124510 readings_cover VIC.art
Transcription
124510 readings_cover VIC.art
A selection of the best CDs and DVDs for summer Fabulous deals and exclusive offers on a great range of titles Win a library of books worth at least $5000, or one of five $100 book vouchers The best books for summer reading Plenty of book, CD and DVD gift ideas to make Christmas special selected by Australia’s best booksellers ART AND ARCHITECTURE LITERATURE BIOGRAPHY CRIME FICTION LANGUAGE, POETRY & ESSAYS FOOD AND WINE GIFT HISTORY 14–15 2–6 9–11 7 7–8 17–18 20–21 11–12 HUMOUR KIDS’ BOOKS MUSIC BOOKS ORDER FORM PHILOSOPHY PHOTOGRAPHY AND FILM POLITICS AND SOCIETY SCIENCE AND NATURE TRAVEL WRITING 20 21–23 16 BACK COVER 18 16 12–13 13–14 19 WIN GREAT PRIZES AT YOUR SERVICE You can win a library of books worth more than $5000 or a $100 gift voucher by correctly answering the questions scattered throughout this guide. See the back cover for details. You can phone, fax or email your orders using the form on the back cover of this guide. CAN’T DECIDE? If you’re not 100% sure about which book will suit, why not give one of our gift vouchers? DELIVERY SERVICE Your books can be delivered anywhere in Australia for a small charge. See the back cover for details. Express and overseas rates are available on request. FREE GIFTWRAP We’ll giftwrap all books on request when you organise delivery through us! CORPORATE GIFTS Impress your clients with a book for Christmas. Contact us for our corporate rates on bulk purchases. FREE ORDER SERVICE Our special order service is free, fast and efficient – if we don’t have it, we’ll get it for you! GUARANTEE If, on inspection, you’re not happy with a book selected through this guide, you can return it (in saleable condition) within 14 days of purchase and we’ll exchange it for another book of equivalent value or for a book voucher – the choice is yours. literature THE ALMOST MOON Alice Sebold Picador. PB. Was $32.95, now $27.95. ‘When all is said and done, killing my mother came easily.’ From this sledgehammer first line, the muchacclaimed author of The Lovely Bones and Lucky sets the scene for another journey into murder and madness. The narrative ripples backwards and forwards over time, hinting at and then describing the shattered family history that brings Helen Knightly to kill her 88-year-old, always-difficult mother. There are traumatic events from Helen’s childhood, glimpses of her long-suffering father who eventually suicides, the facts of her broken marriage and estranged children. As the layers are peeled away, the realisation comes that Helen is as dysfunctional as her mother, and that the intergenerational pattern is fixed. ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA Colleen McCullough HarperCollins. HB. Was $49.95, now $39.95. The latest instalment in McCullough’s ‘Masters of Rome’ series packs the bestselling novelist’s usual punch. When Caesar is murdered, his 18-year-old nephew Octavian is named as his heir. No-one, least of all ambitious Mark Antony, expects Octavian to last, but the young man’s slight frame conceals a remarkable determination and a sharp strategic mind. Under Octavian’s rule, the empire is divided, with Antony responsible for the fabulously rich East. There he meets Cleopatra, who is still mourning Caesar, her lover and the father of her only son. Drawn together by grief, ambition, passion and politics, Antony and Cleopatra begin a very public love affair, and the tension between Antony and Octavian, already simmering, soon threatens to erupt into war... AWAY Amy Bloom Granta. PB. $29.95. Away is the extraordinary story of young Lillian Leyb. Her family destroyed in a Russian pogrom, Lillian arrives in 1920s New York determined to make a new life for herself and is taken under the wing of Reuben Burstein, the famous impresario, and his matinee-idol son Meyer. But then her wily cousin Raisele arrives, with some unexpected news about Lillian’s young daughter Sophie. Driven by a wild hope, Lillian sets off on an odyssey across America, travelling from New York’s Lower East Side to Seattle’s Skid Row and up to Alaska, before embarking along the fabled Telegraph Trail towards Siberia. This is storytelling at its finest – Bloom balances the epic sweep of the story with an intimate and psychologically acute style, and the result is a triumph. BLOOD KIN Ceridwen Dovey Atlantic Books. PB. $29.95. A bloody coup has brought down a government and installed a new leader, who holds the former president captive. Three men who attended the president have also been captured: his chef, his barber and his portraitist. What follows isn’t a political thriller in the vein of Clancy or Grisham, and no clue is given as to the story’s location. Instead, this tautly drawn debut takes us into the minds and motives of the three men – and of their women – held captive while the old regime tumbles and the equally violent usurpers take control. Cliché and shadowy characterisation abound, and the plot is of course highly contrived, but there’s something more exciting here, promising extraordinary things in the future from this gifted young writer. THE BOOK OF OTHER PEOPLE Zadie Smith (ed.) Hamish Hamilton. HB. $45. The Book of Other People is just that: a book of other people. Open its covers and you’ll make a whole host of new acquaintances. Nick Hornby and Posy Simmonds present the ever-diverging writing life of Jamie Johnson; Hari Kunzru twitches open his net curtains to reveal the irrepressible Magda Mandela (at 4.30am, in her lime-green thong); Jonathan Safran Foer’s grandmother offers cookies to sweeten the tale of her heart scan; and Dave Eggers, George Saunders, David Mitchell, Colm Tóibín, AM Homes, Chris Ware and many more each have someone to introduce to you, too. Includes an introduction by Zadie Smith and brand-new stories from over 20 of the best writers of their generation from both sides of the Atlantic. BRIDGE OF SIGHS Richard Russo Chatto & Windus. PB. $32.95. This page-turning, brilliantly evocative novel about contemporary America is by the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Empire Falls. The unfortunately nicknamed ‘Lucy’ (Lou C) Lynch is a simple man of simple tastes, comfortably semi-retired from running the local family chain of stores built up by his father. The only worry in his life is an upcoming trip to Venice with his much-loved wife, where they hope to meet up with their childhood friend Bobby Marconi, now a famous artist. Lou looks back over his life and the past 50 years in his small town – a place built on the now-defunct local tannery and rigidly divided by social class and neighbourhood. Russo’s deep affection for his characters is clear and his skill as a storyteller is proven once again. A truly great read. THE CHILDREN Charlotte Wood Allen & Unwin. PB. $29.95. The promise of death brings a family together in The Children, only to tear it apart. Foreign correspondent Mandy Connolly is called back to her childhood home from the bloodshed of Iraq to watch her father die, swapping a foreign combat zone for the hidden traps and skirmishes of family life. The sharply perceptive Charlotte Wood, whose 2004 novel The Submerged Cathedral was shortlisted for the Miles Franklin award, captures the emotionally charged fallout when tragedy touches a family and old wounds are opened. Mandy and her siblings must deal not only with the loss of their father and their mother’s grief, but also with their own disconnected familial relationships and the life growing up in a small country town that each has sought to escape. THE COMPLETE STORIES David Malouf Random House USA. HB. $45. Brought together for the first time, these 31 stories were written over a period of 25 years by the prodigiously talented David Malouf. The stories have appeared in previous collections – Every Move You Make (2006), Dream Stuff (2000), Antipodes (1985) and Child’s Play (1982) – but their publication in one volume provides us with everything we need to know about the fine art of the short story. Malouf writes about Australia, its shadows and sunlight, and about the ghosts and memories we share as Australians. He touches on country childhoods and adult friendships, the binding ties of family, and the random and often tragic twists of fate by which our lives are mapped. At times unsettling and sobering, the stories explore the different voices and experiences of the human condition. THE DIRTY BEAT Venero Armanno UQP. PB. $32.95. The Dirty Beat opens with the thoughts of the narrator, Max, as his skull is sawn open and his brain is removed. It’s a bit discomfiting, but it’s no big deal – he is, after all, dead. As Max lies in his coffin at the funeral home watching old friends and new acquaintances gather to say goodbye, he remembers his life: his family, his music and, most of all, his women. It’s the women who drive the litany of memories that unfolds, from his first sexual encounter with a ‘pretty hippy’ to the soundtrack of ’70s rock, to the 20-something knockout he is dancing with when he dies at 50 – and in between, the love of his life. A raw, bittersweet novel about love, betrayal and damaged lives from the acclaimed author of Candle Life. selected by Australia’s best booksellers ART AND ARCHITECTURE LITERATURE BIOGRAPHY CLASSICAL MUSIC CDS CRIME FICTION DVDS LANGUAGE, POETRY & ESSAYS FOOD AND WINE GIFT HISTORY 14–15 2–6 9–11 26 7 27 7–8 17–18 20–21 11–12 HUMOUR KIDS’ BOOKS MUSIC BOOKS MUSIC CDS ORDER FORM PHILOSOPHY PHOTOGRAPHY AND FILM POLITICS AND SOCIETY SCIENCE AND NATURE TRAVEL WRITING 20 21–23 16 24–25 BACK COVER 18 16 12–13 13–14 19 WIN GREAT PRIZES AT YOUR SERVICE You can win a library of books worth more than $5000 or a $100 gift voucher by correctly answering the questions scattered throughout this guide. See the back cover for details. You can phone, fax or email your orders using the form on the back cover of this guide. CAN’T DECIDE? If you’re not 100% sure about which book will suit, why not give one of our gift vouchers? DELIVERY SERVICE Your books can be delivered anywhere in Australia for a small charge. See the back cover for details. Express and overseas rates are available on request. FREE GIFTWRAP We’ll giftwrap all books on request when you organise delivery through us! CORPORATE GIFTS Impress your clients with a book for Christmas. Contact us for our corporate rates on bulk purchases. FREE ORDER SERVICE Our special order service is free, fast and efficient – if we don’t have it, we’ll get it for you! GUARANTEE If, on inspection, you’re not happy with a book selected through this guide, you can return it (in saleable condition) within 14 days of purchase and we’ll exchange it for another book of equivalent value or for a book voucher – the choice is yours. literature THE ALMOST MOON Alice Sebold Picador. PB. Was $32.95, now $27.95. ‘When all is said and done, killing my mother came easily.’ From this sledgehammer first line, the muchacclaimed author of The Lovely Bones and Lucky sets the scene for another journey into murder and madness. The narrative ripples backwards and forwards over time, hinting at and then describing the shattered family history that brings Helen Knightly to kill her 88-year-old, always-difficult mother. There are traumatic events from Helen’s childhood, glimpses of her long-suffering father who eventually suicides, the facts of her broken marriage and estranged children. As the layers are peeled away, the realisation comes that Helen is as dysfunctional as her mother, and that the intergenerational pattern is fixed. ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA Colleen McCullough HarperCollins. HB. Was $49.95, now $39.95. The latest instalment in McCullough’s ‘Masters of Rome’ series packs the bestselling novelist’s usual punch. When Caesar is murdered, his 18-year-old nephew Octavian is named as his heir. No-one, least of all ambitious Mark Antony, expects Octavian to last, but the young man’s slight frame conceals a remarkable determination and a sharp strategic mind. Under Octavian’s rule, the empire is divided, with Antony responsible for the fabulously rich East. There he meets Cleopatra, who is still mourning Caesar, her lover and the father of her only son. Drawn together by grief, ambition, passion and politics, Antony and Cleopatra begin a very public love affair, and the tension between Antony and Octavian, already simmering, soon threatens to erupt into war... AWAY Amy Bloom Granta. PB. $29.95. Away is the extraordinary story of young Lillian Leyb. Her family destroyed in a Russian pogrom, Lillian arrives in 1920s New York determined to make a new life for herself and is taken under the wing of Reuben Burstein, the famous impresario, and his matinee-idol son Meyer. But then her wily cousin Raisele arrives, with some unexpected news about Lillian’s young daughter Sophie. Driven by a wild hope, Lillian sets off on an odyssey across America, travelling from New York’s Lower East Side to Seattle’s Skid Row and up to Alaska, before embarking along the fabled Telegraph Trail towards Siberia. This is storytelling at its finest – Bloom balances the epic sweep of the story with an intimate and psychologically acute style, and the result is a triumph. BLOOD KIN Ceridwen Dovey Atlantic Books. PB. $29.95. A bloody coup has brought down a government and installed a new leader, who holds the former president captive. Three men who attended the president have also been captured: his chef, his barber and his portraitist. What follows isn’t a political thriller in the vein of Clancy or Grisham, and no clue is given as to the story’s location. Instead, this tautly drawn debut takes us into the minds and motives of the three men – and of their women – held captive while the old regime tumbles and the equally violent usurpers take control. Cliché and shadowy characterisation abound, and the plot is of course highly contrived, but there’s something more exciting here, promising extraordinary things in the future from this gifted young writer. THE BOOK OF OTHER PEOPLE Zadie Smith (ed.) Hamish Hamilton. HB. $45. The Book of Other People is just that: a book of other people. Open its covers and you’ll make a whole host of new acquaintances. Nick Hornby and Posy Simmonds present the ever-diverging writing life of Jamie Johnson; Hari Kunzru twitches open his net curtains to reveal the irrepressible Magda Mandela (at 4.30am, in her lime-green thong); Jonathan Safran Foer’s grandmother offers cookies to sweeten the tale of her heart scan; and Dave Eggers, George Saunders, David Mitchell, Colm Tóibín, AM Homes, Chris Ware and many more each have someone to introduce to you, too. Includes an introduction by Zadie Smith and brand-new stories from over 20 of the best writers of their generation from both sides of the Atlantic. BRIDGE OF SIGHS Richard Russo Chatto & Windus. PB. $32.95. This page-turning, brilliantly evocative novel about contemporary America is by the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Empire Falls. The unfortunately nicknamed ‘Lucy’ (Lou C) Lynch is a simple man of simple tastes, comfortably semi-retired from running the local family chain of stores built up by his father. The only worry in his life is an upcoming trip to Venice with his much-loved wife, where they hope to meet up with their childhood friend Bobby Marconi, now a famous artist. Lou looks back over his life and the past 50 years in his small town – a place built on the now-defunct local tannery and rigidly divided by social class and neighbourhood. Russo’s deep affection for his characters is clear and his skill as a storyteller is proven once again. A truly great read. THE CHILDREN Charlotte Wood Allen & Unwin. PB. $29.95. The promise of death brings a family together in The Children, only to tear it apart. Foreign correspondent Mandy Connolly is called back to her childhood home from the bloodshed of Iraq to watch her father die, swapping a foreign combat zone for the hidden traps and skirmishes of family life. The sharply perceptive Charlotte Wood, whose 2004 novel The Submerged Cathedral was shortlisted for the Miles Franklin award, captures the emotionally charged fallout when tragedy touches a family and old wounds are opened. Mandy and her siblings must deal not only with the loss of their father and their mother’s grief, but also with their own disconnected familial relationships and the life growing up in a small country town that each has sought to escape. THE COMPLETE STORIES David Malouf Random House USA. HB. $45. Brought together for the first time, these 31 stories were written over a period of 25 years by the prodigiously talented David Malouf. The stories have appeared in previous collections – Every Move You Make (2006), Dream Stuff (2000), Antipodes (1985) and Child’s Play (1982) – but their publication in one volume provides us with everything we need to know about the fine art of the short story. Malouf writes about Australia, its shadows and sunlight, and about the ghosts and memories we share as Australians. He touches on country childhoods and adult friendships, the binding ties of family, and the random and often tragic twists of fate by which our lives are mapped. At times unsettling and sobering, the stories explore the different voices and experiences of the human condition. THE DIRTY BEAT Venero Armanno UQP. PB. $32.95. The Dirty Beat opens with the thoughts of the narrator, Max, as his skull is sawn open and his brain is removed. It’s a bit discomfiting, but it’s no big deal – he is, after all, dead. As Max lies in his coffin at the funeral home watching old friends and new acquaintances gather to say goodbye, he remembers his life: his family, his music and, most of all, his women. It’s the women who drive the litany of memories that unfolds, from his first sexual encounter with a ‘pretty hippy’ to the soundtrack of ’70s rock, to the 20-something knockout he is dancing with when he dies at 50 – and in between, the love of his life. A raw, bittersweet novel about love, betrayal and damaged lives from the acclaimed author of Candle Life. literature DIVISADERO Michael Ondaatje Bloomsbury. HB. Was $45, now $24.95. Ondaatje’s spellbinding story begins in the 1970s, on a farm in northern California near to what had been Gold Rush country, and moves on to Nevada and then France. His characters are a father; a daughter, Anna; an adopted sister, Claire; and an enigmatic young man named Coop. A traumatic event unexpectedly shatters their makeshift family and sets each of them on a separate course, until, years later, the past once again enters their lives. This simple, almost mythical, tale is about what it is to be a family and what it is to be alone. Featuring Ondaatje’s masterful prose, it has been described by some critics as his best work to date. EXIT GHOST Philip Roth Jonathan Cape. HB. Was $49.95, now $39.95. He may have missed out on the Nobel Prize yet again, but America’s greatest living novelist is still writing novels deserving of the highest accolades. In Exit Ghost, we are introduced to writer Nathan Zuckerman on his return to New York, the