Moore's ability to read deeply and bring forgotten novels to the surface has been praised by critics and readers alike. Time, History, and Literature: Selected Essays of Erich Auerbach ($61, HB) Erich Auerbach (1892–1957), best known for his classic literary study Mimesis, is celebrated today as a founder of comparative literature, a forerunner of secular criticism, and a prophet of global literary studies. This volume presents a wide selection of Auerbach's essays, many of which are little known outside the Germanspeaking world. Of the twenty essays culled from the full length of his career for this volume, twelve have never appeared in English before, and one is being published for the first time. Foregrounded in this new collection are Auerbach's complex relationship to the Judaeo-Christian tradition, his philosophy of time and history, and his theory of human ethics and responsible action. Auerbach effectively charts out the difficult discovery, in the wake of Christianity, of the sensuous, the earthly, and the human and social worlds. A number of the essays reflect Auerbach's responses to an increasingly hostile National Socialist environment. Difficult Men: Behind the Scenes of a Creative Revolution: From the Sopranos and the Wire to Mad Men and Breaking Bad by Brett Martin Just as the Big Novel had in the 1960s & the subversive films of New Hollywood had in 1970s, at the beginning of the 21st century TV shows became the place to go to see stories of the triumph and betrayals of the American Dream. Shows such as The Wire, The Sopranos, Mad Men, Deadwood & The Shield tackled issues of life and death, love & sexuality, addiction, race, violence, & existential boredom. Combining deep reportage with cultural analysis and historical context, Brett Martin recounts the rise & inner workings of a genre that represents not only a new golden age for TV but also a cultural watershed. ($39, HB) Metamorphoses of the City: On the Western Dynamic by Pierre Manent ($59.95, HB) This book is a sweeping interpretation of Europe's ambition since ancient times to generate ever better forms of collective self-government, and a reflection on what it means to be modern. Manent's genealogy of the nation-state begins with the Greek city-state, the 'polis'. With its creation, humans ceased to organise themselves solely by family and kinship systems and instead began to live politically. Eventually, as the 'polis' exhausted its possibilities in warfare and civil strife, cities evolved into empires, epitomised by Rome, and empires in turn gave way to the universal Catholic Church and finally the nation-state. Manent charts an intellectual history of these political forms, allowing us to see that the dynamic of competition among them is a central force in the evolution of Western civilisation. The European nation-state, Manent says, is now nearing the end of its line. What new metamorphosis of the city will supplant it remains to be seen. s d d w n n a o 2 H R For our last column for this year, a quartet of titles: Fifty Years of Perceval Drawings by Ken McGregor. Bay Books, Sydney. 1989. First Edition. Hardcover. 256pp., Colour illustrations. Very Good Condition in Very Good Dustjacket. $90.00. This book reproduces 230 of artist John Perceval's (1923–2000) 'best drawings, selected to span his entire career'. They cover his early years in hospital, his life as a young exuberant artist, family life, his tragedies and illnesses and his artistic recovery. Eugene von Guerard's Australian Landscapes compiled by Marjorie Tipping. Lansdowne Press, Melbourne. 1975. First Edition. Hardcover with original slipcase. 118pp., 24 colour lithographs, notes on each, bibliography. Book title is lettered in gilt on the spine with a black and white portrait on the front board. Limited to 1,000 signed and numbered copies of which this is No. 570. Very light foxing and wear on book edges otherwise Very Good Condition in slightly worn slipcase. $190.00. Austrian born artist Eugene von Guerard (1811–1901) arrived in Australia in 1852 to take up gold prospecting in Victoria. Having no success on the goldfields, he instead produced a popular series of artistic studies of goldfields life and within a decade was the foremost painter in the colonies. Active between 1852 to 1882, Guerard became one of Australia's most important landscape artists. This book reproduces a series of 24 tinted lithographs originally published in 1867: 'illustrative of the most striking and picturesque features of the landscape scenery of Victoria, New South Wales, South Australia & Tasmania, drawn from nature and lithographed by the artist'. And the Ass Saw the Angel by Nick Cave. Black Spring Press Ltd, London. 1989. First Edition. Hardcover. 254pp. Moderate spotting to top edge otherwise Very Good Condition in a slightly worn Dustjacket. $75.00. Australian musician Nick Cave's (b.1957) 1980s career trajectory peaked with the publication of this, his first novel. Having already achieved recognition with the bands The Birthday Party (1973–1983) and The Bad Seeds (1984–), he cut his acting teeth in Wim Wenders film Wings of Desire (1987) with The Bad Seeds performing a concert in Berlin. A volume of lyrics King Ink also appeared the following year. Film soundtrack contributions and musical collaborations with Shane McGowan (of the Pogues), P.J. Harvey, Marianne Faithfull and Kylie Minogue lay ahead. Pan's Daughter: The Strange World of Rosaleen Norton by Nevill Drury. Collins Australia, Sydney. 1988. First Edition. Hardcover. 154pp. Black and white illustrations, endnotes, bibliography, index. Remainder mark on bottom edge. A Very Good copy with a lightly worn Dustjacket. $35.00. This is a lively biography of New Zealand born trance artist and pagan worshipper Rosaleen Norton (1917–1979)—known to friends as 'Roie' and later to the public at large as the 'Witch of King's Cross'. Her family emigrated to Australia in 1925. Leaving art college in 1928 she worked variously as a kitchen-maid, nightclub waitress, postal messenger, occasional artist's model for Norman Lindsay and cadet journalist on Smith's Weekly. Her first published fantasy illustrations appeared in 1941. By 1949 she had met her lover, the poet Gavin Greenlees (1930–1983). Norton first attracted controversy when she was charged with obscenity over a series of pagan, sexually explicit drawings exhibited at the University of Melbourne, in August 1949. Police raided the exhibition, which included such works as Lucifer and Witches' Sabbath. The charges were dismissed after she provided a detailed explanation of her occult beliefs. Her art work was inspired by images and beings she claimed to have seen in psychic trance encounters invoked by both self-hypnosis and later, LSD. A compilation of her mystical artwork, with poems by Greenlees, was published as The Art of Rosaleen Norton (1952) by publisher Walter Glover. Containing explicit images such as Fohat and The Adversary, this work was even more controversial than her Melbourne exhibition. The publisher was charged with producing an obscene publication and the book could only be distributed in Australia with some of the more sexually explicit images blacked out. In the United States copies were burned by customs officials. The publisher was sent bankrupt, so Norton proceeded to sell her occult artwork directly to the public. She also openly established a Pagan Coven dedicated to the 'Great God Pan' at her lodgings in Kings Cross. More trouble from the authorities was to follow. A series of confiscated photographs depicting simulated ceremonial rituals, led to Rosaleen being charged in 1956 with 'engaging in unnatural sexual acts', and she unwittingly aided in the public ruin of Sir Eugene Goosens, conductor of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, who was both a member, from 1952, of her coven and her lover. Her notoriety/fame endured throughout the 1950s and 1960s, with evermore lurid embellishments, up until her death at age 62. Quite a life. This handsome volume includes most of the more 'notorious' examples of her artwork as well as a sympathetic and perceptive analysis of her disparate occult philosophy.Stephen Reid 25 Language & Writing A People's Art History of the United States: 250 Years of Activist Art and Artists Working in Social Justice Movements by Nicolas Lampert Daily Rituals: A Selection of Writers' Daily Routines & Writing Practices ($29.99, HB) Anthony Trollope wrote 3,000 words every morning before heading off to his job at the Post Office. Toulouse-Lautrec did his best work at night, sometimes even setting up his easel in brothels, and George Gershwin composed at the piano in pyjamas and a bathrobe. Freud worked 16 hours a day, but Gertrude Stein could never write for more than 30 minutes, and F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote in gin-fuelled bursts—he believed alcohol was essential to his creative process. From Marx to Murakami, Beethoven to Bacon, Daily Rituals examines the working routines of more than 160 of the greatest philosophers, writers, composers and artists. Also New Macquarie Concise Dictionary 6th ed, $39.99, PB; $49.99, HB Totes Ridictionary by Balthazar Cohen 'Totes ridic! Presh! Amazeballs! Adorbs! Obvs!' Everywhere you look, in emails, tweets, Facebook posts, text messages, blogs and even real-life conversations, Totes Ridicheads are turning words into twee 'abbrevs', communicating in internet acronyms, and embracing hashtags as a way of life. And sooner or later you'll need to become fluent in totes ridicularity. The Totes Ridictionary will help you survive life in a world where text-message abbreviations and Twitter slang are dancing on the grave of the Oxford New English Dictionary. ($19.99, HB) English for the Natives: Discover the Grammar You Don't Know You Know by Harry Ritchie Forget the little you think you know about English grammar and start afresh with this highly entertaining and accessible guide. English for the Natives outlines the rules and structures of our language as they are taught to foreign students—and have never before been explained to us. Harry Ritchie also examines the grammar of dialects as well as standard English, and shows how non-standard forms are just as valid. With examples from a wide variety of sources, from Ali G to John Betjeman, Margaret Thatcher to Match of the Day, this essential book reveals some surprising truths about our language and teaches you all the things you didn't know you knew about grammar. ($29.99, HB) Cluetopia: The Story of 100 Years of the Crossword by David Astle ($29.99, PB) Crosswords are not as old as you think. The first one appeared a century ago, and David Astle is here to toast the centenary, whizzing you through 100 years of remarkable clues, seeking the inside stories across the world. Travel to New Guinea, Venezuela and Metropolis: every destination arising from a clue. Encounter love, murder, hoaxes, propaganda. Visit a Maori funeral, a Bass Strait oil-rig, a Russian game show—just some of side-trips locked inside a crossword. With almost 100 minichapters, each one with a clue to crack, Cluetopia is the perfect book for word lovers and puzzle fans. Dear Writer ...revisited... by Carmel Bird 'I first read Dear Writer as a nervy, secretive scribbler-in-jour- nals 20 years ago. How comforted I was by the letters of Virginia O'Day—her kindly, lively voice, her practicality. Neither patronising nor falsely encouraging, Virginia seemed the ideal writing companion—here was someone who could explain things that others seemed only to hint at. Reading this revised version I'm struck again by its practical generosity on technical matters, but am also inspired by the deeper, more complex conversations I think I missed in those early readings: about courage, about the urgency and mystery and self-discovery of the writing process. Dear Writer Revisited may masquerade‚ convincingly—as a book for beginners, but its lessons are mature and wise'.