city he left 11 years before. Nathan has been living an isolated life on a New England mountain, and back in New York he finds himself erotically drawn to a young woman, Jamie. He also reconnects with an acquaintance of his youth – Amy Bellette, companion and muse to Zuckerman’s first literary hero, EI Lonoff. Through Amy, he encounters a young literary hound who will do and say nearly anything to uncover Lonoff’s ‘great secret’. Suddenly involved again with love, mourning, desire and animosity, Zuckerman plays out an interior drama of vivid and poignant possibilities. There are two tried and true ways to put together the perfect summer reading programme. The first is to read the clutch of novels that walked away with the year’s major literary prizes – this way you get to sample the very best in literary fiction from Australia and both sides of the Atlantic, as well as indulging in a bit of backlist reading courtesy of the Nobel winner. The alternative, which is much loved by book-groups across the globe, is to read the titles shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize. The award-winners package for this year is wonderfully diverse. The headline Australian title on the list is Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria (Giramondo, PB, $26.95), which was awarded the Miles Franklin Literary Award. Wright is only the second Aboriginal writer to win the award; it took her six years to shape her powerful story about the people, land and spirit of Desperance, a fictional town near the Gulf of Carpentaria. The other Australian title on this year’s list is Peter Temple’s The Broken Shore (Text, PB, $22.95), which was awarded the Duncan Lawrie Dagger (formerly known as the CWA Gold Dagger), the biggest crime-writing prize in the world. ENLIGHTENMENT Maureen Freely Marion Boyars Publishers. PB. $32.95. Though best known as Orhan Pamuk’s English translator, Maureen Freely is also a novelist in her own right. Enlightenment is about M, a journalist who grew up in Turkey and returns to Istanbul to investigate why her former Turkish boyfriend and his young son have been detained by the authorities in the US. Soon, she is drawn into an investigation of events in Turkey’s Cold War past involving a retired CIA operative, a murder and the involvement of a group of young political activists in said murder. Freely’s complex political thriller is about the provisional nature of truth and about important human rights issues in Turkey’s past and present – it’s particularly timely and thought-provoking in the context of the recent prosecutions of Turkish writers Orhan Pamuk, Perihan Magden and Elif Shafak on charges of ‘insulting Turkishness’. THE FERN TATTOO David Brooks UQP. PB. $32.95. Ten years after his mother’s death in an accident on the Hume Highway near Canberra, Benedict Waters is contacted by Mrs Darling, who claims to be an old friend of his mother’s. Several years later, he at last agrees to meet her, and she tells him that she has things of his mother’s to pass onto him. Only when Mrs Darling dies a few years later does Benedict uncover, in her possessions, a hidden world of family secrets he knew nothing about. Through his mother’s diaries, he learns of family scandals and crimes that have played out over the course of the previous century, the consequences of which haunt his family still. Meticulously plotted, The Fern Tattoo carefully unveils a story of the inescapable burden of ancestry and family heritage. GENTLEMEN OF THE ROAD Michael Chabon Sceptre. PB. Was $32.95, now $29.95. JANE AUSTEN CLASSICS Cameron. PB. $19.95. These handsome new editions of six Austen classics – Emma, Mansfield Park, Northanger Abbey, Persuasion, Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility – include the novel itself, an introduction, a rethink essay, a piece about a particular aspect of Austen’s world (ie, fashion in the Mansfield Park edition) and an essay about the landscape of the book. Bound to become collectors’ editions, these volumes are both wonderful introductions to Austen’s novels and fascinating works of literary analysis. Who abandoned Queen Dido in Carthage? 3 Chabon’s most celebrated previous work, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2001. In his latest amazing adventure, which was serialised in the New York Times earlier in 2007, Chabon gives us a swashbuckling historical adventure novel set in the 10th-century Kingdom of Arran. This fun-filled boys’-own romp stars the Frankish Zelikman and his sidekick the giant Abyssinian Amram. The two amiable horse thieves and sword masters pool their talents to restore order to Khazaria, the fabled kingdom of wild red-haired Jews on the western shore of the Caspian Sea. The book epitomises Chabon’s skilful recreation of historical settings and explores his fascination with Jewish history, in particular the fabled medieval Jewish empire of the Khazars. The atmospheric line drawings by Gary Gianni emphasise the book’s comic-book feel. On learning of his success Temple said. ‘It’s a huge thrill to win the Duncan Lawrie Dagger for The Broken Shore. You’re up against some of the world’s best crime writers in English. I was proud enough just to be the first Aussie to make the shortlist, let alone win.’ newcomer. Cormac McCarthy won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for his novel The Road (Picador, PB, $22.95), a profoundly moving work that boldly imagines a future in which no hope remains, but in which a father and son are sustained by love. Close to home, New-Zealander Lloyd Jones won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize Best Book Award for his muchlauded novel Mister Pip (Text, PB, $29.95). Jones was the first New Zealand writer to win the prize since Janet Frame in 1989. The judges described his novel as a ‘…mesmerising story [showing] how books can change lives in utterly surprising ways’. Richard Powers won the National Book Foundation’s National Book Prize and was shortlisted for the Pulitzer for his novel The Echo Maker (Vintage, PB, $24.95). Set in Nebraska during the Platte River’s massive spring migrations, it explores how memory, instinct and relationships make us who we are. the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize for his novel Out Stealing Horses (Vintage, PB, $27.95), an intensely lyrical and evocative novel about the transition of the past into memory. In it, 67-year-old Trond Sander recalls his young adulthood against the shadowy aftermath of WWII. The world’s most-hyped literary award, the Man Booker Prize, didn’t go to Mr Pip, as most critics and bookmakers had expected. Instead, it was awarded to Irish writer Ann Enright for The Gathering (Jonathan Cape, PB, $32.95). The judges described the novel as a ‘…powerful, uncomfortable and even at times angry book…[that is also] a very readable and satisfying novel’. Canadian-born author Nancy Huston, who lives and works in France, won the Prix Femina, one of Europe’s most prestigious literary prizes, for her novel Fault Lines (Text, PB, $32.95), written and first published in French as Lignes de Faille. The book examines how the decisions and political upheavals of one generation affect the lives of the next; its story sweeps from a young German girl in 1940 to a Californian of the 21st century. The winner of the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction was Half of a Yellow Sun (Harper Perennial, PB, $25) by Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Set in Nigeria during the 1960s, the novel is about Africa, moral responsibility, the end of colonialism, ethnic allegiances, class and race – and about how love can complicate all these things. The two big prizes in the USA went to one well-known name and one relative Norwegian Per Petterson won both the International IMPAC Dublin Award and This year’s Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to the English writer Doris Lessing, described by the Swedish academy as ‘that epicist of the female experience, who with scepticism, fire and visionary power has subjected a divided civilisation to scrutiny’. The 87year-old writer’s initial response to winning the prize was breathtaking in its lack of grace: ‘Look, I’ve won all the prizes in Europe, every bloody one, so I’m delighted to win them all. It’s a royal flush.’ Lessing is best known for The Golden Notebook (1962, Harper Perennial, PB, $23); her most recent work is The Cleft (Fourth Estate, PB, $28). And finally, if you decide to get stuck into the Man Booker shortlist, this year’s finalists were: Darkmans (Nicola Barker, Fourth Estate, PB, $35); The Reluctant Fundamentalist (Mohsin Hamid, Hamish Hamilton, PB, $29.95); Mister Pip (Lloyd Jones, Text, PB, $29.95); On Chesil Beach (Ian McEwan, Jonathan Cape, HB, $29.95); and Animal’s People (Indra Sinha, Simon & Schuster, PB, $32.95). 4 literature THE GHOST Robert Harris Hutchinson. PB. Was $32.95, now $27.95. Robert Harris writes political intrigue like no-one else in the thriller game: before he was a novelist, he was a political journalist, and, for a time, a key supporter of Tony Blair and New Labour. He once said that his time on the campaign trail with the Blairs (with whom he later bitterly broke) had given him ‘invaluable material’. Here, he seems to be working it through. A ghostwriter mysteriously dies while working on the ‘tell-all’ memoirs of a British PM who was forced to retire after an ill-advised war in the Middle East. His replacement quickly realises the mistake he has made in taking on the job, as he uncovers secrets with the power to change world politics. This is the UK’s answer to Primary Colours – a great holiday read. THE GIFT OF RAIN Tan Twan Eng Scribe. PB. $32.95. Set in the Malaysian state of Penang in the early stages of WWII, this is the story of two people suddenly caught up in a tumultuous period. Young Philip Hutton is half Chinese, half English, but feels neither. He meets Japanese diplomat Hayato Endo and the two develop a special friendship, Philip showing Endo around Penang and Endo teaching Philip the discipline of the Japanese martial art Aikado. But later, when the Japanese invade Penang, new truths and secrets are forced into the open and Philip must discover who he really is, risking everything to save those he loves. In his debut novel, Eng has written a deeply moving account of family, friendship, betrayal and enduring courage. GIFTED Nikita Lalwani Viking. PB. $32.95. Born in Rajasthan, raised in Cardiff and now living in London, Nikita Lalwani has written a heartfelt, acutely drawn and often funny first novel. A brilliant addition to the genre of next-generation writing, Gifted captures the parental expectations, hopes and fears imposed on the children of immigrants. In Rumi Vasi’s case there is the added pressure of being a supremely gifted mathematician since the age of five. She is relentlessly tested by her academic father and criticised for her gawky gait, Coke-bottle glasses and lack of grace by her mother. Lalwani’s writing is sometimes gauche but always fresh, vividly capturing Rumi’s dysfunctional family, her confused identity as prodigy and teenager, and the irrational and obsessive behaviour that results. This is captivating writing, holding the reader spellbound as Rumi’s life unravels. THE LAST CHINESE CHEF Nicole Mones Fourth Estate. PB. $28. Food writer Maggie is tired of food (and life) when she receives the news that a paternity suit has been filed against her recently deceased husband by a woman in China. Maggie travels to find out what happened, conveniently taking on an assignment to interview a Chinese-American chef while she’s there. In a new place, sampling a new and surprising cuisine and making an unexpected new friend, Maggie rediscovers her appetite for life – and makes a few discoveries about her husband. Affectionate and life-affirming, this novel by the author of Lost in Translation is similarly surprising. Steeped in Chinese history and bursting with passion for its food and culture, it provides a window onto a new world and a way of life that is threatened by the encroaching tide of the West. LANDSCAPE OF FAREWELL Alex Miller Allen & Unwin. HB. Was $35, now $29.95. A retiring German professor delivers his last lecture – one he knows to be rather lacklustre – planning to go home and kill himself afterwards. An angry Aboriginal woman, a Sydney professor, unexpectedly interrupts his speech with an impassioned dissection of his argument and a demand for recognition of her people’s place in the history of human suffering. It is a wake-up call that changes – and prolongs – his life. In examining the importance of truth-telling and reconciliation in another culture, he comes closer to dealing with his own and his country’s past. Alex Miller resembles JM Coetzee in the way in which he blends the political and the literary to explore the big questions, and Landscape of Farewell contains echoes of Coetzee’s Elizabeth Costello in its use of an ageing narrator to guide the reader on an intellectual quest. GIRL MEETS BOY Ali Smith Text. PB. $22.95. The acclaimed author of The Accidental is the latest in a distinguished line-up to contribute to Canongate’s ‘The Myths’ series, which is published in Australia by Text. Smith chooses a myth with a happy ending: the transgender story of Iphis, the infant girl raised as a boy who faces a big problem on the eve of her wedding. In a rare moment of mercy, the gods solve her dilemma by changing her into a real boy. Smith’s Iphis is an androgynous graffiti activist targeting an amoral advertising agency; her lover, a woman in search of meaning and identity. This poetic, astonishingly inventive treatment explores the myths we grow up with and what we do about them – as well as the myths that society constructs for us in order to get us to behave. THE LAY OF THE LAND Richard Ford Bloomsbury. PB. Was $32.95, now $19.95. The Lay of the Land begins and ends with a shooting and the question ‘Are you ready to meet your maker?’ For middle-aged but still ornery Frank Bascombe, the answer is no. Completing the trilogy of Frank Bascombe novels that began 20 years ago with The Sportswriter and continued with Independence Day, the Pulitzer Prize–winning Richard Ford takes us to the New Jersey suburbs in the year 2000. Over the course of three days, Frank contemplates an awkward Thanksgiving with his first wife, the failure of his second marriage, his treatment for prostate cancer and the ongoing saga of the contested presidential election. Ford continues to contemplate the big questions, the comedy and pathos of life; his uplifting, energetic style hasn’t diminished one iota with the years. LIFE ON THE REFRIGERATOR DOOR Alice Kuipers Pan Macmillan. PB. $24.95. Alice Kuipers wrote her affecting debut novel, told entirely in fridge notes, after being inspired by a random note her boyfriend had left her. ‘If someone else had seen his six words, they would have known so much about us and our relationship.’ This inventive little book sketches the relationship between a single working mother and her teenage daughter over the course of a year. Both of them are so busy that they barely see each other and communicate mainly through notes. It’s amazing how much ground is covered: dinners, schoolwork, boys, boundaries and weekend access. When Claire’s mother finds a lump in her breast, the notes take a poignant tone, and trace the pair’s discovery that their time together is precious – especially when it can no longer be taken for granted. THE LOST DOG Michelle de Kretser Allen & Unwin. HB. $35. This eagerly awaited third novel is at once a vital addition to the canon of Melbourne literature and a sharply observed depiction of the immigrant’s dual identity. Having taken us to Revolutionary France in The Rose Grower and post-colonial Sri Lanka in The Hamilton Case, Michelle de Kretser writes about subjects close to her heart: Melbourne (Richmond in particular) and the subtropical Sri Lanka of her birth. The lost dog of the title belongs to Tom, whose search for his pet is juxtaposed with the problem of his ageing mother and his new-found love for the enigmatic Nelly. Trams, Camberwell market, the Skipping Girl Vinegar sign and other familiar icons flash through this novel, which never underestimates the intelligence of its reader and promises that nothing in life is straightforward. THE MEMORY ROOM Christopher Koch Vintage Australia. PB. $32.95. This accomplished espionage thriller in the tradition of John Le Carré is from the award-winning author of The Year of Living Dangerously and Highways to a War. Brilliantly eccentric Vincent and beautiful, neglected Erika share a passion for secrecy, vintage comics and play-acting. Easygoing Derek is drawn into Vincent’s circle at university, and the pair of them aim to enter the Foreign Affairs department – until Vincent’s greatest fantasy is unexpectedly fulfilled when he is recruited for the ASIS. Erika, now a successful journalist, Vincent and Bradley are reunited in Beijing in their 30s, where things begin to go horribly wrong. Koch writes thrillers in the same way that Peter Temple writes crime novels: this book is richly characterised and deftly drawn, with the espionage plot naturally unfolding from the characters’ obsessions and foibles. Also available in HB ($49.95). MORAL DISORDER Margaret Atwood Bloomsbury. HB. Was $39.95, now $16.95. Memories, dreams and fears collide in these fractured stories about ageing, illness, family ties and the distance that separates us even from the ones we love. The story of Nell and her family subtly evolves through a succession of interconnected stories spanning the 1930s to the present – stories that touch on childhood, adolescence, marriage, motherhood, parental decline and ageing. One of the pivotal stories gives the collection its name; it’s an often disturbing tale of life on the land gone wrong, where a succession of doomed animals – pets, strays and farm animals – pass from life to death due to an array of natural and unnatural causes. This bargain buy is a great introduction to the work of Margaret Atwood, author of more than 30 books including the Booker-winning The Blind Assassin. OCEAN ROAD Glyn Parry Fremantle Press. PB. $29.95. It’s the summer of 1976, and 17-year-old Toby is holidaying with his parents on the south-west coast of Western Australia. His father Frank, an American, is a hardworking but far-from-successful novelist; his mother Laura is a housewife who is beginning to tire of her marriage. When his father is suddenly called to the United States to be with his sister, whose son is dying, Toby and his mother are left alone. Freed from her husband’s supervision, Laura falls under the sway of Myron Abbott, an old flame of hers, and becomes determined to put an end to her failing marriage. When Frank returns she demands a divorce, and Toby is forced to learn hard truths about life and love. literature PONTOON Garrison Keillor Faber. PB. $29.95. Garrison Keillor fans can rejoice, because there’s a new Lake Wobegon novel just in time for the summer holidays! In it, the Detmer girl returns