—Charlotte Wood. Updated to accommodate the digital age. The Elements of Eloquence: How to turn the perfect English phrase by Mark Forsyth From King Lear's Howl, howl, howl to Channel 4's location location location (via Tennyson and Tony Blair). From Crisis? What Crisis? to Bond, James Bond. And from God creating Heaven and earth to Guy Ritchie creating Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels: join Mark Forsyth with the Muses on the summit of Mount Parnassus as he tinkers wildly with zeugma, merism, syllepsis and iambic pentameter in an eccentric (and ultimately successful) attempt to write the perfect three sentences. Forsyth's new book does for literary and poetic style what his The Etymologicon did for everyday words. ($29.99, HB) 26 Most people outside of the art world view art as something that is foreign to their experiences and everyday lives. A People’s Art History of the United States places art history squarely in the rough-and-tumble of politics, social struggles, and the fight for justice from the colonial era through to the present day. Author and radical artist Nicolas Lampert combines historical sweep with detailed examinations of individual artists and works in a politically charged narrative that spans the conquest of the Americas, the American Revolution, slavery and abolition, western expansion, the suffragette movement and feminism, civil rights movements, environmental movements, LGBT movements, antiglobalisation movements, contemporary antiwar movements, and beyond. ($59.95, HB) Poetry Looking for Clancy by A. B. 'Banjo' Paterson (ill) by Robert Ingpen ($34.99, HB) In 1889 Australian folk poet, A. B. 'Banjo' Paterson, first published his ballad, Clancy of the Overflow. The verse achieved immediate popularity and, with the creation of his legendary character, the free-spirited stockman, Clancy, Paterson had summed up the essence of the Australian outback. Award-winning illustrator Robert Ingpen has journeyed into the Australian outback, exploring the myth of Clancy through words and illustrations, to find what it is that has made Clancy such an enduring figure in Australian folklore. Unbelievers, or The Moor by John Mateer ($24, PB) John Mateer’s previous poetry book Southern Barbarians traced the influence of the Portuguese empire in the Indian Ocean. Unbelievers, or The Moor takes this exploration one step further, to recover its Arabic and Islamic origins in Al-Andalus, the Moorish state which occupied much of present-day Spain & Portugal from the 8th to the 15th centuries. A seat of learning & culture, which combined Muslim, Christian & Jewish influences, it provides a model for Mateer’s own mixed background as a South African Australian, and for his nomadic identity as a poet. The collection is much concerned with influential but invisible histories; with the poem as a moment of connection between languages and cultures, so that it seems already to exist in translation; with doubles and hauntings, friends in far places, and above all, what Mateer calls ‘the irony of Elsewhere’. The Complete Lyrics, 1978–2013 by Nick Cave 'I walk into the corner of my room, see my friends in high places I don't know which is which and whom is whom, they've stolen each other's faces.' Spanning Nick Cave's entire career, from his writing for The Birthday Party, through highly acclaimed albums like Murder Ballads, Henry's Dream, and Dig, Lazarus, Dig! up to his latest release, Push the Sky Away, this fully updated edition of The Complete Lyric 1978–2013 is a must for all fans of the dark, the beautiful and the defiant. ($26.99, PB) The Best 100 Poems of Dorothy Porter ($25, PB) Dorothy Porter was one of Australia's true originals, renowned for her passionate, punchy poetry and verse novels. This collection, the best of her life's work as selected by her partner Andrea Goldsmith, presents the many facets of Porter, from her break-out verse novel The Monkey's Mask to her posthumous collection, The Bee Hut. Whether stretching the fabric of ancient mythology, discovering the beauty of the natural world or inking an intimate message on the heart, Porter's verse is endlessly captivating. Poetry Please by Roger McGough ($39.99, HB) The BBC has looked back through its rich archive of recordings to produce a poll of the most asked for and most broadcast pieces ever: it is those poems that this anthology brings together here. A showcase, in effect, for the nation's favourite verse, Poetry Please is a treasure trove for our most requested and most listened to poems of all time. Also available on CD—$19.99 Train Songs: An Anthology (eds) Don Paterson & Sean O'Brien ($24.99, HB) Wordsworth was the first laureate of locomotives: in fact he railed against them, and against the consequent opening up of the Lakes to holiday hordes (On the Projected Kendal and Windermere Railway). His dismay was echoed down the decades by disturbed ruralists, and yet the train has become part of our psychic landscape: some of the bestloved English poems—Edward Thomas's Adlestrop, or Philip Larkin's Whitsun Weddings—have celebrated carriages, platforms and waiting rooms, while locomotion has inspired some of the most characteristic poetry of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Stevenson, Hardy and MacNeice, Betjeman and Auden. Vincent Van Gogh: The Years in France: Complete Paintings 1886–890 by Walter Feilchenfeldt ($129.95, HB) A contribution to a future catalogue raisonné of Vincent van Gogh's work, this book is a comprehensive list of Van Gogh's paintings executed between 1886 and 1890 in Paris, Arles, Saint-Rémy & Auvers-sur-Oise. The works are reproduced in full colour & appear in related scale to their original size. All owners are registered, beginning with Theo van Gogh or receivers of gifts, and ending with the present owners, if known and willing to be mentioned. For the first time the paintings recorded in early documents like the 'Andries Bonger Inventory List' of 1890 and the 1905 Amsterdam Exhibition are completely identified, plus the book includes a wealth of new information of crucial importance to collectors, dealers, art historians and public institutions. Philip Johnson and His Mischief: Appropriation in Art and Architecture by Christian Bjone ($35, PB) The world of art itself is fair game to be pillaged or mined in the production of new art, but there is almost no recognised equivalent aesthetic in architecture. Philip Johnson consistently dealt with the concept of appropriation, and used it as a design strategy from the very beginning of his illustrious career. This book looks at the concept of appropriation and how Johnson's style was influenced first by his mentor, Mies van der Rohe, and then by post-modern ideas and artists. Charting his career through the 1980s and beyond, this book reviews Johnson's body of work, showing that, far from being a weakness, his use of appropriation was a major part of his innovative success. Old Masters: Australia's Great Bark Painters Bark painting, as practised by Aboriginal artists of Arnhem Land for millennia, is one of the great traditions of world art—only recognised as such late in the 20th century. This book highlights the work of 40 master painters who have carried one of the oldest continuing traditions of art into the modern era, featuring the paintings of Narritjin Maymuru, Yirawala, Mawalan Marika, David Malangi & their contemporaries. These men of high ritual standing were not only artists, but also ceremonial & clan leaders, philosophers, advocates for land rights and human rights, ambassadors and politicians, who recognised the power of art as the most eloquent means to build bridges between Aboriginal and European society. The book includes scholarly essays, biographies, portraits of the artists, & 122 full-colour plates of the paintings, made between 1948 and 1988. ($39.95, PB) The Age of Collage: Contemporary Collage in Modern Art (eds) Silke Krohn et al Because collage's references range from other artistic works and techniques to scientific images, pop culture, and erotica, these raw materials reflect humanity's collective visual memory and context, and beyond the lowbrow movement, which brings a fresh perspective to figurative surrealism, more and more established artists are now embracing this medium. The Age of Collage showcases outstanding current artwork and artists, documenting this new appetite for destructive construction. The book also takes an insightful behind-the-scenes look at those working with this interdisciplinary and cross-media approach. Through confident cuts, brush strokes, mouse clicks, or pasting, collage gives the impossible a tangible form—while turning our world view on its head along the way. ($81.50, HB) Marcel Broodthaers: Works and Collected Writings (ed) Gloria Moure ($135, HB) Marcel Broodthaers (1924–1976) was to transform the category of artist completely, purging the vocation of its medium-specific implications to pursue a unified conceptualism across media such as artist's books, prints, film, installation, sculpture and writings. This book gathers his early poetry, statements, critical essays, both published and unpublished, open letters, interviews, preparatory notes and scripts alongside nearly 200 colour images in a massive and decisive presentation of the artist's postmedium art. The Arts Quick Sketching with Ron Husband ($44, PB) Quick sketching is the best technique you can use to stay finely tuned and to keep those creative juices flowing. To keep your sense of observation heightened, and to sharpen your hand-eye coordination, an animator needs to constantly draw and sketch. Ron Husband offers instruction to quick sketching and all its techniques. From observing positive and negative space and learning to recognise simple shapes in complex forms to action analysis and using line of action, this Disney legend teaches you how to sketch using all these components, and how to do it in a matter of seconds. Fantasy Modern: Loudon Sainthill's Theatre of Art and Life by Andrew Montana Australian painter and theatre artist Loudon Sainthill and his partner, entrepreneur and gallery director Harry Tatlock Miller, were at the heart of avant-garde artistic and literary circles in mid-20th century Melbourne, Sydney and London. Sainthill’s art embraced painting, murals, book illustration, textile design and fashion. He is best known for his costumes, design and artwork for the theatre and ballet—including for the Ballets Russes, Hélène Kirsova’s ballet company, and in London, Michael Benthall’s production of The Tempest and Robert Helpmann’s Le Coq d’Or. This sumptuously illustrated biography details Sainthill and Miller's life and times, and contains much of Sainthill’s work along with never-before-published archival photographs. ($89.95, HB) The Vatican: All the Paintings— The Complete Collection of Old Masters, Plus More than 300 Sculptures, Maps, Tapestries, and other Artefacts ($80, HB) This book is organised and divided into 23 sections representing the museums and areas of the Vatican, including the Pinacoteca, the Sistine Chapel, the Raphael Rooms, the Borgia Apartments, the Vatican Palaces, St. Peter's Basilica and more. Its design enables the reader to carefully examine the 180 full- and half-page featured paintings as well as the rest of the collection of paintings, which appear four and six to a page. Several gatefolds through the book show triptychs, ceilings, and frescos at an even larger size. Larger works of art like ceilings and frescos include overall views and details of the masterpieces. Masterpieces of Chinese Painting 700-1900 by Hongxing Zhang ($79.99, HB) Painting has always been regarded by the Chinese as a supreme art, its merits equal to those of poetry and philosophy. The tradition can be traced over 2,500 years, but many