from California, where she has made a killing in veterinary aromatherapy, to marry her boyfriend Brent aboard Wally’s pontoon boat, presided over by her minister Misty Naylor of the Sisterhood of the Sacred Spirit. At the same time, a delegation of renegade Lutheran pastors from Denmark come to town on their tour of America, their punishment for having denied the divinity of Jesus. All is in readiness for the wedding – the giant shrimp shish-kebabs, the French champagne, the wheels of imported cheese, the pate with whole peppercorns, the hot-air balloon, the flying Elvis, the pontoon boat and the giant duck decoys – and then something else happens… THE QUIET GIRL Peter Hoeg Harvill Secker. PB. Was $32.95, now $27.95. Kasper Krone, a Danish circus performer, finds himself in trouble for tax fraud. On the brink of being extradited to Spain, where he has stashed money offshore, he receives a proposal from an order of nuns. They will have their patriarch put in a good word for him with the Spanish government – if he donates most of his defrauded funds to them. And there is another task. One of their novices has been abducted and questioned about a group of children their order takes an interest in. These children have a special gift ‘for coming close to God faster than the others’, and the nuns think that they need a man to keep an eye on them. Then two of the children go missing – and Kasper finds himself compelled to help find them. A new novel from the author of Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow. Most people have a list of books that they’ve wanted to read during the year but haven’t managed to buy, let alone enjoy. The Christmas holidays are the perfect time to make good these intentions, so we’ve put together a list of some of the ‘Must Read’ fiction and poetry highlights of 2007 that we’re intending to take to the beach, and we thought it might be useful to include it here as a guide for other, similarminded readers. Top of the list is Khaled Hosseini’s A Thousand Splendid Suns (Bloomsbury, PB, $32.95). The second novel by the author of The Kite Runner is also set in Afghanistan and has been getting word of mouth that’s even more positive than its predecessor – which is really saying something! Hosseini himself gave a glowing recommendation to Dave Egger’s What is the What (Hamish Hamilton, PB, $29.95), saying: ‘I cannot recall the last time I was this moved by a novel…It is impossible to read this book and not be humbled, enlightened, transformed’. Set in Sudan and Ethiopia, What is the What is the true story of Valentino Achak Deng’s courage and endurance in the REMEDY Anne Marsella Portobello Books. PB. $32.95. All the ingredients for a fabulous chick-lit soufflé are here. The heroine has a fanciful name, Remedy. The romantic location is Paris. Remedy’s forte is fashion and she works at À La Mode Online. There’s plenty of love interest, including hi-jinks with cowboy Jeromino, workouts with trapeze artist Johannes and poetry from pizza-delivery boy Mouktar. And the diary format is quirky, each day being dedicated to a succession of minor saints whose tragic ends provide Remedy with salutary lessons in love, life and faith. The author’s tendency to parrot Austen phrasing is cloying at times, but the soufflé is kept light as air by Remedy’s bubbling exuberance in her quest to find her ‘man o’ the moon’ and make the world a better place through the democratisation of fine shoes. Scapegallows tells the true story of Margaret Catchpole, a girl growing up in late-18th-century England. Brought up in a poor but respectable family, her life takes a wrong turn when she falls for Will Laud, a sailor and smuggler. After Will shoots an excise man in the course of a raid and becomes a wanted man with a price on his head, Margaret attempts to disassociate herself from him by taking a job as a children’s nursemaid. But when Will by chance comes back into her life, and Margaret recklessly steals a horse in order to sell it and buy him his way out of prison, she finds herself thrown into a series of vicissitudes that will end in her escaping the gallows and being transported to Australia. After these two reads, it might be time for some light relief, and what better than Sucked In (Text, PB, $32.95), the latest Murray Whelan thriller from Shane Maloney. Apparently Whelan is now spinning his wheels in parliament, a toothless cog in Labor’s stalled political machine. But then the remains of a long-lost union official are found, and he gets sucked into some murky waters. It’s sure to provide a few chuckles. We’re not alone in being devotees of Maloney’s Whelan novels. Bestselling Scottish crime fiction writer Ian Rankin is on record as being a fan, and we’re sure that Maloney returns the favour. Rankin’s latest, Exit Music (Orion, PB, $32.95), has been marketed as the last DI Rebus novel (noooooo!), and sees the Scottish detective investigating the murder of a Russian poet. It’s amazing how grimy Edinburgh’s underbelly is, really. Not as grimy as Chris Womersley’s local settings in The Low Road (Scribe, PB, $32.95), though. Part classic film-noir crime- SHADOW IN THE RIVER Frode Grytten Abacus. PB. $29.95. Robert Bell, a journalist in contemporary Norway, is suffering personal and professional crises: his affair with his sister-in-law is spiralling out of control, and his career as a journalist has hit the skids. A way out of his impasse arises when Guttorm Pedersen, a local boy, is drowned in a mysterious accident. The town of Odda is filled with Serbian immigrants and riven with ethnic tensions, and the Serbians seem convenient scapegoats for the inexplicable death of a Norwegian. But are they really responsible? Or are they being blamed for someone else’s cold-blooded crime? Drawn further and further into the case he has become obsessed with, Bell finds himself immersed in a murky world of racial tensions, paranoia and blackmail. SOUL CATCHER Michael White Quercus. PB. $29.95. SCAPEGALLOWS Carol Birch Virago. PB. $29.95. face of Sudan’s civil war. If it’s anywhere near as good as the author’s previous novel, A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, we’ll be happy. 5 After a drunken night’s gambling, Augustus Cain, a slave-catcher in pre–Civil War America, finds himself in debt to Eberly, a wealthy slave owner. Unable to pay, a deal is struck whereby the debt will be cancelled if Cain catches two of Eberly’s runaway slaves. He sets out on his dangerous journey, and becomes gradually more intrigued by the story of Rosetta, one of the two slaves. A knockabout soldier of fortune, Cain is at first unrepentant about his profession, but as his journey progresses he is forced to question whether the job of ‘soul catcher’ is one he can continue to do. A rattling adventure story, Soul Catcher is set against the jittery background of the abolition movement, and of two very different societies about to come to blows. Who smoked 20 cigars per day? thriller, part modern tale of despair and desperation, this first novel has been compared to the work of Cormac McCarthy, so is undoubtedly going to be a great read. After these dark landscapes, a total change of pace will be in order. We’re keen to dip into Miranda July’s offbeat and apparently startlingly original collection of short stories No One Belongs Here More than You (Text, PB, $23.95), and can’t wait to curl up with Ann Patchett’s Run (Bloomsbury, PB, $29.95), which promises to offer the same singing prose, warmth and humanity as her wonderful Bel Canto. It will also be great to re-read Yann Martel’s Life of Pi (Text, HB, $59.95), which has just been released in a new edition accompanied by striking illustrations by Tomislav Torjanac. One title on the list that we’re particularly looking forward to is The Bastard of Istanbul (Viking, PB, $32.95), which has been a cause célèbre in Turkey, the country in which it is set. Shafak was charged with ‘Insulting Turkishness’ by raising the issue of the Armenian genocide in the novel and faced a hefty time in prison if found guilty. Fortunately, both she and fellow novelist Orhan Pamuk, who had been charged with the same crime, had charges against them dismissed for lack of evidence. As huge fans of Pat Barker’s Regeneration trilogy, we can’t wait to get our teeth into her latest novel Life Class (Hamish Hamilton, PB, $32.95), which is about a group of students from London’s Slade School of Art during WWI. We’re sure that her restrained, elegant prose will once again be on offer. And talking about elegant prose – this holiday is when we’re going to savour JM Coetzee’s Diary of a Bad Year (Text, HB, $35), with its meditations on loneliness, friendship and the possibility of love. We’re also huge fans of Alice Munro’s writing, and can’t wait to read her fictionalised family history, The View from Castle Rock (Vintage, PB, $24.95). And to conclude our reading binge? We’ll deliberate on whether we think Les Murray has the potential to join Coetzee as a Nobel laureate after reading his Selected Poems (Black Inc, PB, $27.95) and then we’re going to dip into some more poetry with Leonard Cohen’s playful and profound The Book of Longing (Penguin, PB, $24.95). And finally, to the greatest poet of them all – and the biggest book: The RSC William Shakespeare: Complete Works (ed. Jonathan Bate & Eric Rasmussen, Macmillan, PB, $95). If we start now, we might just be finished in time for next Christmas… 6 literature THE SPECTACLE SALESMAN’S FAMILY Viola Roggenkamp Virago. PB. $32.95. The Spectacle Salesman’s Family tells the story of Fania, a 13-year-old girl growing up in post-WWII Germany. Fania’s world is one of confusion, novelty and unfinished business. Her part-Jewish mother is eagerly pursuing a claim for reparations payments for wrongful imprisonment during the war, while her wanton, wayward elder sister Vera is busy discovering men. The ’60s are beginning to swing, Vietnam is being invaded and all the while old wounds from Nazi Germany continue to embitter and divide her community. Her loving, eccentric but somewhat cloying extended family provide her with affection, if not always understanding, as she grapples with the trials of impending adolescence. Charming and sentimental, this book creates a touching picture of bewildered youth beginning to slowly but surely come of age. THE STONE GODS Jeanette Winterson Hamish Hamilton. PB. Was $32.95, now $27.95. Jeanette Winterson plays with time travel, interplanetary expeditions and love in this thought-provoking collection of interconnecting tales that target the bugbears of our society: technology, consumerism, celebrity, bureaucracy, environmental disaster, political nitwits and nuclear war. Satire blossoms into something more serious and moving as the unthinkable future Winterson imagines for the human race takes hold. Constant throughout, though in a variety of forms, are Billie Crusoe and the Robo sapiens Spike, and the doomed love they share. There’s plenty of polemic, passion and word mischief, whose lyrical beauty resonates long after the page has been turned. The Stone Gods is Winterson’s heartfelt message in a bottle to save the planet – while we can. THE TENDERNESS OF WOLVES Stef Penney Quercus. PB. Was $29.95, now $14.95. In a remote Canadian settlement at the turn of the 19th century, a French trader is found dead in his cabin: scalped. It’s the first murder the small community has seen, and they are both shocked and privately titillated. Nearby, a troubled 17year-old has disappeared. His mother, one of the community’s original settlers, must trek into the desolate landscape beyond in order to find him and clear his name. Penney brilliantly evokes the icy wilderness of her setting using cool, measured, spiky prose. The rough-hewn frontier characters are complex and nuanced, unfolding for the reader layer by layer as the novel progresses. This striking debut novel is a journey of discovery in more ways than one, with an epic adventure driving its narrative and a murder mystery at its core. If you haven’t yet read this powerful novel, you really should. And if you read it and loved it, why not buy a few copies at this special price and give them as Christmas presents? Suite Française offers astounding insight into the moral complexities of the human condition. It comprises two parts of what might have been a four or five-part work had its author not died in Auschwitz. In the first part, Storm in June, Nemirovsky tells of the exodus from Paris on the eve of the Nazi invasion. In part two, Dolce, we witness Lucille’s story unfold as she tries to resist the attractions of a sensitive German officer and takes the risk of defending a young farmer who joins the Resistance. Unforgettable. THE TEARS OF AUTUMN Charles McCarry Scribe. PB. $32.95. In November 1968, CIA agent Paul Christopher is as shocked as the rest of the world by President Kennedy’s assassination. But once the first shock subsides, his gifted, logical mind connects the dots, and he is convinced that he knows who orchestrated the murder. It’s not the Mafia, it’s not the FBI, it’s not the Cubans – it’s not even the Russians. It’s a group of people in a country where rumblings of future conflict are already beginning to be heard: Vietnam. To prove his theory he will travel the world, risking life and limb to uncover the truth behind the most controversial political assassination of the century. First published in 1974, it’s not hard to see why Charles McCarry’s taut, gripping novel is being reissued. Arguably Matthew Condon’s best novel to date, this is an original Australian story spanning the entire 20th century. Wilfred Lampe, a simple rabbiter and farmhand, believes he has seen it all without once in his long life leaving his home town of Dalgety: war, romance, tragedy, the Australian bush-life and fly-fishing on the mighty Snowy River. Then comes the discovery of his great-niece, Aurora, whom he never knew existed. Aurora is young, wild and thoroughly modern and has her own set of contemporary social problems. Together the two find themselves on an unlikely road-trip that changes both their lives. This compelling story delves into the changing character of the Australian psyche and discloses some home truths about what constitutes a meaningful life. THOSE FARADAY GIRLS Monica McInerney Viking Australia. PB. $32.95. Juliet, Miranda, Eliza, Sadie and Clementine Faraday all live together in Hobart with Leo, their widowed father. Theirs is a rambunctious household, full of laughter, chaos and joy. So when 16year-old Clementine announces she is pregnant, it’s not the disaster it could have been. Over two decades later, in 2006, Clementine’s daughter Maggie is living in New York, fleeing from personal and professional crises in London. Leo wants the whole Faraday family to reunite for Christmas in Ireland. But with Clementine’s mother and four aunts scattered across the globe, will such a reunion be possible? Spanning three decades, Those Faraday Girls tells a heart-warming story of family togetherness and of the enduring bond that unites five very different sisters from childhood to middle age. ORDERING MADE SIMPLE SUITE FRANÇAISE Irene Nemirovsky Chatto & Windus. PB. Was $32.95, now $15.95. THE TROUT OPERA Matthew Condon Vintage Australia. PB. Was $32.95, now $27.95. THE UNCOMMON READER Alan Bennett Faber. PB. Was $24.95, now $19.95. A chance encounter with a travelling library introduces the seriously underread HM the Queen to the delights of books and reading, an interest that becomes an obsession when she picks up a copy of Nancy Mitford’s The Pursuit of Love. So besotted with reading does she become that her regal responsibilities begin to falter. Steps must be taken when instead of sharing regal chitchat with the president of France, the queen probes the president on the merits or otherwise of Jean Genet. This gorgeously written subversive little tale celebrating the benefits of reading is penned by one of writing’s greatest exponents, the very funny dramatist and writer Alan Bennett. You can phone, fax or email your orders by using the form on the back cover of this guide. TOWARDS ANOTHER SUMMER Janet Frame Vintage. PB. $23.95. Homesick for New Zealand, 30-year-old writer Grace Cleave is enduring another London winter. She misses the warmth of the southern hemisphere, and realises she is a migratory bird that has misplaced its home. So begins this highly personal novella by the extraordinary Janet Frame, written in 1963 and posthumously published because of its tantalisingly autobiographical content. Grace’s sense of alienation is compounded when she accepts an invitation to spend a weekend with virtual strangers, the strain of keeping her flying thoughts to herself almost bringing her undone. The raw depiction of Grace’s daily struggle with life is in sharp contrast to the hallucinatory poetry of childhood and imagination that courses through the narrative. Troubling but curiously uplifting, Towards Another Summer is a welcome reminder of Janet Frame’s genius. TRAVELLER Ron McLarty Sphere. PB. $32.95. Ron McLarty is famous as the author who was rejected by every publisher in town before his spectacular discovery by Stephen King, who trumpeted The Memory of Running as ‘the best book you can’t read’. Before that, he was semifamous as a bit-part actor, including appearances on Sex and the City and Law & Order. His second novel, Traveller, is about an ageing, unsuccessful actor who makes his living as a bartender. A letter from the past breaks the news that Jono’s first love has died as a delayed result of a stray bullet that hit her as a child when they were growing up on Rhode Island. The news sparks a series of reminiscences about the old neighbourhood, and reflections on how both he and others have been shaped by past experiences. WHERE THREE ROADS MEET Salley Vickers Text. PB. $22.95. Another volume in Canongate’s wonderful ‘The Myths’ series. In 1923, Sigmund Freud, smoker of some 20 cigars per day, was diagnosed with a malignant growth in his mouth. The growth was removed, but eventually he was forced to undergo radical surgery that left him with difficulty speaking. In 1938 the Nazis invaded Austria, and Freud fled to England with his family, where he died in 1939. Where Three Roads Meet is set in the last year of his life, and tells a haunting tale in the form of an imaginary conversation between the dying Freud and a mysterious stranger. Still devastated by the death of his favourite grandson, Freud and his companion ruminate on life and death, and on the great tragedy that formed the basis of so much of Freud’s work: that of Oedipus and his mother. THE YACOUBIAN BUILDING Alaa Al Aswany Fourth Estate. PB. $25. Finally published in English, this 2002 Arabic blockbuster is a bleak but utterly compelling snapshot of contemporary Egypt seen through the stories of the occupants of a building in Downtown Cairo. It’s no exaggeration to say that by reading this novel, Westerners can gain some degree of insight into the complex issues that have prompted the radicalisation of some parts of the Middle East. The main storyline is