Chinese paintings were made to be viewed on a temporary basis, displayed for just a few hours, or perhaps several weeks. The masterpieces of the form have been seen very rarely, and then only by few, particularly in the West. Presenting works from the richest and most representative collections in the world, this book is an authoritative guide to these great works, and includes the best paintings by the greatest masters as well as those by lesser-known artists. The Art of Drawing: British Masters Since 1600 by Susan Owens ($60, HB) Featuring works by foremost British artists from the early 17th century up to the present day, this book offers fresh insights into the wide range of ways in which British artists have used drawing to think on paper, build up ideas, and make finished exhibition pieces. Taking examples from the greatest masters, including Isaac Oliver, Peter Lely, WIlliam Blake, Thomas Rowlandson, John Constable, Edwin Landseer, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Edward Burne-Jones, Wyndham Lewis, Paul Nash, Lucian Freud, David Hockney, John Piper, Sian Bowen and Grayson Perry, Susan Owens discusses the art and craft of drawing, materials and techniques, and why artists chose them. Art as Research: Opportunities and Challenges (ed) Shaun McNiff ($27.95, PB) The new practice of art-based research uses art making as a primary mode of enquiry rather than continuing to borrow research methodologies from other disciplines to study artistic processes. Drawing on contributions from arts therapies, education, history, organisational studies, and philosophy, the essays critically examine unique challenges that include the personal and sometimes intimate nature of artistic enquiry and the complexities of the partnership with social science which has dominated applied arts research; how artistic discoveries are apt to emerge spontaneously, even contrary to plans and what we think we know; how truth can be examined through both fact and fiction as well as the interplay of objective and subjective experience; and ways of generating artistic evidence and communicating outcomes. 27 E W N Was $40 Now $16.95 The Cat's Table Michael Ondaatje, HB Was $24 Now $9.95 Book Lust To Go Nancy Pearl, PB Was $30 Now $12.95 The Definitive Wit of Winston Churchill Richard M. Langworth, HB Was $25 Now $9.95 S E P Was $27 Now $9.95 A Fanatic Heart: Selected Stories Edna O'Brien, PB Was $42 Now $16.95 Hemingway's Boat Paul Hendrickson, HB Now $18.95 The Kings & Queens of England Ian Crofton, HB 28 I L A Was $40 Waiting for Sunrise William Boyd, HB Was $49.95 Now $29.95 May Gibbs: More Than a Fairytale, An Artistic Life Holden & Brummitt, HB Now $12.95 The New Granta Book of Travel, HB Was $25 Was $35 Now $9.95 Now $12.95 The Big Book of Words You Should Know David Olsen et al, PB Was $25 Was $20 Now $9.95 Now $8.95 A Beginner's Guide to Philosophy Dominique Janicaud, PB Was $25 Now $9.95 Was $75 Now $19.95 Lives of the Ancient Egyptians Toby Wilkinson, HB N S Was $30 Now $14.95 Between You & I: A Little Book of Bad English James Cochrane, HB Mathematics: The Big Questions Philosophy: The Big Questions Tony Crilly, HB Simon Blackburn, HB Was $39.99 C Ethics: The Big Questions Julian Baggini, HB Was $25 Was $60 Now $9.95 Physics: The Big Questions Michael Brooks, HB Was $45 Now $18.95 The Atlantic & its Enemies: A History of the Cold War Norman Stone, HB Now $16.95 Londoners Craig Taylor, HB Was $35 Now $16.95 London Under Peter Ackroyd, HB E W Was $33 Was $49.95 The Table Comes First: Family, France & the Meaning of Food Adam Gopnik, HB Venezia: Food & Dreams Tessa Kiros, HB Now $9.95 1001 Classical Recordings You Must Hear Before You Die (ed) Matthew Rye, HB Fair World: A History of World's Fairs & Expositions from London to Shanghai 1851–2010 Paul Greenhalgh, HB Now $29.95 Now $16.95 Now $19.95 Now $19.95 Was $70 Was $40 Was $30 Now $9.95 Historic Maps & Views of Vienna Hannah Schweizer, HB S Was $60 Now $9.95 Was $99.95 Now $99.95 The Decorative Arts: From the Middle Ages to the Renaissance The Complete Plates, HB Was $25 The 20th Century World Architecture, HB The Art Musem, HB Was $250 Now $19.95 L A Now $100 Now $140 A Natural History of the Piano: The Instrument, the Music, the Musicians from Mozart to Modern Jazz & Everything in Between Stuart Isacoff, HB I Was $225 Was $225 Now $16.95 C Silent Spring Rachel Carson, PB Tibet: Land of Exile Patricio Estay, HB Was $42 Historic Maps & Views of Berlin Hannah Schweizer, HB E Now $29.95 A Man in Love Karl Ove Knausgaard, PB Was $30 P Was $75 Now $14.95 The Lost Gardens of Sydney Colleen Morris, HB S Was $49.95 Now $29.95 South East Asian Food Rosemary Brissenden, HB Was $30 Now $14.95 Moon Landing 40th Anniversary Pop-up, HB Was $89.95 Now $39.95 House by Robyn Stacey & Peter Timmins, HB Was $60 Now $19.95 The Silver Spoon Pasta, HB Was $49.95 Now $24.95 Australian Mongrel David Darcy, HB Was $60 Now $19.95 Diamond Jubilee Limited Ed Commemorative Box Set 29 of 13 prints SOME BOOKS I ENJOYED READING IN 2013 Strange Angel: The Otherworldly Life of Rocket Scientist John Whiteside Parsons by George Pendle. $29, PB 'Rocket Scientist Blows Himself Up!' screamed the headlines about the mysterious explosion that killed 37 year old John Parsons in his makeshift laboratory on the outskirts of Pasadena in June 1952. A double tragedy as it turned out, since his elderly mother upon hearing the news, took her own life the same day. The scientific community mourned a brilliant (if mildly eccentric) rocket engineer whose experiments had advanced the understanding of rocket propulsion during the 1930s when few were taking rocketry itself seriously. Yet, the day of his death, before the arrival of the press, two friends hurriedly visited his house to whitewash out a huge mural depicting Satan's visage. Turns out that Parsons was also an ardent diabolist—a High Priest of the Church of Thelema—promoting the ideas of the English occultist Aleister