about devout Taha el Shazli, son of the doorkeeper of the Yacoubian Building. Taha has set his ambitions on joining the Cairo Police Force to escape his life of poverty, only to have his hopes dashed by social prejudice. Angry at the injustice of the process, he joins a radical cell of the Muslim Brotherhood and becomes a terrorist/martyr. A thought-provoking and unexpectedly affectionate novel that is as instructive as it is enjoyable. crime BENEATH THE BLEEDING Val McDermid HarperCollins. PB. $33. Tony Hill and Carol Jordan are back, and they’re in particularly fine form this time around. McDermid’s Tony Hill novels have always been a cut above her Kate Brannigan and Lindsay Gordon outings, and Beneath the Bleeding is every bit as good as The Mermaids Singing and Wire in the Blood. McDermid has chosen to work with a topical subject – a bomb attack at Bradfield’s soccer stadium – and has constructed a tight and thought-provoking plot around this event, as well as a second plot line about the puzzling poisoning of soccer star Robbie Bishop. With Tony confined to a hospital bed after an attack by a patient and Carol still not able to determine whether her feelings for him are purely those of a friend or something more, their sleuthing partnership must adapt to the new circumstances. Another cracking read from the queen of ‘Tartan Noir’. CLEAN CUT Lynda La Plante Simon & Schuster. PB. Was $29.95, now $24.95. It’s a bad day for DI Anna Travis when her partner, James Langton, doesn’t come home for dinner; it’s an even worse one when it turns out that this is because he’s been stabbed in the course of duty. As she helps him through his slow recovery, Anna becomes immersed in the case of Ilene Phelps, a librarian who has been murdered although she doesn’t appear to have had an enemy in the world. Anna’s investigation uncovers an almost unfathomable world of paroled criminals, repeat offenders and illegal immigrants all escaping justice. With its themes of lenient sentencing, prison systems bursting at the seams and the struggles of police to keep violent criminals behind bars, Clean Cut is a timely and compulsively readable study of good and evil in the modern world. HAVANA BLACK HAVANA BLUE HAVANA RED Leonardo Padura Bitter Lemon. PB. $24.95 each. We often notice crime-fiction aficionados casting their eyes over our shelves anxiously looking for a new author’s name and whole a new series to get stuck into – the edgier the better. Fortunately, The Havana Quartet is exactly what they’re looking for. Three of the four novels in this Cuban series are now available in English translation, and they’re remarkably more-ish. Padura has a decidedly literary style and his plots are tight, credible and oozing with atmosphere. Lead character Lieutenant Mario Conde is an aspiring novelist and extraordinarily intuitive police detective who feels displaced and disillusioned in modern-day Havana. He knows that the simplicity and innocence of his barrio childhood can never be recaptured, but that doesn’t stop him yearning for it, particularly when he is forced to encounter the worst of humanity in the course of his profession. AD INFINITUM: A BIOGRAPHY OF LATIN Nicholas Ostler HarperCollins. HB. $60. The Latin language has been a constant in the cultural history of the West for over two millennia. It has shaped the way we think of ourselves and has been the foundation of our education for centuries. And yet Latin began life as the cumbersome dialect of a small southern Italian city-state. Its active use lasted three times as long as Rome’s Empire and lives on in the law codes of half the world and in terminologies of biology and medicine. In Ad Infinitum, the author of Empires of the Word: A Language History of the World examines the reasons why Latin made such a long-lasting impact on language, and how it managed to stay alive for two millennia despite the cultural superiority of Greek. 7 THE DRAINING LAKE Arnaldur Indridason Harvill Secker. PB. $35. Fans of Indridason’s Reykjavík Murder Mysteries can breathe a sigh of relief, because Erlendur Sveinsson has returned to investigate his favourite type of case – that of a missing person. When low water levels reveal a skeleton in an Icelandic lake, the crumpled detective sets out in his typically obsessive and unorthodox style to discover its identity. The hole in its skull indicates that there’s a murder to solve, too, but what does the Russian radio device with which it was weighed down indicate? Erlendur’s investigation takes us back to the Cold War era in East Germany and Iceland, telling a tale of political disillusionment and abandoned dreams. The Draining Lake is atmospheric, characterdriven crime fiction of the highest order. KENNEDY’S BRAIN Henning Mankell Harvill Secker. PB. Was $32.95, now $27.95. Louise Cantor, a Swedish archaeologist, returns from a Greek excavation to find her son Hendrik dead in his Stockholm flat. Circumstances point to suicide, but Louise is certain Hendrik did not kill himself. As she begins sifting through his possessions, Louise uncovers evidence of enquiries he had been making into President Kennedy’s death and the legend that Kennedy’s brain mysteriously disappeared after his port-mortem. When Louise then discovers that Hendrik had also been investigating the potentially illegal activities of drug companies in Africa, she is all the more convinced that he has been murdered – and sets out on a crusade to uncover his assassins. A fast-paced and gripping read, Kennedy’s Brain is a top-notch thriller that holds the reader’s attention from first page to last. THE ONE FROM THE OTHER Philip Kerr Quercus. PB. Was $29.95, now $14.95. In 1949, Bernie Gunther, former policeman and detective, finds himself in Munich rebuilding his practice as a PI. Germany is still a dangerous place, where murder is commonplace and life is cheap. When Bernie is approached by Frau Warzok, her case seems unremarkable. She wants to remarry, but needs confirmation that her husband, a sadistic war criminal who has disappeared, is really dead. Gunther takes the case, but finds that it involves more than he bargained for – and that his very life is now in danger. Gritty, hard-boiled and with a rough, unpretentious charm, this is one spectacular work of crime fiction. And you’ll love the shocking, impossible-to-foresee plot twist three-quarters of the way through, which will have you hooked right through to the very last page. A worthy successor to Kerr’s masterful Berlin Noir trilogy. THE AENEID Virgil (trans. Robert Fagles) Penguin. PB. $29.95. Following on from his translations of Homer’s Odyssey and Iliad, Robert Fagles has translated into English another classic of ancient literature. The Aeneid tells the story of Aeneas, his flight after the fall of Troy and the epic journey that follows as he wanders the Mediterranean. His adventures take him from Troy, through Greece and Sicily, and to Carthage, where he abandons Queen Dido to fulfil his destiny in Italy – to build the city that will become Rome. With an extensive introduction by Bernard Knox, a pronunciation guide and suggestions for further reading, this Penguin Classics edition serves as both an excellent introduction to Virgil and an attractive collector’s edition. THE SILVER SWAN Benjamin Black Picador. PB. $32.95. Another Dublin-based crime outing for Black (aka John Banville), author of last year’s Christine Falls. This time, pathologist Quirke is approached by Billy Hunt, an old and forgotten friend whose wife, Deidre, has just been found dead in an apparent suicide by drowning. Hunt wants a favour: he loathes the idea of a post-mortem being performed on his wife, and wants Quirke to pull strings to prevent it. Quirke agrees, but then performs the post-mortem himself, and discovers that Deidre did not die by drowning. Convinced that she died of an overdose, Quirke suspects that Hunt staged her death as a suicide for reasons best known to himself – but when he discovers that Deidre had been having an affair, doubts begin to assail him. As the plot thickens, Quirke finds himself drawn into a murky world of infidelity, dubious motives and suspicious death. UP IN HONEY’S ROOM Elmore Leonard Weidenfeld & Nicolson. PB. Was $32.95, now $29.95. Blonde knockout Honey married her wannabee Nazi husband Walter to try to change him. It didn’t work, so she took off. That was before America entered the war. Five years later, a hotshot federal marshal is on Honey’s tail, looking for information about Walter and two escaped Nazi prisoners of war. This WWII mystery is as kooky and smart-mouthed as you’d expect from Elmore Leonard, featuring his signature cast of slightly twisted characters. There’s the SS officer who runs off with a nice Jewish girl, the German American who looks uncannily like Himmler (and was born in the same hospital on the same day) and, of course, Honey: the sassy, smart-as-a-whip pin-up girl at the axis of it all. ZUGZWANG Ronan Bennett Bloomsbury. PB. $29.95. In March 1914, Dr Otto Spethmann, a psychoanalyst, finds himself drawn into a web of danger and deceit. St Petersburg is a jittery town, hysterical over threats from Germans without and terrorists within. Yastrebov, a suspected terrorist, has been murdered, and the police want answers – and seem to think that Spethmann can help them. As Spethmann is drawn into the case, he discovers that he is closer to it than he thinks, and that his daughter Catherine has been romantically involved with Yastrebov. Not only that, but her affair has linked him to revolutionaries, and compromised him with the dreaded secret police. Unwittingly, Spethmann finds himself lured into a diabolical game as precarious as a game of chess – where one false move could cost him his life. Who is Orhan Pamuk’s English translator? AT LARGE AND AT SMALL: CONFESSIONS OF A LITERARY HEDONIST Anne Fadiman Allen Lane. HB. $29.95. With her wonderful combination of wit and erudition, Fadiman draws us into 12 of her personal obsessions: from her slightly sinister childhood enthusiasm for catching butterflies to her monumental crush on Charles Lamb; from her wistfulness for the days of letterwriting to the challenges and rewards of moving from the city to the country. Many of these essays were composed ‘under the influence’ of the subject at hand. Fadiman sustains a terrific caffeine buzz while recounting Balzac’s coffee addiction; and she stays up till dawn to write about being a night owl, examining the rhythms of our circadian clocks and sharing such insomnia cures as her father’s nocturnal word games and Lewis Carroll’s mathematical puzzles. This is a perfect book for life’s passionate obsessives. poetry 8 essays AUSTRALIAN CLASSICS: 50 GREAT WRITERS AND THEIR CELEBRATED WORKS Jane Gleeson-White Allen & Unwin. PB. $29.95. Gleeson-White’s selection of the 50 most important Australian stories, novels, poems and non-fiction titles aims to provide a broad overview of Australian writing and bring key authors to a wider audience. In doing so, she has created a remarkable literary portrait of Australia over the past 140 years. Each essay introduces both the work of literature discussed and the author, providing a brief biographical background, a rundown on the effect and intention of the work, and the response to its publication. In addition, a selection of contemporary writers nominate their 10 favourite Australian books. This is a welcome spur to reread some classics, with authors including Marcus Clarke, Barbara Baynton, Henry Lawson, Kenneth Slessor, Christina Stead, Patrick White, David Malouf, Robert Hughes, Helen Garner, Peter Carey, Sally Morgan and Tim Winton. THE BOOK IS DEAD: LONG LIVE THE BOOK Sherman Young UNSW Press. HB. $29.95. ‘Nobody reads books anymore.’ Booklovers are offended by such attention-grabbing catchphrases. We like to think that the majority of people do still read books, that not every publishing list is driven by the bottom line, that reading words on a screen will never replace reading the real thing. Young is a new-media guru, but he remains a booklover at heart. Behind his multimedia smokescreen, he writes to ensure a future for readers of books, whether that future involves paper or Sony technology. In fact, his book is a call to arms to publishers to protect and defend book culture by embracing ebook technology. Engagingly written, this is no dry academic tome. It will certainly get booklovers thinking about the future of book publishing and ‘book culture’ – and also get publishers’ hackles rising! DELIVERY SERVICE BEOWULF: AN ILLUSTRATED EDITION Seamus Heaney (trans.) & John D Niles (illus.) Norton. PB. $33.95. The Nobel Prize–winning poet Seamus Heaney (translator) and John D Niles (illustrator) have come together to produce an evocative contemporary presentation of the Old English heroic elegy, Beowulf. This ancient narrative poem of anonymous authorship tells the story of the heroic Beowulf, who does battle with three antagonists to save the people of Denmark: the monster Grendel, Grendel’s mother and the dragon. In this volume the legendary story is richly illustrated with Niles’ collection of black and white images, reproducing such things as the objects, armour and paintings of the period – each accompanied by useful explanatory texts. THE BEST AUSTRALIAN ESSAYS 2007 Drusilla Modjeska (ed.) Black Inc. PB. $27.95. THE BEST AUSTRALIAN POEMS 2007 Peter Rose (ed.) Black Inc. PB. $24.95. THE BEST AUSTRALIAN STORIES 2007 Robert Drewe (ed.) Black Inc. PB. $27.95. This popular series from Black Inc has become a mainstay of the Summer Reading Guide and of many holiday reading lists. Drusilla Modjeska and Robert Drewe follow up their editing debuts in 2006 and are joined by Peter Rose, editor of the Australian Book Review, who is at the helm of Poems this year. Drewe delivers sparkling stories from established favourites, alongside exciting new work from a younger generation; Modjeska showcases some of Australia’s best non-fiction writers in a selection highlighting the wonderful versatility and beauty of the essay form; and Rose presents work from some of the abiding luminaries of Australian poetry, along with some impressive if unfamiliar new voices. THE BEST POEMS OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE Harold Bloom Harper Perennial. PB. $30. Subtitled ‘From Chaucer Through Robert Frost’, this comprehensive anthology attempts to give the reader an overview of six centuries of great British and American poetry. The book features a large introductory essay by Harold Bloom called ‘The Art of Reading Poetry’, which presents his critical reflections of more than half a century devoted to reading, teaching and writing about poetry. It offers either the entire range of what is most valuable in the major poets’ oeuvres, or vital selections that illuminate each figure’s contribution. Bloom has also supplied headnotes to every poet in the volume as well as to the most important individual poems. language ROTTEN ENGLISH: A LITERARY ANTHOLOGY Dohra Ahmad Norton. PB. $21.95. This book celebrates what was once termed ‘dialect literature’ – works written not in standard English, but in vernacular language. It’s a genre that was dismissed by the establishment in the past, but which has recently gone mainstream: as Dohra Ahmad points out in her introduction, half the winners of the Man Booker Prize in the past 12 years have been written in non-standard English. Divided into sections that cover poetry, short stories, essays and extracts from novels, it includes a medley of vernacular literature from the 18th to the 21st centuries. From Scottish and Jamaican poets, to Maori writers and the short stories of Irvine Welsh, Rotten English provides a breathtaking journey through the cultural heritage of the vast and varied English-speaking world. Your books can be delivered anywhere in Australia for a small charge – see the back cover for details. THE CAT’S PYJAMAS: THE PENGUIN BOOK OF CLICHÉS Julia Cresswell Penguin. PB. $24.95. From centuries-old sayings (‘beggars can’t be choosers’; ‘a friend in need’; ‘at the end of the day’; ‘it’s not rocket science’), the English language seems so full of clichés that sometimes it’s hard to see the wood for the trees (ha ha). Here eagle-eyed word detective Julia Cresswell takes a long hard look at the history of some of the worst (and best) culprits and spills the beans (whoops) on their curious, often surprising origins. Who would have thought, for example, that ‘a finger in every pie’ originates with Shakespeare or that ‘lie back and think of England’ comes from an Edwardian lady’s diary? This volume presents us with the low-down on those expressions we’re all a bit guilty of using too much. THE COMPLETE POLYSYLLABIC SPREE Nick Hornby Viking. HB. Was $35, now $14.95. We could all put together a ‘stuff I’ve been reading’ column, but there’s no doubt Nick Hornby’s would be the most entertaining. His musings on books (and many other things) ran in the US Believer magazine for three years and are published here for everyone’s enjoyment. Hornby got around the magazine’s proviso that no writer’s work be slagged off by choosing books he thought he would like, hence his avoidance of contemporary literary fiction. Each monthly essay begins with a list of books bought and books read, and there are occasional excerpts from some of them. The result is a discursive insight into Hornby’s life, mind and love of Arsenal. His best words of advice? If you’re finding the book you’re reading hard-going, put it down and start another. Who was the mistress, then wife, of the Duke of Lancaster? OTHER PEOPLE’S THOUGHTS Simon Leys Black Inc. PB. $19.95. This entertaining collection of quotations has been ‘idiosyncratically compiled for the amusement of idle readers’ by the much-lauded writer Simon Leys, author of The Wreck of the Batavia and The Death of Napoleon. Idiosyncratic is indeed the word, for as Leys notes in the book’s foreword, the best compilations are those whose content reflects the mind and character of the compiler. Leys’ witty and thought-provoking assortment of quotes and bons mots ranges alphabetically from Adventure and Ambition to Youth and Zhuang Zi. Simone Weil, Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson, CS Lewis, GK Chesterton, Léon Bloy and Joseph Conrad evidently have a lot to say to Leys and are frequently quoted in this erudite little book. SHORTER OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY: SIXTH EDITION OUP. HB. Was $299, now $250. SHORTER OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY: DELUXE SIXTH EDITION WITH CD-ROM OUP. HB & CD. Was $399, now $350. The latest edition of the Shorter Oxford is finally available, with the latest updated terms, definitions and standard spellings. This comprehensive, authoritative two-volume work is a cornerstone of every literate library, containing one-third of the entries found in the vast Oxford English Dictionary, the world’s most authoritative English language reference. New terms include ‘blogroll’ and ‘declutter’; new spellings include ‘neocon’ and ‘cafe’. Keep up-todate and informed by upgrading your reference library – and your computer. The Shorter Oxford is also available with an accompanying CD-Rom for easy (and easily portable!) reference. The CD-Rom includes in-built spelling and typo correction and automatic look-up from other applications – handy for bypassing Microsoft spell-checker. SPEECHES THAT CHANGED THE WORLD Simon Sebag Montefiore Murdoch. PB & CD. $34.95. This publication collects together dozens of speeches that have had a dramatic impact upon the course of world history. Beginning with some of the earliest recorded speeches (Moses, Jesus and Mohammed), the book moves through to momentous orations made by such figures as Elizabeth I, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. Of particular interest are some less well-known speeches, such as one Marie Curie made at Vassar College in 1921 about her discovery of radium; and Woodrow Wilson’s address to Congress in 1917, which cemented the United States’ decision to enter WWI. The 20th century is amply covered, with a bonus CD that includes recordings of speeches made by 14 famous orators – some of them illustrious, and some ignominious. THE STUFF OF THOUGHT Steven Pinker Allen Lane. PB. $35. The Stuff of Thought is about language – and thankfully, it’s as far from being a dry, pseudo-highbrow tome as you could hope for. It’s about the sort of linguistic quirks that affect us every day, such as the odd but predictable patterns that determine children’s names, and the invented words that do or don’t take off. Did you know, for instance, that the email term ‘spam’ comes from Monty Python? (That’s right, the Spam Sketch.) And that George Bush’s 1988 campaign slogan ‘Read my lips: No new taxes’ led to the term ‘bushlips’, meaning ‘insincere political rhetoric’ – which somehow didn’t catch on? For anyone bewildered and fascinated by the English language, its certainties and its absurdities, this book is a goldmine. biography ARTHUR BOYD: A LIFE Darleen Bungey Allen & Unwin. HB. $65. Although much has been written about the Boyd family, there has never been a biography devoted exclusively to Arthur Boyd. This memoir is an absorbing and ultimately very moving piece. Instead of the typical image of Boyd as a creative genius from a grand artistic family, Bungey reveals a social misfit whose eccentric relatives caused him to be the brunt of schoolyard taunts. We find a man whose apparently gentle demeanour caused as much harm as good, whose affairs of the heart led to enormous personal angst, and whose life was dogged by a succession of forceful characters such as fellow artist John Perceval. What is 344 km long? BAD FAITH Carmen Callil Vintage. PB. Was $29.95, now $12.95. A study of powerlessness, hatred and the role of remembrance, Bad Faith is the story of Louis Darquier, one of history’s most despicable villains and conmen. A Nazi collaborator and ‘Commissioner for Jewish Affairs’, Darquier dissembled his way to power in the Vichy government and was responsible for sending thousands of children to the gas chambers. After the war he left France, never to be brought to justice. Early on in his career Louis had married the alcoholic Myrtle Jones from Tasmania, who was equally practised in the arts of fantasy and deception. Together they had a child, Anne, whom they abandoned in England – her tragic story is woven through the narrative. This summer’s array of non-fiction releases truly has something for everyone. Those readers who are keen on both poetry and history will swoon over Charlotte Higgins’ Latin Love Lessons: Put a Little Ovid in Your Life (Short Books. HB. $29.95). It has everything from Ovid’s tips on picking up girls to Catallus’ advice on dealing with a broken heart and Virgil’s textbook case of how not to dump a girlfriend. Equally entertaining is How to Talk about Books You Haven’t Read (Granta, PB, $29.95), in which literature professor Pierre Bayard argues that in this age of infinite publication, the truly cultivated person is not the one who has read a book, but the one who understands the book’s place in our culture. Top biographies include the paperback release of Barry Jones’ A Thinking Reed (Allen & Unwin, $35), in which the former politician and quiz-show master gives insights into his richly interesting public and private life. Gonzo: The Life of Hunter S. Thompson (Jan Wenner & Corey Seymour, Little Brown, PB, $35) is sure to be a great overview of a brilliant and mad life – it includes introductions by Rolling Stone founder Jann Wenner and actor Johnny Depp. And Fidel COMMITTED: A RABBLEROUSER’S MEMOIR Dan Mathews Atria Books. PB. $29.95. People for Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) campaigns chief Dan Mathews has written a hugely entertaining autobiography. Mathews masterminded PETA’s provocative assaults on fast-food chains and fur-wielding fashion icons in the ’90s, cannily bringing a clutch of celebs onboard to promote the cause. With an effortlessly light touch and upbeat attitude, Mathews reveals what led a former party animal to devote his life to animal rights. He doesn’t stint when describing what happens to animals in labs, fur farms and abattoirs. Curiously, though, what is usually unreadable can be digested here, thanks to Mathews’ almost deadpan delivery when describing the darker side to PETA’s campaigns. Without preaching, his message is that looking away is what keeps us compliant. It’s thought-provoking stuff. BORN STANDING UP Steve Martin Simon and Schuster. HB. Was $34.95, now $29.95. BERNARD SHAW: A LIFE AM Gibbs UNSWP. HB. Was $59.95, now $16.95. Bernard Shaw was, more than most, the architect of his own life story. The prolific writer not only produced many autobiographical works, but also fed biographers with a wealth of material to work from. However, it is becoming increasingly obvious that he didn’t confine his inventive, often fanciful, storytelling to his technically fictional works of literature. This revealing biography by noted Shavian scholar AM Gibbs pieces together the truth of Shaw’s life from a patchwork of sources, including unpublished letters and other material from relatives and close acquaintances. The myths challenged here include his loveless childhood, his sexual relationships, his marriages and his politics. Authoritative and enquiring, this fascinating biography is certain to endure as an important source on this leading 20th-century figure. 9 Steve Martin hasn’t done stand-up since 1981. In Born Standing Up, the celebrated actor, writer and comedy genius muses on his early career, revealing the tricks and techniques that took him from vaudeville to fame on Saturday Night Live. This thoughtprovoking and honest autobiography captures the changing mood of the ’60s and ’70s, and doesn’t avoid the bad reviews and broken hearts that accompanied the career highs and life in Laurel Canyon and Aspen. It also reveals the source of Martin’s trademark poignancy: his frosty and long-unresolved relationship with his father. The book ends with the beginning of Steve Martin’s life in movies, his stand-up years brought to a close by the exhaustion and loneliness of a crazy working schedule promoting not ‘just your ordinary banjo magic act’. Castro: My Life (Fidel Castro & Ignacio Ramonet, Allen Lane, HB, $59.95) is sure to be just as meaty, if not quite so much of a roller-coaster of a read. Bill Bryson’s many fans will be interested to see him swapping genres to write Shakespeare: The Word as a Stage (Harper Press, HB, $30), the latest installment in the excellent Eminent Lives series. And thriller readers will be on the edge of their seats when reading Ben Macintyre’s Agent Zigzag (Bloomsbury, PB, $23.95), a true-life ripping yarn about Eddie Chapman, a dashing and louche British WWII double agent dubbed ‘Agent Zigzag’ by MI5. History titles include the paperback release of Les Carlyon’s magnificent The Great War (Picador, $39.95); as well as Paul Johnson’s Creators: From Chaucer to Walt Disney (Phoenix, PB, $27), which seeks to answer the question of whether there is such a thing as a typical creator by profiling such well-known names as Shakespeare, Jane Austen, Viollet-leDuc, Picasso and Christian Dior. Also worth looking out for is John Man’s fascinating The Terracotta Army: China’s First Emperor and the Birth of a Nation (Bantam Press, PB, $35), an account of DAUGHTER OF THE DESERT: THE REMARKABLE LIFE OF GERTRUDE BELL Georgina Howell Picador. PB. $24.95. The intrepid Gertrude Bell would delight the heart of any biographer. What a woman, and what a life! Born to immense wealth and privilege, she jettisoned a life of leisure to tread her own path. The first woman to take a first in modern history at Oxford, she went on to become a famous Alpine mountaineer. By her 30s, she was an expert on Arabian desert travel and politics, had worked with TE Lawrence and had became a founder of modern Iraq. In the context of current events, her story is particularly fascinating. The British invaded the region to secure oil supplies and found themselves running a weakened colonial empire. Bell was instrumental in cutting ‘the enormous cost of policing in Iraq’ to install an Arab king. An amazing story, grippingly told. the discovery and excavation of the terracotta warriors in Xian. There are also two award-winning histories to savor over the holidays. Iron Kingdom: the Rise and Downfall of Prussia 1600–1947 (Christopher Clark, Penguin, PB, $29.95) won the 2006 Wolfson Prize for History in the UK; it looks at the history of Prussia from medieval backwater to major European power and the force behind the creation of the German Empire. Locally, Colonial Ambition: Foundations of Australian Democracy (Peter Cochrane, MUP, PB, $39.95) featured on many awards lists, and won the 2007 Prime Minister’s Prize for Australian History. It tells the story of the agitators and politicians of New South Wales – WC Wentworth, Sir George Gipps, Henry Parkes, Robert Lowe, Earl Grey and many more – and their fight for parliamentary liberty. Political titles aren’t in short supply, either. Some of our book-buyers think that Naomi Klein’s The Shock Doctrine: the Rise of Disaster Capitalism (Allen Lane, PB, $32.95) is going to prove even more popular and influential than her previous bestseller, No Logo. In it, Klein exposes the gripping story of how America’s ‘free market’ policies have come to dominate the world – through the exploitation of disaster-shocked people and countries. Local titles include Graeme M Clark’s Boyer Lectures 2007: the Return of the Senses (ABC Books, PB, $24.95); and Advance Australia…Where? (Hachette Australia, PB, $35) by Hugh Mackay, bestselling author of Reinventing Australia. In his latest work, Mackay investigates big questions such as ‘What will our next generation of children be like?’, ‘Why are we losing interest in politics?’ and ‘Is multiculturalism dead?’. Other timely local publications are Waleed Aly’s People Like Us: Bridging the Cultural Chasm between Islam and the West (Picador, PB, $32.95); and Nicolas Rothwell’s Another Country (Black Inc, PB, $24.95), a many-faceted journey into the landscape, people and places of Central Australia. Some of the big names in philosophy and cultural theory also have titles this summer. Umberto Eco is back with On Ugliness (Harvill Secker, HB, $95), an exploration of the monstrous and the repellant in visual culture and the arts. He investigates the voyeuristic impulse behind our attraction to the gruesome and the horrible and raises the question of whether ugliness is merely in the eye of the beholder. Topics range from Milton’s Satan to Goethe’s Mephistopheles; from Decadentism and picturesque ugliness to the aesthetics of excess and vice. Also of note is the paperback release of Alain de Botton’s The Architecture of Happiness: The Secret Art of Furnishing Your Life (Penguin, PB, $26.95), the French philosopher’s rumination on society’s love affair with its houses and their furnishings. biography 10 FAR FROM A STILL LIFE: MARGARET OLLEY Meg Stewart Knopf Australia. HB. Was $49.95, now $23.95. This intimate biography of artist Margaret Olley begins in the 1920s in North Queensland, where Margaret’s early childhood was spent on a cane farm and dairy. The story unfolds to tell of her lifelong love affair with painting, which started at boarding school and went on to blossom at East Sydney Technical College. The book includes intriguing revelations about her friendships with well-known figures such as Donald Friend, William Dobel and Russell Drysdale, as well as accounts of her bohemian adventures in Europe. We learn of her struggles with alcoholism in the late 1950s in Brisbane and her subsequent joyous return to life and painting. As Barry Humphries sums up: ‘A great painter, a great woman, a great story’. PETER SCULTHORPE: THE MAKING OF AN AUSTRALIAN COMPOSER Graeme Skinner UNSWP. HB. $59.95. Skinner’s biography chronicles the first half of Sculthorpe’s career, from his birth in 1929 through to his 45th birthday in 1974. It looks at Sculthorpe’s childhood in Depression-era Tasmania, his years at the Conservatorium of Music in Melbourne, and his departure, in 1958, for a programme of study at Oxford University. Upon his return to Australia in 1960 there followed years of professional development during which Sculthorpe pioneered an identifiably Australian style of music, and became one of the most prominent of Australian composers – a position he still holds at the age of 78. Ultimately, this is the story of a man who wished not just to compose, but to write distinctively ‘Australian music’ – and who succeeded magnificently. CORPORATE GIFTS GRAHAM GREENE: A LIFE IN LETTERS Richard Greene (ed.) Little Brown. PB. Was $59.95, now $54.95. Until now, the greater part of Graham Greene’s writings – his letters – have remained unpublished. This marvellously edited collection of missives penned by the master novelist reveals much that has been missed by his biographers. Written with the wit and liveliness that made him a great novelist, the letters reveal Greene’s personal, literary, religious and political concerns over a period of 70 years. They discuss the craft of writing; describe dealings with publishers, editors and agents; and praise or dismiss fellow authors. The letters disclose the intention and inspiration behind Greene’s work, as well as providing delightful littleknown insights into Greene the family man. The entertaining introduction includes a short biographical essay; and useful and often amusing explanatory notes and references are provided throughout. LAST NIGHT I DREAMED OF PEACE Dang Thuy Tram Rider. PB. $32.95. This extraordinary document is, like Irene Nemirovsky’s Suite Française, a rare onthe-spot account of the experience of war, rediscovered and published decades after the author’s death. Last Night I Dreamed of Peace is the diary of a young Vietnamese doctor killed by an American soldier in 1970. Dang Thuy Tram was a member of the Communist party (something she fought to achieve, hampered by her ‘bourgeois’ background), and was fiercely opposed to the interference of US troops, whom she decries as ‘bloodthirsty devils, sinking their fangs into our bodies’. Devoted to the ideal of a united Vietnam and to saving as many of her compatriots as she can, she writes passionately from the ‘other side’ of the conflict as it unfolds. Simply written and infused with the hopeful idealism of youth, this book is both touching and important. A LIFE OF PICASSO VOLUME 3: THE TRIUMPHANT YEARS, 1917–1932 John Richardson Jonathan Cape. HB. $69.95. Drawing on exhaustive research from interviews and unpublished archival material, John Richardson has produced the longawaited third volume of his definitive biography. Full of original and groundbreaking insights, the Triumphant Years reveals Picasso at the height of his powers, producing the costumes and sets for Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes productions as well as some of his most important sculpture and paintings. Though married to Olga, the Russian ballerina, he begins a long affair with Marie-Therese and travels to Rome and Naples, inspiring the classicism in his work of the early 1920s. It’s fascinating to read of how the mercurial, witty Cocteau introduced Picasso to the aristocratic and artistic world of Paris – Picasso was amused by Tristan Tzara and the Dadaists but resisted the advances of André Breton and the Surrealists. Biography doesn’t get any better than this. LOOK ME IN THE EYE John Elder Robison Random. PB. $34.95. John Elder Robison spent his childhood being tormented by family and teachers for refusing to look them in the eye. Words like ‘sociopath’ and ‘psycho’ were bandied about until he grew up and was diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome. Only then did he discover the explanation for his extraordinary mathematical, mechanical and musical gifts. There was also an explanation for his odd social skills – or lack thereof. His memoir provides a touching, painful and exquisitely honest account of a brilliant, awkward child’s struggle to grapple with his differences in a world that understood neither him nor his condition. He also reveals how he used people’s reactions to his condition to learn to mimic normal behaviour, and tells us much about our own ‘normal’ world in the process. THE MITFORDS: LETTERS BETWEEN SIX SISTERS Charlotte Mosley (ed.) Fourth Estate. HB. $60. Nancy, the scalding wit who parlayed her family life into bestselling novels. Diana, the fascist jailed with her husband, Oswald Mosley, during WWII. Unity, a suicide, torn by her worship of Hitler and her loyalty to home. Debo, who adored pleasure and fun, and found herself Duchess of Devonshire. Pamela, who craved nothing more than a quiet country life. Jessica, a runaway, communist and fighter for social change. The Mitfords became myth in their own time: the great wits and beauties of their age, they were immoderate in their passions for ideas and people. For this volume, Charlotte Mosley, Diana’s niece, has selected letters from an archive of 18,000 to which she has exclusive access. Virtually spanning the century, these letters between the sisters constitute a superb social chronicle, and explore with disarming intimacy their shifting relationships. MUCK Craig Sherborne Black Inc. PB. $27.95. Poet and journalist Craig Sherborne made a big splash with his first memoir Hoi Polloi in 2005, collecting admiring accolades from the likes of Helen Garner and Peter Craven. The same idiosyncratic storytelling – shot through with pathos, black humour and wicked social observation – is on display in Muck. We follow the story of young Craig and his perfectly awful parents, Winks (now ‘Duke’) and Heels (now ‘Feet’), as they buy a dairy farm in New Zealand: the beginnings of a family ‘dynasty’. Thanks to the highly eccentric Duke and Feet and their breathtakingly skewed view of the world and their place in it, this is another highly entertaining (if deeply weird) memoir by one of Australia’s finest writing talents. Impress your clients by giving them a book instead of a