Crowley (1875–1947). While Jack Parsons was conducting solid rocket fuel experiments for the US government on the eve of World War II, he had also rented a 25 acre (10 hectare) estate outside Pasadena. During the 1940s, following their masters' creed, 'Do What Thou Wilt Shall Be the Whole of the Law', commune members, who included several fading silent movie stars, indulged in as many drugs, drink and 'sex magick' rituals as they could handle. Parson's first wife took off to Florida with L. Ron Hubbard, later the founder of his own cult, Scientology, so Jack anointed her 17 year old stepsister as his new communal companion. As his behaviour became increasingly erratic, his isolation from the world of rocketry intensified. His final love interest was a young, red-headed wild child artist with whom he was planning to travel to Mexico for a new variation on the good life. His only income by now was creating explosive special effects for the film industry. The day he was to leave for Mexico he was rushing through a final order for a film company when disaster struck. Robert Goddard, Albert Einstein, Robert Heinlein and Isaac Asimov also make brief appearances in this entertaining book examining the wilder side of American science and culture. The Satin Man: The Disappearance of the Beaumont Children Revealed by Alan Whiticker and Stuart Mullins. $24.95, PB. Seeing the photo on the cover of the three Beaumont children strikes a nerve. They are my contemporaries. Jane Beaumont (9) was my age. Her younger sister Arnna (7) and her brother Grant (4) were the ages of two of my sisters. At 10 am on 26 January 1966 the three children catch a bus to Glenelg Beach. Jane is given eight shillings and sixpence, 85 cents, ($10.00 in today's values) by her mother Nancy to buy lunch. Having arrived, at around 10.15 am they are recognised by and call out and wave to the local postie. A school friend of Jane's sees them playing in the water at about 11.00 am. They had placed their towels in the shade at Colley Reserve, a small park directly opposite the beach and were running in and out of the sprinklers. A Glenelg woman later notices them playing with a man described as between 30 to 40 years old tall, slender. Other witnesses later see him dressing them and the three children apparently waiting for him. The children are last seen 'around midday' when they buy their lunch at Wenzel's Cakes—paying with a £1.00 note ($50.00). Someone had given them a large amount of money. They are not seen again. They fail to return home on the 2.00 pm bus as arranged and are reported missing by their parents that evening. Journalist Whiticker follows his previous book on the case with a presentation of new evidence and leads. A potential suspect (now deceased ) is named pseudonymously—a businessman who may have been involved in the disappearance and buried the children in an Adelaide factory. The evidence, including interviews with family members, is not entirely conclusive but is tantalisingly suggestive. Certainly worthy of further investigation by authorities. White Gold by Giles Milton. Paperback. $24.99, PB 'As the sun rose spectacularly over the city’s eastern ramparts and the men were led through the principal gate, they were tormented by jeering, hostile Moors. We were met and surrounded by vast crowds of them ... offering us the most vile insults. As word of their arrival spread through the souks, more and more people flocked to the city in order to mock the hated Christians. They surged towards the frightened captives and tried to beat them with sticks and batons'.—Cornish cabin boy, Thomas Pellow, aged 11, recalling the start of his 20 year captivity by Barbary Corsair pirates in 1716. Did you know that between 1550 & 1750 over one million Europeans were captured and enslaved? I didn't. Algiers alone was a prison for anywhere between 25,000 to 50,000 slaves. Slaves markets also flourished in Tunis and Morocco where Thomas was sent. His purchaser was Sultan Moulay Ismail, a murderous tyrant committed to constructing a vast pleasure palace of some 450 kms! that extended from Meknes to Marrakesh— built entirely by Christian slave labour. After enduring much torture, Pellow converted to Islam and became the personal slave of the sultan for over two decades, including service as a soldier in the sultan’s army, before finally making his escape & returning to Cornwall. This is an excellent account of the white slave trade, supported by unpublished letters & manuscripts of slaves& the various ambassadors sent to free them. In my last column of 2013 may I wish all Gleaner readers an enjoyable Holiday Season. May we meet again. Stephen Reid 30 Stephen Reid: William Manchester and Paul Reid—The Last Lion Trilogy: Winston Spencer Churchill. 3 Vol Box Set ($190, HB). Vol 1—Visions of Glory 1874–1932 (pub. 1983); Vol 2—Alone 1932–1940 (pub. 1988); Vol 3—Defender of the Realm 1940–1965 (pub. 2013) More than three decades in the writing, William Manchester's marvellous biography has been triumphantly completed at last. Manchester (1922–2004), incapacitated by illness in 1998, asked fellow author Paul Reid to finish the work. A masterly, kaleidoscopic presentation of Churchill in all his multifaceted guises both private and public. Nearly 3,000 pages ... but don't let that deter you. Dive into this wonderfully written narrative! Biography in the grand manner just as its towering subject deserves. Our 2013 favourites Sally Gaunt: My pick of the year is HhhH, a gripping World War 2 thriller by Frenchman Laurent Binet, which throws spine-chilling light onto the workings of the SS while also examining questions around historiography. Judy Kirkwood: When anyone escapes, my heart / leaps up. Even when it's I who am escaped from, / I am half on the side of the leaver. Sharon Olds can write this after her beloved husband of thirty years is leaving to be with a new woman! Yet there is nothing easy, languid or passive in