hamper this Christmas! Contact us for our corporate rates on bulk purchases. A LOVER OF UNREASON Yehuda Koren & Eliat Negev Robson Books. HB. Was $50, now $12.95. The third player in the Sylvia Plath/Ted Hughes story has long been airbrushed out of history in favour of the two literary geniuses. This detailed, thoroughly researched book finally tells the story of the dramatically beautiful Assia Wevill, the woman Ted left Sylvia for. Assia gassed herself (and their young daughter) seven years after Plath had killed herself, and for the same reasons – she could no longer live with Hughes’ infidelities. A Russian Jew born in Berlin, she moved between cultures several times in her short life: moving with her family to Palestine as a child, then with her first husband to England, her second to Canada and her fourth back to London in time for the Swinging Sixties, where she would become a tragic part of its literary legacy. MEMORIES, DREAMS & REFLECTIONS Marianne Faithfull Harper. PB. $35. Marianne Faithfull’s wonderfully conversational new memoir picks up where her acclaimed 1994 autobiography Faithfull finished. With its potpourri structure, the book is indeed a collection of memories and reflections, dropping back to the ’60s, which seem as fresh as yesterday, and zooming forwards to the noughties and the amazing array of modern artists she’s worked with – Polly Harvey, Nick Cave, Jarvis Cocker, Damon Albarn and Beck. She reflects on exchanging life with Mick Jagger for life as a homeless junkie, her mismatched enigmatic parents, her ‘Weimar’ years, and playing Maria Teresa in Sofia Coppola’s Marie Antoinette. It’s all thoroughly entertaining – who wouldn’t want to read about Marianne sitting around drinking champagne and talking about death with Kate Moss, Donatella Versace and Cher? FULL BLOOM: THE ART AND LIFE OF GEORGIA O’KEEFFE Hunter Drohojowska-Philp Norton. HB. Was $52.95, now $16.95. Georgia O’Keeffe may be the best known and least understood artist of the 20th century. Art critic and journalist Hunter Drohojowska-Philp sets out to address the situation by delving behind the myths surrounding the artist. Rather than discovering a fiercely independent creative spirit who was supported by her mentor, the much older photographer Alfred Stieglitz, the biographer discovers a woman whose childhood was not charmed and whose adult life was marked by betrayal and emotional collapse. The focus is, of course, on the New York years and the artist’s personal and creative renewal in New Mexico. This meticulously researched biography is accompanied by a marvellous full-colour survey of O’Keeffe’s work and fascinating biographical snapshots that ultimately tell the artist’s story more cogently than the recitation of facts. POINT TO POINT NAVIGATION Gore Vidal Abacus. PB. $27.95. Here, Gore Vidal ranges freely over his remarkable life with his signature wit and literary elegance. ‘Point to Point Navigation’ refers to a form of navigation Vidal resorted to as a first mate in the navy during WWII. As he says, ‘As I was writing this account of my life and times since Palimpsest, I felt as if I were again dealing with those capes and rocks in the Bering Sea that we had to navigate so often with a compass made inoperable by weather’. It is a beautifully apt analogy for the hazards eluded (mostly) during his eventful life. Here, Vidal travels in memory through the arenas of literature, television, film, theatre, politics and international society, recounting achievements and defeats, (famous) friends and (equally famous) enemies made. history SEARCHING FOR SCHINDLER Tom Keneally Random House. HB. Was $45, now $39.95. One afternoon in 1980, Tom Keneally, in search of a briefcase, stepped into an unassuming little shop in Beverly Hills. Making polite conversation with the owner, the topic soon turned to what Keneally was doing in California. When the owner discovered that he was an author, he took him aside. ‘I know a wonderful story,’ he informed him, ‘it is not a story for Jews but for everyone.’ Intrigued by the life of the paradoxical saint and sinner Oskar Schindler, Keneally set out on a quest to tell his tale. Witty, conversational and filled with interesting characters, Searching for Schindler is the best sort of memoir: a detailed account of its author’s pursuits, and an amusing, anecdotal account of life’s twists and turns. SHANGHAI TANGO: A MEMOIR Jin Xing Atlantic. PB. Was $32.95, now $27.95. Jin Xing had two passions as a little boy: to dance and to be female. Born in the middle of the Cultural Revolution, the talented dancer was selected to join the People’s Army Dance Corps at the age of nine. Ballet eventually took Jin Xing to Paris, New York, Rome and Brussels, where the idea of having a sex change gradually took hold. After a five-year absence, he returned to China to be reborn as a woman in the country of her birth. This extraordinary autobiography by this strong-willed and determined dancer reveals the hard-working life of a prima ballerina and the life experiences that led to her selfdiscovery and renewal – she is now the choreographer of the Shanghai Opera House and director of her own troupe. THE BOOK OF LOVE: IN SEARCH OF THE KAMASUTRA James McConnachie Atlantic. HB. $45. If you’ve ever wondered how a 3rdcentury guide to Indian social mores and relationships became a byword for sex, this is the book for you. McConnachie takes a fascinating meander through the Kamasutra’s creation, its rediscovery and publication by the swashbuckling Orientalist Richard Burton, and the rush to publish it in the post-Chatterley glow of the early 1960s. You won’t find a rundown of the 64 modes and moods of lovemaking that lie at the heart of the Kamasutra’s erotic wisdom. Ultimately, McConnachie’s book is less about the Kamasutra itself than about the society it reflects, from 3rd-century India to Victorian Europe and today, where books like The Pop-up Kamasutra and The Kamasutra for Cats attest to the continued popularity of the myth, if not the content, of the original. BYZANTIUM Judith Herrin Allen Lane. HB. $49.95. Byzantium paints a picture of the empire that for a thousand years stood between Western Europe and the East, one that held back the Ottoman Turks until the fall of Constantinople in 1453. Eschewing a standard chronological approach, Judith Herrin’s book is concerned with what life was like under this highly sophisticated culture. Zooming in on defining aspects of Byzantium, she tells the story of the origins of the city of Constantinople, the Cyrillic and Slavonic alphabets, Greek Fire, and the Church of Hagia Sophia. She also fills in more intimate details of Byzantium, such as the origin of the fork, and the function of eunuchs at the Imperial Court. Author Philip Pullman (His Dark Materials) was so taken with this title that he said: ‘It’s the best introduction to Byzantine history I’ve seen. I can say with absolute certainty that I shall steal from it several times.’ THINGS I OVERHEARD WHILE TALKING TO MYSELF Alan Alda Hutchinson. PB. Was $32.95, now $27.95. Alan Alda is the first to admit that he likes hearing himself talk, whether to himself or as a guest speaker. In the follow-up to his bestselling memoir Never Have Your Dog Stuffed, he ponders the big question: what constitutes a meaningful life? The insights he has to share are drawn from the speeches he’s given over the years since he found fame as Hawkeye Pierce in M*A*S*H. Recalling the values he’s endorsed as a public speaker and testing them on his own experience provides an interesting means of looking back on life. At the heart of his inspiring message is the futility of looking for meaning in life, for the meaning of life according to Alan Alda is…well, you’ll just have to read the book, won’t you?! CITRUS: A HISTORY Pierre Laszlo University of Chicago Press. HB. $38.95. This fascinating history traces the spectacular rise and spread of citrus across the globe. The book starts in Southeast Asia in 4000 BC and follows citrus’ journey through North Africa and the Roman Empire to early modern Spain and Portugal, whose explorers introduced the fruits to the Americas during the 1500s. Blending scientific rigour with personal curiosity, Laszlo ransacks over two millennia of world history, exploring the numerous roles that citrus has played in agriculture, horticulture, cooking, nutrition, religion and art – from the Jewish feast of the Tabernacles through the gardens and courts of Versailles to the canvases of Vincent van Gogh to the huge orange groves of southern California. A wide-ranging but remarkably pithy popular science book. GIFT VOUCHERS TWO LIVES: GERTRUDE AND ALICE Janet Malcolm MUP. HB. $32.95. Much has been written about the pitfalls of biographical writing, the search for accuracy and avoidance of bias and hearsay. In fact, Gertrude Stein played with the formula herself in her mockautobiography of Alice B Toklas. Janet Malcolm – biographer of Sylvia Plath, Chekhov and Freud – adds a dose of psychology and investigative journalism to tease out her portrait of Gertrude Stein and Alice B Toklas, and the often volatile relationship they shared. Provocatively, she wonders how the two women, both Jewish and lesbian, managed to survive life in Vichy France during WWII, and dwells on Toklas’ dogged protection of Stein’s legacy after the writer’s death in 1946. Malcolm’s elegant little book includes classic photographs of Stein and Toklas, and liberally quotes from Stein’s works. 11 THE DISCOVERY OF FRANCE Graham Robb Picador. HB. $59.95. This is, quite simply, one of the best and most original works of French history you’re ever likely to read. Rather than focusing on the French Court and the Parisians, it instead tells the story of the people glossed over in conventional histories. Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, up to four-fifths of France’s population lived in rural communities, some of them so isolated that they didn’t even understand one another’s languages. France was a ramshackle conglomeration of peoples, with such differing customs, laws and dialects that they amounted to virtually separate nations. Graham Robb’s meticulously detailed work tells their stories, and also clearly explains why the French Revolution failed to rouse much enthusiasm amongst so many of these autonomous, selfgoverning communities. FROMELLES Patrick Lindsay Hardie Grant. HB. $45. On 19 July 1916, a battle took place on the Somme in which 2000 members of the Fifth Australian Division, many of them survivors of Gallipoli, were killed. It was the greatest single loss of life in Australian history – yet until now, the fate of many of the missing diggers has been unknown. Fromelles rescues from oblivion the story of one of the darkest days in Australian history. Patrick Lindsay shows how the arrogance and recklessness of the battle’s architect, Sir Richard Haking, doomed the campaign to failure before it commenced. He also shows how the obsession of a Melbourne teacher led him on a five-year quest to discover the fate of 170 of the missing diggers who had broken through the German lines and then vanished. Who established the concept of extinction? HM BARK ENDEAVOUR: HER PLACE IN AUSTRALIAN HISTORY Ray Parkin MUP. PB. Was $45, now $16.95. HM Bark Endeavour recreates Captain Cook’s 1768 voyage, and the human story of the people who sailed with him. It was a voyage not of conquest, but of discovery; of knowledge, geography and navigation. The people who sailed left diaries, logs and other detailed records of the journey and the ship’s specifications, and Ray Parkin uses these original records to build a picture of the physical intricacies of the Endeavour, its rigging and sails, the dangers of life onboard, and the effort that went into manning it and attending to its every need. He also provides interesting insights into Captain Cook’s character, his ‘enquiring and calculating mind’, and the depth and beauty of his observations on the world he traversed. If you’re not 100% sure about which book will suit, why not give one of our gift vouchers? DEATH OF A REVOLUTIONARY Richard L Harris Norton. PB. $21.95. Che Guevara is an icon the world over, representing the spirit of revolution as much as anything more concrete. But many of those who wear his portrait on their chest know very little about who he was, what he stood for, and the ideals he fought and died for. Californian professor of global studies Richard Harris first published this accessible, authoritative look at Guevara the revolutionary (and particularly the Bolivian mission that was his downfall) in 1970. This revised and updated edition comes at a time when genuine interest in the man is growing again, with a major film (starring Benicio Del Toro) being well received and several documentaries being scheduled for release in the near future. KATHERINE SWYNFORD Alison Weir Jonathan Cape. HB. $59.95. Alison Weir is the author of a slew of bestselling popular histories, most of them firmly focused on women and royalty. Her heroines are typically feisty, intelligent and headstrong – and Katherine Swynford, mistress and then wife of the Duke of Lancaster, is no exception. Renowned for her beauty, the enigmatic Katherine enjoyed a passionate romance with one of the most powerful princes of the 14th century. She knew most of the great figures of her time and lived through the Hundred Years War, the Black Death and the Peasants’ Revolt, as well as personal loss and heartache. An important person in her own right, and a woman who made her own decisions and shaped her own destiny, Katherine was a woman well ahead of her time. history 12 THAMES: SACRED RIVER Peter Ackroyd Chatto & Windus. HB. Was $59.95, now $49.95. This companion volume to Ackroyd’s London: The Biography places the River Thames at the very centre of British cultural, political, social, economic and sacred life and at the heart of the English imagination. Forgoing a chronological or linear narrative, Ackroyd uses the metaphor of water with its runs, swirls, eddies, undercurrents and dark places to structure his homage to ‘Father Thames’ as the archetypal global river and the most celebrated waterway of its length (215 miles/344 km from source to sea) on the planet. In the Thames, Ackroyd has found the perfect subject, at once both temporal and psychological: kings and traitors, gods and nymphs, artists and writers, stevedores and loch-keepers, murderers, thieves and suicides populate the 45 exhaustively researched chapters. There are chapters on the working river; trade; pollution; fish; riverboats; river law; river light; the river as ‘a stream of pleasure and sex’; Thames literature and bridges; and the age-old association of the Thames with healing, grace, rebirth and death. SQUARE RIGGER DAYS: AUTOBIOGRAPHIES OF SAIL Charles W Domville-Fife UNSWP. PB. $39.95. The rise of the steamship in the mid-19th century didn’t spell the immediate demise of the sailing ship. From 1850 to 1910, these magnificent vessels were used to carry bulky cargoes such as wool, grain and coal all over the world. In those last great days, the ships were manned by a dying breed of old-fashioned sailing men who endured hardships and adventures that seem more suited to the world of storytellers than the industrial age. In 1938, Charles Domville-Fife published Square Rigger Days, a collection of the experiences and adventures of these men, some of whom were by then in their 90s. This reissue makes for enthralling reading, providing a first-hand glimpse into their lives of danger and adventure. NEMESIS: THE BATTLE FOR JAPAN 1944–45 Max Hastings Harper Press. PB. $40. Eminent military historian Max Hastings has written a gripping, evocative account of the final year of the Pacific arm of WWII. The battle with Japan, he argues, was remarkably separate from the battle with Germany: the two countries were only nominally allies, drawn together by common enemies. It is fitting, therefore, that Nemesis runs parallel to Armageddon, his bestselling book on the war in Europe. Hastings has not only pored over existing writing and resources on the subject – he also travelled to Asia and collected his own eyewitness accounts, which are woven into the narrative. His approach is similar to that of Australia’s Les Carlyon (The Great War), with similar effect: the people and events in Nemesis are captured with such detail, such immediacy, that they fairly leap from the page. This is narrative history at its best. WHATEVER HAPPENED TO TANGANYIKA? Harry Campbell Portico. HB. $20. ‘Harry Campbell has achieved something that most scholars would give anything to achieve. He has created a whole new discipline – one which we may perhaps call nostalgic geography.’ In his introduction, Alexander McCall Smith rightly celebrates Campbell’s achievement in researching and writing Whatever Happened to Tanganyika?: The Place Names that History Left Behind. Dozens of countries, cities and counties have changed their identity over the years. Some of the names we remember from our schooldays or from news headlines just a few years ago are now gone. Here, Campbell trawls through the place names that history left behind: the stories about where they came from, what happened to them and what they were replaced by. society BEST AUSTRALIAN POLITICAL CARTOONS Russ Radcliffe (ed.) Scribe. PB. $27.95. MAN OF STEEL Russ Radcliffe (ed.) Scribe. PB. $29.95. Scribe’s ever-popular Best Australian Political Cartoons series is becoming one of our essential annual publishing events. Cartoons have the unique ability to capture telling political moments in a single image with a few well-chosen words – gaffes, scandals and occasional triumphs alike. An election year is always extra-busy for our top cartoonists, and it’s reflected here, with contributions from Bill Leak, Peter Nicholson, Andrew Weldon and others. Man of Steel looks back at the decade spent at the top by a prime minister who is surely every caricaturist’s dream (those eyebrows! that bottom lip!). This razor-sharp collection brilliantly captures the radical changes wrought by 10 years of the Howard government, accompanied by telling quotes from Howard, his colleagues and his opponents as they manipulate the media, the voters…and each other. NEMESIS: THE LAST DAYS OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLIC Chalmers Johnson Scribe. PB. $35. There will never be any shortage of books on the 9/11 terrorist attacks and the war in Iraq, but Nemesis is undoubtedly one of the best to date. In the concluding volume of a trilogy, Chalmers Johnson posits that the attacks were not ideologically motivated assaults on Western democracy or Christianity. Instead, he argues that they were repayment – ‘blowback’ – for a half-century of secret, illegal US operations around the world that have had a devastating impact upon poorer and less powerful nations. He unveils how US military bases are more prolific than official figures state, and how the trillion-dollar-a-year US military is being partly funded by overseas credit. The result is the threat of national bankruptcy, and the death of the American republic as we know it. VIETNAM: THE AUSTRALIAN WAR Paul Ham HarperCollins. HB. Was $55, now $46.95. THE OXFORD COMPANION TO AUSTRALIAN POLITICS Brian Galligan & Winsome Roberts (eds.) OUP. HB. $99.95. ‘Surely God weeps’, an Australian Vietnam veteran wrote in despair at the memory of the Vietnam War. But no act of God intervened to stop the long years of carnage and devastation in this most controversial of wars. Here, Paul Ham (author of the bestselling Kokoda) narrates in compelling detail the full story of Australia’s involvement in our longest military campaign, in which 50,000 Australians participated. He draws on hundreds of unpublished sources, as well as interviews with soldiers, politicians, medical practitioners, aid providers, entertainers and the Vietnamese people, to reconstruct the epic history of a campaign that disfigured a country and divided the world, nations, families and friends. THE TIMES COMPLETE HISTORY OF THE WORLD: 5TH EDITION Richard Overy HarperCollins. HB. $185. THE TIMES COMPREHENSIVE ATLAS OF THE WORLD: 12TH EDITION HarperCollins. HB. $295. New editions are now available of two of the most comprehensive, authoritative reference works in print, both of them fully updated to include recent developments in world politics and geography. The Times Comprehensive Atlas of the World includes a new map of Alaska and Canada, updated national and socioeconomic statistics, cutting-edge information on climate change and major revisions to the Middle East region. New nations and capitals have also been incorporated. The Times Complete History of the World is internet-linked for the first time, allowing the reader to further explore subjects of interest using a reputable and respected source. New spreads cover warfare in the modern age, state tyranny and migration – all current hot topics of enduring historical significance. Beautifully produced and intricately illustrated with maps and photographs, these books will make a valuable addition to any reference library. politics This comprehensive reference is the latest Australian addition to Oxford’s esteemed series of Companions. ‘Every Australian has a significant stake in our political system’, writes the editors. Politics shapes not just our government, but our society and the rules and ‘norms’ that govern it. A basic understanding of our political system, how it operates and how it evolved is invaluable – and is expertly delivered here. The Companion provides an accessible, authoritative introduction to Australian politics in the form of thematic essays by over 200 contributors on topics ranging from Aboriginal politics and the Accord, to globalisation and the Vietnam War. All the state premiers and prime ministers are covered, as well as the political theories and global organisations and events that have shaped us. This is a major contribution to Australian publishing, and a reference that will endure for years to come. BLUBBERLAND: THE DANGERS OF HAPPINESS Elizabeth Farrelly UNSWP. PB. $29.95. Renowned architecture writer and former NSW City Councillor Elizabeth Farrelly broadens her scope to examine Western society’s addiction to acquiring ‘stuff’. ‘Blubber’, by her definition, is anything spare or surplus. It can be good (spare time in the day, a birdsong for the sake of it) or it can be destructive: McMansions, silicone body parts, junk food–fuelled obesity. This is an intelligent, incisive examination of why we can’t seem to stop overdoing everything in our quest for happiness – even though we now know that overconsumption is not only not making us happy, but is fast destroying the earth. Along the way, Farrelly looks at how and why we attribute value to things (including our definitions of beauty and desirability) and concludes that it all stems from a desire to impress or outdo our peers. WATCHING BRIEF: REFLECTIONS ON HUMAN RIGHTS, LAW AND JUSTICE Julian Burnside Scribe. PB. $32.95. Julian Burnside QC is best known for his impassioned and devastatingly articulate work on behalf of asylum seekers in Australia. He represented the Tampa refugees, as well as many others imprisoned in Australian detention centres, and helped to raise the profile of their plight with a gruelling schedule of public speaking engagements. His contribution to the asylum-seeker debate forms a significant section of this book of essays, the first to collect his writings on the subject. Burnside’s talents and interests are wide-ranging: he is a noted patron of the arts and is devoted to the intricacies of the English language (as demonstrated in his previous book Wordwatching). All of these interests are reflected in this considered, persuasive and endlessly fascinating collection of essays, which also cover the law, human rights, and justice and injustice in Australia. COURAGE Maria Tumarkin MUP. PB. $32.95. Courage is a quality this author holds dear. Rippling across the page in marvellously meditative style, the loosely connected chapters combine philosophy, memoir, history and anecdote to explore the concept of courage and the many forms it can take. Tumarkin’s vision of courage concerns the spontaneous actions of everyday people. She explores the courage we need to get by in our daily lives and to stand up to the bullies of this world, focusing on her own experiences as a migrant from the former Soviet Union and a wide-ranging palette of cultural and intellectual touchstones – from the Holocaust to Dave Eggers to Love Actually. Ultimately, she writes about the writers, experiences and events that interest her. Because of her intelligence, skill and passion, they interest us too. An impressive follow-up to Traumascapes (2006). science CULTURAL AMNESIA Clive James Picador. PB. $32.95. This is a sprawling, divergent intellectual adventure that’s both thought-provoking and entertaining. It’s an unsurprising combination from James, the consummate intellectual entertainer. This vast project, a collection of short biographical essays on some of the 20th-century’s most influential cultural figures, evolved from James’s habit of making notes in the margins of his home library. (Some figures from previous ages who have significantly influenced 20th century thought are also included.) Cultural Amnesia reflects those beginnings: the essays here are an intoxicating mix of personal engagement, measured reflection, telling detail and unusual anecdote. James writes: ‘In this book can be heard the merest outside edge of an enormous conversation.’ Taken together as a whole, these carefully selected portraits form a nuanced picture of the achievements and legacy of the last century. THE ELEPHANT, THE TIGER, AND THE CELL PHONE Shashi Tharoor Arcade. PB. $32.95. Thoughtful, incisive and engrossing, this book about contemporary India doesn’t fit firmly into any particular category – which is often a good sign. Shashi Tharoor, a journalist and former undersecretary-general of the UN, employs a cocktail of memoir, reportage, history and political commentary to encapsulate India as it is, was and will be. The diversity of style and tone, ranging from whimsy to serious commentary, reflects the cacophony of voices, religions and lifestyles of India itself. He writes with wit and authority on a number of topics, including Indian identity, the demise of the sari, the legacy of Gandhi and Nehru, the myth of the Indian middle class and the implications of India’s growing importance as a source of labour and expertise for Western companies – particularly IT. A MATTER OF PRINCIPLE Jana Wendt MUP. HB. Was $35, now $29.95. The ‘perfumed steamroller’ makes the transition from the screen to print in this classy collection of profiles. One of Australia’s most respected journalists, Jana Wendt has interviewed some of the world’s most intriguing people during her long career. Here, she meets with several subjects who have piqued her interest – some of them for the first time, others revisited from earlier interviews. The common thread running through this diverse group of people, including Robert Hughes, Camille Paglia, Rove McManus and Frank Gehry, is a focus on a single value fundamental to each. A Matter of Principle delves below the surface of its famous subjects, ranging beyond the usual territory of the ‘celebrity profile’ to discuss what drives, challenges and confronts them. WOULD IT KILL YOU TO SAY PLEASE? Alice Williams Text. PB. $24.95. Have you ever wondered about the finer points of contemporary etiquette? If so, this is the book for you. From winning friends and influencing people, to the gentle art of getting away with dabbling in drugs and alcohol, this is the allencompassing guide to modern manners. Alice Williams’ book takes a half-serious, half-humorous look at the things old-fashioned etiquette books just won’t tell you: when it is acceptable to text message; what to do when you accidentally send a private email to your whole address book; and how to survive a McJob in a call centre. Know someone whose etiquette is below par? This is the perfect present. And if by chance they take offence, you can always pretend it’s to help them reform other people’s etiquette rather than their own! ABOUT THE SIZE OF IT Warwick Cairns Macmillan. HB. $35. About the Size of It takes an amusing yet incisive look at one of those things that affects us all, but that we rarely think about: the art of measuring things. Why, for instance, was it so difficult to wean people away from using old-fashioned pounds and feet as units of measurement? So difficult that it could only be accomplished through the introduction of laws – even criminal laws? Warwick Cairns shows how standard units of measurement evolved from the immutable mathematical formulae that govern the relationships in size between our hands, feet and thumbs. He also exposes the battle that raged, and still rages, between those who support the imperial system and the metric system, and how national prejudices and changes of government have determined who follows which. ANORAKS TO ZITTING CISTICOLA Sean Dooley Allen & Unwin. PB. $24.95. Sean Dooley’s first book The Big Twitch was a significant achievement. It recorded his successful attempt to see the most bird species in one year, breaking the Australian birdwatching record. But it also made that most nerdy of hobbies seem, well, kinda cool. In this idiosyncratic A–Z guide, comedy writer and ‘bird nerd’ Dooley delivers his response to all those curious punters who sidle up to him with questions about just what a birder is and does. Once again, he infuses his subject with a blend of sardonic, self-deprecating humour and bursting-at-the-seams enthusiasm, covering everything from binoculars as a fashion accessory (silly but amusing) to how to use field guides (useful to the novice), ethical birdwatching (useful to just about anyone) and various entries on specific bird species and birding terms. THE BEDSIDE BOOK OF BIRDS: AN AVIAN COMPENDIUM Graeme Gibson Bloomsbury. PB. $35. Birdlovers won’t be alone in enjoying this anthology of poems, pictures and tales about our enigmatic feathered friends. Canadian writer Graeme Gibson discovered the magic of birds when he saw his first albatross at sea, and it’s a passion he shares with his wife, writer Margaret Atwood. His delightfully illustrated compilation pays tribute to the ways we engage with birds – in nature, art, poetry and literature. Birds enrich our lives and touch the human spirit, but they’ve also been exploited; the 15,000 hummingbirds sent weekly from Trinidad to the hatters of Victorian Europe are just one example. Chapters range from birds observed, birds in folk tales and birds as companions, to birds as omens and birds commodified. Diverse contributors include Italo Calvino, Bruce Chatwin, Redmond O’Hanlon, Peter Matthiessen and Judith Wright. BIG HISTORY: FROM THE BIG BANG TO THE PRESENT Cynthia Stokes Brown New Press. HB. $49.95. Question: what is ‘big history’? Answer: not just history, science or religion, but the whole story, from the big bang to now. Taking the reader through the development of the universe, the earth and the gradual emergence of life, Brown then turns to the development of Homo sapiens, and their transformation from hunter-gatherers to the domestic creatures of today. With domestication came the start of a far-from-harmonious relationship with nature – the results of which we are now facing in the form of environmental damage, pollution, increased radiation and global warming. Will human beings stop their suicidal treatment of the only planet they have? Or are we headed for a collision with nature – and certain disaster? Succinct, relevant and unputdownable, this is one of the top non-fiction picks of the year. 13 THE CANON: A WHIRLIGIG TOUR OF THE BEAUTIFUL BASICS OF SCIENCE Natalie Angier Scribe. PB. $32.95. The Canon provides a readable and accessible means to fill the gap in even the greatest vacuum of scientific illiteracy. ‘Science is fun’ Angier proclaims in her introduction – and in her hands, astonishingly, it is! Her undogmatic and elegantly written book takes the reader through the basics of the scientific canon, including the laws of statistics, mathematics, probabilities and coincidences (which turn out to be not nearly so coincidental after all, and can usually be reduced to simple equations). She also looks at physics, chemistry and the highly contentious subject of evolutionary biology, and provides interesting insights into the battle that still rages between evolutionists and creationists. If you’ve ever wanted to start reading popular science and not known where to begin, this is the perfect place to start. THE CONSTANT GARDENER: A BOTANICAL BIBLE Holly Kerr Forsyth Miegunyah. HB. $75. Cooks have Stephanie Alexander’s Cook’s Companion as their kitchen bible; now gardeners have their botanical bible in this truly comprehensive, passionate and beautifully illustrated specimen. Kerr Forsyth is the author of four books on gardening and has been the Weekend Australian garden columnist for a decade; here she presents gardeners with everything they need, from tips for beginners to inspiration for the green-thumbed. You’ll find an A to Z of Holly’s favourite plants; a discussion of specific elements in a garden, such as climbers, hedges and lawns; the prime tenets of garden maintenance: soil, mulch, pruning, propagation, pests and weeds; garden construction, including water features and lighting; and a chapter on the plants and places that particularly inspire gardeners. The author’s stunning garden photography is featured throughout. A STUBBORNLY PERSISTENT ILLUSION Stephen Hawking Running Press. HB. $49.95. Bestselling author and physicist Stephen Hawking presents the ‘Best of’ Albert Einstein, from the writings that revealed the famous Theory of Relativity, which has been called the most important scientific discovery of the 20th century, to the great man’s important works on quantum theory, statistical mechanics and the photoelectric effect. Also included are many of Einstein’s philosophical essays, including ‘About Zionism and Cosmic Religion’. Who deplores the difficulty of eating Toblerone? AN EXPLORER’S NOTEBOOK Tim Flannery Text. PB. $34.95. Tim Flannery will need no introduction to his army of avid readers. An Explorer’s Notebook collects together dozens of his unpublished reviews and essays from the past two decades. Covering diverse topics, they range from essays on his adventures in Australia, New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, to an account of the ill-fated French exploration of Australia, which met disaster in 1801. In two fascinating essays, Flannery informs us how humans are prisoners of their biological imperative and how our genes make us fall in love; and how Australia, one of the most ‘underpopulated’ countries on the planet, is actually supporting a population above what its environment can sustain. Filled with timely and intelligent debate, this volume also includes a transcription of Flannery’s magnificent 2002 Australia Day Address. science 14 A FRAGILE BALANCE: THE EXTRAORDINARY STORY OF AUSTRALIAN MARSUPIALS Christopher Dickman (illus. Rosemary Woodford Grant) Craftsman House. HB. $85. Christopher Dickman has been fascinated by marsupials since he was a boy. That fascination is evident in this beautiful, eminently readable book, with its loving attention to detail, its blending of occasional anecdote with fact and its stunning wildlife illustrations. Dickman provides up-to-date information to a general readership on the extraordinary diversity of mammals, their intriguing behaviours, their evolutionary framework and their interactions with other living things and the wider environment. The tangled interactions between humans and marsupials are examined, and the contradictory status of some species as pests and targets for conservation is considered. This remarkable achievement and valuable reference will delight and inform in equal measure. THE GREAT NATURALISTS Robert Huxley (ed.) Thames & Hudson. HB. $75. The great naturalists described, experimented, collected and gave us the means to order and understand the natural world – to exploit it, but also to conserve it and ensure its future survival. The stories of nearly 40 of these great pioneers – including Aristotle, Carl Linnaeus, Joseph Banks, Georges Cuvier (who established the concept of extinction), Alexander von Humboldt and Charles Darwin – take us from Classical times to the end of the 19th century, when natural history changed from an amateur pursuit to the specialised profession we know today. The book is illustrated with beautiful and precise paintings and drawings of birds, animals, fossils, fish, shells and geology, the majority of which have been selected from the picture archives and collections of the Natural History Museum, London. A LIGHT HISTORY OF HOT AIR Peter Doherty MUP. HB. Was $32.95, now $29.95. In this series of essays, Nobel Prize–winner Peter Doherty covers the history of hot air, in every possible sense of the expression. For most of us, the terrible reality of global warming is only just becoming apparent, but its roots go back to the technical wizardry that commenced less than 300 years ago with the Industrial Revolution. A Light History of Hot Air looks at every facet of human activity that has contributed to our present dilemma: coal, methane, oil, natural gas and the desire for the comforts of the modern world, coupled with an inability to understand the attendant environmental consequences. It also looks at how our sun-seeking lifestyles have further imperilled our well-being, particularly amongst those who are genetically ill-equipped to deal with large doses of radiation. What’s a riad? ON DEEP HISTORY AND THE BRAIN Lord Daniel Smail University of California Press. HB. $39.95. Until the 1860s, the question of where history began was a comfortable certainty: with the story of the Garden of Eden, and the creation of man. The revolution that Darwin’s theories brought about ushered in a new era, in which history was generally taken to begin with the rise of civilisation. But what