this cycle of poems. Stag's Leap is full and brimming with passion, anger, humour and life. She is a magnificently sensual poet and this has to be my favourite read of the year. Toby Fitch: Autoethnographic by Michael Brennan— Michael Brennan's third collection of poetry is a surreal series of prose poems much like columns or skyscrapers in shape, set in a 'dystopic near-present', narrated by a slew of protean, gender-ambiguous characters who seem to be dealing psychically with the fallout of democratic capitalism. The strangeness of these poems—as one of the narrators echoes, and as with all good poetry, 'it makes me feel more human'. David McLaughlin: The best Australian book I read this year was Tim Winton's Eyrie. I also loved Hannah Kent's Burial Rites. The best crime book was either A.S.A Harrison's The Silent Wife (smart, very unnerving) or Adrian McKinty's I Hear the Sirens in the Street (a cracker). The best international novel was the ambitious, adventurous The Flamethrowers by Rachel Kushner. But the best of the best was Alice Munro's short story collection, Dear Life. It was a pleasure to read: subtle, profound and true. Jonathon Collerson: Countdown City: The Last Policeman Book II by Ben H. Winters is the second book in an award-winning trilogy. It uses a quasi detective structure to present scenes from the disintegration of America as it counts down to the impact of an asteroid that will devastate Earth. It is sometimes very dark, allowing only a trace of light in the loving relationships that matter at the end. It is a good book for someone who enjoys things apocalyptic and slightly fantastic. The third book will be out mid-2014. Jack Harkin: HHhH by Laurent Binet—Kevin Hart’s definition of postmodernism 'as marking an attitude of disbelief towards the modern' accurately describes Laurent Binet’s narrative approach to the rise and fall of SS General Reinhard Heydrich. A well-documented 'true story' that draws Binet into a continuous sieving of histories, films and novels until an astonishing portrait of bravery emerges. His description of the defiance shown by Czech resistance fighters (in the crypt of a Prague church) against a Nazi siege has stayed with me all year. Andrew Sims: The Flamethrowers by Rachel Kushner was a great discovery this year—a mercurial, heady, 'sophomore' effort which has left me hankering for this young writer's next novel. But I also have to mention (in the absence of a collected volume as yet available) Opened Ground: Poems 1966–1996 by Seamus Heaney. It is currently the only available selection of the Nobel Prize winning poet who died in August. Tamarra Burnett: Blood and Beauty by Sarah Dunant—An enjoyable and at times brutal romp through Renaissance Italy centred around the Borgia families who have been referred to as the first Italian Crime Family. If you enjoyed the TV series The Borgias, have a stab at the book. Elizabeth Allen: The Night Guest by Fiona McFarlane—I love this book. I love the tiger in this book. Tigers keep cropping up in the literature I read. I have encountered them all my life—in childhood tales like The Tiger Who Came to Tea and more recently in books such as The Life of Pi. They have a certain symbolic and imaginative power that someone has no doubt written a PhD thesis about. The tiger is not the only good thing about this book, there are also the finely realised characters, the language and that sense of connection and wonder that you get when you read a really good book. The writer’s ability to lock words together to express the things about being alive that you privately thought you were the only one who knew, to make you identify with the thoughts and feelings that you would have if you were that character in that situation, to make you recognise and at the same time realise something new. It made me repeatedly stop and think, ‘Wow, she just nailed that!’ Australian fiction is alive. Five stars (out of five). Suzi McConnaghy: It is always difficult to describe any book as 'the best book', but there are two books I've read over the last 12 months that have lingered long in my mind. They are Barracuda by Christos Tsiolkas and The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt. Although wildly different in style, both grapple with issues of considerable significance. Barracuda is an extraordinary exploration of masculinity, sexuality and the fundamental question of what it means to be 'a good man', while The Goldfinch is a staggeringly powerful epic of love, loss, treachery, betrayal, terrorism and art fraud, well worth the ten year wait from Tartt's last book. Both are not to be missed. Ingrid Anderson: My favourite book for the year, for sheer readability, is Life After Life by Kate Atkinson. It was one of those books that I wanted to read again as soon as I had finished it. Honourable mention, too, for Donna Tartt's The Goldfinch. Its superlative descriptions of Manhattan in the 1980s alone make it a must. John Walsh: I must admit to being a fan of Philipp Meyer, and nominate his latest novel, The Son, as my Book of the Year. Told through the lives of three generations of one of Texas' wealthiest families, The Son is a sprawling tale of Texas drenched in blood, oil, greed and conflict. Outstanding. Scott Donovan: Ludwig Wittgenstein: the Duty of Genius by Ray Monk—Some years old now but still the definitive biography of the great Austrian thinker/nutcase. Easy to read and frequently hilarious! James Paull: Merivel: A Man of His Time by Rose Tremain—An elegiac masterpiece. Merivel, older and more world-weary than when we encountered him in Restoration, struggles to reconcile the wonder of life with the many and varied defects of humanity as his own mortality looms. WhyTremain has never won the Booker continues to baffle me. Meaghan Gregory: Juliet Marillier is my favourite science fiction author, and in Shadowfell she has woven a wonderful story about friendship, bravery and forbidden magic. David Gaunt: Richard Flanagan's Narrow Road to the Deep North is an outstanding novel in a year choc-a-bloc with very good fiction. It's a haunting, powerful, deeply touching book about love & death, & the (literally) unforgettable impact of war on lives. ABN 87 000 357 317 Mandy: Flora & Ulysses: The Illuminated Adventures by Kate DiCamillo & K G Campbell (ill)—Hilarious, quirky illustrated tale featuring 10-yearold Flora Belle (a natural-born cynic), a most unattractive little shepherdess lamp named Mary Ann, and Ulysses the squirrel, a superhero born of ridiculous and unlikely circumstances. One of my very favourite children’s authors. PO Box 486, Glebe NSW 2037 Ph: (02) 9660 2333 Fax (02) 9660 3597 Email: books@gleebooks.com.au Prices in the gleaner are GST inclusive and enjoy all the benefits: Join the 10% redeemable credit on all purchases, free entry to Gleebooks literary evenings held at #49, the Gleaner sent free of charge, free postage within Australia, invitations to special shopping evenings, & gleeclub special offers. Annual membership is $30.00, 3-year membership is $75.00. Membership to the gleeclub is also a great gift; contact us & we’ll arrange it for you. Please supply the following books: Tatjana Pastrovic: Instant: The Story of Polaroid. A product as cool in the 50s, 60s and 70s as Apple is today, it cranked out one irresistible product after another. This reads like a Greek tragedy...starting with Polaroid's first instant camera in 1948 and the company's meteoric rise, to the dramatic collapse into bankruptcy in the 2000s. Polaroid Years: Instant Photography & Experimentation explores the influence and fascinating way Polaroid photographs have been used by people like Ansel Adams, David Hockney and Ray and Charles Eames and manipulated by artists like Walker Evans, David Levinthal and John Reuter. Tim Gaunt: My book of the year was Leaving the Atocha Station by Ben Learner, which is a hilarious novel about a brilliantly unlikeable American poet floundering in Spain on a fellowship. ORDER FORM Please note that publication dates of new releases may vary. We will notify you regarding any delays. 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Box 486 Glebe NSW 2037 Ph: (02) 9660 2333 Fax: (02) 9660 3597 books@gleebooks.com.au Bestsellers Non-fiction 1. My Mother, My Father: On Losing a Parent (ed) Susan Wyndham 2. The World We Made: Alex McKay's Story from 2050 Jonathon Porritt 3. One Summer: America 1927—The Moment America Discovered Its Future Bill Bryson 4. Mad Marathon: The Story of the 2013 Election Mungo MacCallum 5. 1914: The Year the World Ended Paul Ham 6. The Stalking of Julia Gillard: How Team Rudd and the Media Contrived to Bring Down the Prime Minister Kerry-Anne Walsh 7. Murder in Mississippi: United States v Price & the Struggle for Civil Rights John Safran 8. I Am Malala: The Girl Who Was Shot by the Taliban Malala Yousafzai 9. On the Trail of Genghis Khan Tim Cope 10. Empress Dowager Cixi: The Concubine Who Launched Modern China Jung Chang Bestsellers Fiction 1. Narrow Road to the Deep North Richard Flanagan 2. Eyrie ....... and another thing Another Gleaner year over and I have a library-length list of books I want to read in my break. Starting with the new Tim Winton and Christos Tsiolkas, and then I really must try Fiona McFarlane's Night Guest—it has been so thoroughly recommended. For my favourite book of the year I'm in agreement with Jack and Sally. As soon as I started Laurent Binet's HHhH I knew it was going to be hard to beat, and everyone I've given it to this year has been similarly impressed. Recently I've been reading Dear Writer ... Revisited. Carmel Bird's charming guide to writing fiction is an equally inspiring guide to reading. Julian Barnes' Guardian essay on Penelope Fitzgerald, published in his collection Through the Window, had filed her in my mind as someone I must get around to—and something in Bird's pages tweaked intention to action. So I grabbed a copy of The Bookshop, a quietly tragic tale of a failed attempt at late life change via the book trade, and petty small town politics. Fitzgerald is a master of the well-placed adjective—something one watches out for after reading Carmel Bird. Her characterisation of both people and place is so precise, sharp but never mean, I was wanting to reread it to see how it was done before I'd finished the first chapter. I look forward to her other books, and also to Hermione Lee's new biography of Fitzgerald (p.8). Another writer I've just discovered who has a deft pen is Poe Ballantine—his memoir Love & Terror on the Howling Plains of Nowhere is a pleasure to read. Well, that's it from me for 2013. Don't forget there'll be a Summer Reading Guide coming your way in November. Thank you to all the contributors to this year's magazine, and thank you to our loyal readership. All the best for 2014. Viki Tim Winton 3. The Antibiography of Robert F Menzies Bernard Cohen 4. The Luminaries Eleanor Catton 5. Questions of Travel 6. Burial Rites 7. What the Ground Can't Hold 8. Coal Creek 9. The Night Guest 10. Murder & Mendelssohn 32 Michelle de Kretser Hannah Kent Shady Cosgrove Alex Miller Fiona McFarlane Kerry Greenwood Remember! Join the Gleeclub and get free entry to ALL events held at our shops, 10% credit accrued with every purchase, The Gleaner mailed to you, and FREE POSTAGE anywhere in Australia. Main shop—49 Glebe Pt Rd; Ph: (02) 9660 2333, Fax: (02) 9660 3597. Open 7 days, 9am to 9pm Thur–Sat; 9am to 7pm Sun–Wed Gleebooks 2nd Hand—189 Glebe Pt Rd; Ph: (02) 9552 2526. Open 7 days, 10am to 7pm Sydney Theatre Shop—22 Hickson Rd Walsh Bay; Open two hours before and until after every performance Blackheath—Shop 1, Collier's Arcade, Govetts Leap Rd; Ph: (02) 4787 6340. Open 7 days, 9am to 6pm Dulwich Hill—536 Marrickville Rd Dulwich Hill; Ph: (02) 8080 0098. Open 7 days, 9am to 7pm, Sunday 9 to 5 www.gleebooks.com.au. 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