if it is possible to go much further back than that, even in the absence of written records? ‘Deep history’ involves the study of the neuro-physiological legacy that is a part of all human beings, and investigates how much human behaviour is determined by genetic traits that were developed long ago. What does the development of these traits have to say about how humans lived in the past? On Deep History and the Brain seeks the answer. PIGEONS Andrew D Blechman UQP. PB. $32.95. Did you know that pigeons and doves are the same bird? That they were domesticated 10,000 years ago, at around the same time as dogs? And that a million of them served in WWI and WWII? And this is only the start of their story. Where human civilisation has gone, pigeons have followed, and the bad rep these creatures currently have obscures a long, positive relationship with human beings. After a chance run-in with a New York pigeonracing enthusiast, Andrew D Blechman set out to investigate the history of this remarkable bird. Filled with fascinating tidbits of information, his book provides an insight into the way humans and pigeons have served one another for thousands of years, and makes one wonder how human civilisation would have fared without them! REMEMBERED GARDENS Holly Kerr Forsyth Miegunyah. HB. Was $49.95, now $24.95. Elizabeth Macarthur sailed into the fledgling settlement of New South Wales in 1790, after a horrific voyage from England. As a comfort and a way to evoke home in this distant and foreign land, she set about creating her remembered garden, filling it with roses and oak trees. Edna Walling came to gardening in the 1920s, 150 years after Elizabeth’s first encounter with the Australian ‘wilderness’. Immediately captivated by the natural landscape and indigenous plants, she became a leading proponent of the Australian native garden. In Remembered Gardens, Holly Kerr Forsyth brings to life the stories of Elizabeth, Edna and six other women whose passions for their gardens and for garden making have shaped our relationship with the Australian landscape. Beautifully illustrated, the book also includes more than 200 photographs of some of Australia’s foremost gardens. SUPER CRUNCHERS Ian Ayres Sceptre. PB. $35. Just what is Super Crunching? Answer: statistical analysis that impacts real-world decisions. Ian Ayres’ intriguing book provides a remarkable eye-opener into how simple mathematical formulae can be used to predict just about anything. Want to know which years are going to produce the best Bordeaux wines? Details of the rainfall and average summer temperatures will give you the answer, raising the ire of traditionalists when the results prove to be spot on (as happened to the system’s inventor). Ayres also shows how Big Brother–style Super Crunching is being used to assess insurance risks, sports performance, aeroplane travel, people’s spending patterns – in fact, every aspect of our daily lives. More a study of our times than of maths, this is a fascinating, disturbing and never-less-than-enthralling read. VERY SPECIAL RELATIVITY: AN ILLUSTRATED GUIDE Sander Bais Harvard University Press. HB. $36.95. Who fully understands the beauty of Einstein’s Special Theory of Relativity? What do the scientific terms and concepts that constitute our reality really mean? This wonderful little book offers an illustrated guide to these world-changing ideas and attendant implications. Through the use of geometric diagrams, analogy and clear text, Bais offers insight into such mystifying concepts as Causality, Spacetime, Momentum and the Doppler Effect. Printed on toned paper, the text is concise and easy to read and the subtle colorations of the opposing illustrations are a work of art in themselves. If you have an interest in maths and physics, this attractive little hardback will be a special treat, summarised by the Einstein quote on the first page: ‘What I value in life is quality rather than quantity…’. WILDWOOD: A JOURNEY THROUGH TREES Roger Deakin Hamish Hamilton. HB. $59.95. Wildwood reads like a travel diary; its relaxed, easy-to-follow narrative takes the reader around the world gathering intimate knowledge of humanity’s profound connection to wood and trees. Deakin travels from Suffolk to Khazakhstan, from the Spanish Pyrenees to Utopia in outback Australia. He details his observances of trees both wild and cultivated, and at the same time relays his evocative daily experiences that include a rich cast of friends and colleagues (including Australians Ramona Koval and John Wolseley). With a keen sense of fun and irony, the author uses his evocative storytelling technique to take us on an unusual and informative world journey. If you loved The Secret Life of Trees by Colin Tudge, you’ll be just as enamoured of this title. architecture 1001 BUILDINGS YOU MUST SEE BEFORE YOU DIE Mark Irving Cameron House. HB. $65. We cringed when we saw the title, but it only took 30 minutes or so to fully get into the swing of this architectural ‘best of’ world tour and put together our shortlist of the places we want to see before shuffling off this mortal coil. Organised in chronological chapters (Ancient World to the Renaissance, Empire to Revolution, Modernism Goes Global, Fast into the Future etc), most entries have pictures and all have architect, location, style and materials recorded. Citations are written by a large cast of architects and architectural historians and are extremely accessible – if you come across a technical term that you don’t know there’s a handy glossary at the back of the book, too. There’s also a handy location index for those keen to plan their next travel itinerary around some architectural ogling. 101 THINGS I LEARNED IN ARCHITECTURE SCHOOL Matthew Frederick MIT Press. HB. $21.95. Frederick, lecturer and architect, knows his potential readership well. Slick design with colour restraint and engaging illustrations make this a seductive yet instructional book. It brims with simple advice on drawing techniques; theories from the notables (Mies, Kahn, Venturi); analysis of places (Fallingwater, Guggenheim Bilbao); and distilling meaning (zeitgeist, genius loci). There’s no computer-aided drafting here, and the book will bring joy to all who appreciate design, whether they are architects (even those who struggled in the studio) or laypeople. Packed with tips, it will be most appreciated by practitioners and architecture students who can keep it close to help demystify the jargon and inspire answers to universal architectural questions. Perfect for those who line and letter, but still have the promise of being late bloomers. 50/60/70: ICONIC AUSTRALIAN HOUSES Karen McCartney Murdoch Books. HB. $69.95. Subtitled ‘Three Decades of Domestic Architecture’, this book is bound to feature on Christmas wishlists around the country. Karen McCartney, editor of interiors magazine Inside Out, presents 15 homes built in the period from the 1950s to the 1970s. Designed by different architects, these homes combine outstanding architecture with gorgeous interior design – showcased here in excellent colour photographs. A detailed introduction places the period in a social, historical and architectural context, and each of the selected homes is individually reviewed in an informed and engaging style. art architecture 15 CORRUGATED IRON: BUILDING ON THE FRONTIER Adam Mornement & Simon Holloway Frances Lincoln. HB. $89.95. It can be said that Australia has corrugated iron at the core of its psyche; in fact, it’s almost impossible to think of our built environment without it. This comprehensive work offers wonderful insight into the product’s invention and development; its employment as a global frontier material; and its use in boats, bomb shelters, churches, housing in underdeveloped countries and many other projects. There are chapters on the product’s current use in contemporary architecture, including a detailed look at the work of prize-winning Australian architect Glen Murcutt, and while the book offers a global perspective, Australia is well represented. This volume is much more than an attractive pictorial exposé: through corrugated iron, it offers insight into an aspect of global culture rarely explored. For the student or researcher, the book also includes a useful bibliography. GAUDÍ: COMPLETE WORKS Isabel Artigas Evergreen. Boxed set. $75. This two-volume, 600-page slip-cased set will get serious devotees of the great Spanish architect very excited. Gaudí’s complete works are presented in photographs, plans and drawings, accompanied by authoritative essays by Isabel Artigas. A lavish number of colour photographs are used throughout, particularly for major works such as the Sagrada Família, Casa Milà and Casa Batlló, and these highlight both interior and exterior detail. Evergreen is one of Taschen’s imprints, so there’s no surprise that the production values of this publication are incredibly high in relation to its price. GUARANTEE DESIGN: INTELLIGENCE MADE VISIBLE Stephen Bayley & Terence Conran Conran Octopus. HB. $99.95. Some books are works of love, and this is clearly one of them. In the past, leading interior designer and restaurateur Terence Conran has funnelled some of the profits from his chain of Habitat stores and raft of influential London restaurants into projects such as the Design Museum on London’s Thames – we suspect that the publication of this sumptuously illustrated and beautifully designed book is another such quasi-charitable enterprise. Opening with eight essays introducing how design has forged its place in modern cultural history, the book moves onto 200+ pages of A–Z listings summarising the highlights of 20th-century design organised by name of designers and design movements. Mackintosh and Miyake, Eames and Ergonomics, Ikea and International Style – this book has them all. Give this as a Christmas gift and you’ll be as popular as Jacobsen’s 1952 Series 7 stacking chair (p182). HOT…AND BOTHERED Michael Leunig Penguin. PB. $24.95. We’re obviously fans of the great Mr Leunig (check out our cover), so were thrilled to see that Penguin is publishing his latest collection just in time for Christmas. It collects the cartoons he’s done since the last volume (A New Penguin Leunig, 2005), and presents biting political pieces alongside his trademark whimsical numbers. There are a few paintings and roughly half a dozen older, unpublished pieces of pure silliness. A quality stocking-stuffer. KLIMT Alfred Weidinger Prestel. HB. $295. This exhaustive survey of the leading artist of the Viennese Art Nouveau style offers art lovers an irresistible opportunity: page after page of Klimt’s paintings and frescoes along with illuminating commentary about his life and career. Weidinger, an associate director at Vienna’s Albertina Museum, presents Klimt’s entire painted oeuvre on an unprecedented scale. His commentary reflects the latest academic findings in chapters featuring a wide range of topics, including Klimt and women, the Viennese Secession, landscapes, portraits and allegories. The book’s large format and sumptuous production values allow close examination of the exquisite detail and luminescent quality of the work for which Klimt is renowned, making it a perfect gift or collector’s item. Best of all, it provides viewers with an allencompassing perspective on one of history’s greatest painters. MUSEUM Robyn Stacey & Ashley Hay CUP. HB. $79.95. From the first, European settlers were fascinated by the flora and fauna they found in Australia, which was so different from that in Europe. Among a host of collectors who soon emerged, one of the most dedicated was Alexander Macleay, who in 1826 arrived to collect specimens of natural history. Museum showcases the collection he and his family amassed over the next three-quarters of a century, now held in Sydney’s Macleay Museum. In a series of essays, Ashley Hay details the life of Macleay, his relationships with the great naturalists of his age (including the young Charles Darwin), and the part played by his remarkable family in the fulfilment of his life’s work. Robyn Stacey’s astonishingly beautiful and vivid photographs do full justice to the wonders contained in this magnificent collection. NEXT WAVE: EMERGING TALENTS IN AUSTRALIAN ARCHITECTURE Davina Jackson Thames & Hudson. HB. $65. This book profiles the 16 most exciting young architectural studios in Australia, and the projects that are winning them global attention. Davina Jackson, former editor of Architecture Australia and an associate professor of architecture at the University of NSW, has nominated the ‘Next Wave’ of architectural talents: M3; Richard Kirk; Bark; David Boyle; Marsh Cashman Koolloos; Adam Haddow; Turner; Clinton Murray; Cassandra Complex; Elenburg Fraser; Neil + Idle; Minifie Nixon; Staughton; BKK; Terroir; and Iredale Pederson Hook. Jackson’s magazine-style profiles are accompanied by a generous number of Shannon McGrath’s colour photographs, making this a particularly attractive Christmas gift for those in – or about to embark upon – an architectural or design career. PAPUNYA: A PLACE MADE AFTER THE STORY Geoffrey Bardon & James Bardon MUP. HB. Was $120, now $59.95. First published in 2004, this important work has now been republished three times. Geoffrey Bardon’s excursion to the desert outpost of Papunya to teach Aboriginal children in the early 1970s, and the subsequent formation of the Papunya Tula Artists company, is well known. From this extraordinary well of knowledge and deep understanding of the people and their art, Bardon has produced this remarkable labour of love: a detailed account of the artists, their country and their culture. Numerous top-quality reproductions are accompanied by detailed diagrams revealing the artistic and cultural meaning of the works. This volume of more than 500 pages offers the deeper understandings of Aboriginal culture and community that indigenous Australians deserve. Also available in PB for the same price. If, on inspection, you’re not happy with a book selected through this Guide, you can return it (in saleable condition) within 14 days of purchase and we’ll exchange it for another book of equivalent value or for a book voucher – the choice is yours. NATIONAL TREASURES FROM AUSTRALIA’S GREAT LIBRARIES NLA. PB. Was $34.95, now $12.95. National Treasures showcases dozens of rare artefacts of Australian history that are held in Australian libraries. Not just a chronicle of books, it unveils a catalogue of priceless diaries, manuscripts, maps, drawings and paintings. Included are Andrea Corsali’s 16th-century book Lettera, which contains the first European depiction of the Southern Cross; the journal that Captain Cook kept on the Endeavour from 1768 to 1771; and one of the six known copies of John Lewin’s Birds of New Holland with Their Natural Histories, the first book on Australian birds, published in 1808. There are also Walter Burley Griffin’s concept drawings for Canberra (the winner amongst 137 entries in an international competition), the Mabo Papers, Ned Kelly’s famed helmet, and a host of other fascinating sidelights on Australian history. THE NEW 100 HOUSES Robin Beaver (ed.) Images Publishing. HB. $85. Get ready for some serious envy factor kicking in when you flip through this handsome edition. Most of the houses featured here are the products of major spending on the part of the client. Some are truly extraordinary – wait until you see the Garcia Residence by Ibarra Ross Design Architects and Javier Artadi’s Beach House in Las Arenas – and some are just plain awful (Casa Renacimiento and Hawn Residence, step on down). What’s fascinating here is the array of architectural styles on show and the relationships between the houses and their sites, all of which are captured beautifully in the lavish colour photographs. There are plenty of examples from Australia and New Zealand among a truly international line-up. SEVEN HUNDRED PENGUINS Penguin. HB. $49.95. Design aficionados and book fetishists alike will savour this decidedly quirky little book: a kind of time capsule of book design history. This beautifully produced collection includes 700 memorable cover designs that have been selected by Penguin staff based in offices all over the world, and represents local publishing across the Penguin empire, from its birth in 1935 to the beginnings of the 20th century. Most of the covers here (displayed one-to-a-page, in full colour) are Penguin paperbacks – designed not so much to endure as to immediately grab the reader’s eye. Always striking, often eccentric, occasionally hilarious in retrospect, these cover images, taken together, reflect the spirit and flavour of Penguin over the past 70-plus years. A definite collector’s item. 30,000 YEARS OF ART Phaidon editors Phaidon. HB. $69.95. This impressively bulky book traces the history of world art, from the beginnings of human creativity to today. Crisp colour reproductions of more than 1000 original masterpieces are accompanied by concise commentaries written by leading academics, curators and archaeologists. An incredible variety of pieces are showcased here, drawn from all over the world. There are Spanish cave paintings; an ancient Egyptian ibis coffin; Donatello’s bronze David; an intricately decorated Ottoman basin from Turkey; and Jeff Koons’ Puppy, a sculpture in live flowers, wood and steel. The chronological arrangement makes for easy browsing and reference, and allows the reader to compare artistic creations from around the world at different times in history. Infinitely collectable, this celebration of visual creativity in all its forms can be savoured and admired by art lovers and historians alike. 16 music 1001 CLASSICAL RECORDINGS YOU MUST HEAR BEFORE YOU DIE Matthew Rye (ed.) ABC Books. HB. $65. Among all of the lists it seems we now have to work through before moving on to the great bookshop in the sky, this one could well be the most pleasurable. Marketed as ‘the key to understanding and appreciating the entire body of classical music’, 1001 Classical Recordings includes sonatas, arias and operas, choral works and symphonies – each described in a review that also explains why certain recordings are the most inspiring, artistically successful and satisfying. Handy features include recommended releases, quotations that shed light on the composers and their works, and in-depth biographical information on composers. An indispensable companion to the best of classical music. MUSICOPHILIA Oliver Sacks Picador. PB. Was $32.95, now $27.95. What is it that causes ordinary, unmusical people to develop a sudden obsession with music? Causes someone with no musical talent to become a composer of genius? Musicophilia seeks an explanation for this gift, which can strike seemingly out of nowhere. Take the case of Tony Cicoria, a surgeon who in 1994 was struck by lightning. Within two months, he developed a passion for Chopin, taught himself to play the piano, and was then suddenly overwhelmed by his own compositions in his head. Are such cases the result of brain lesions, or temporal lobe seizures? Or do they defy scientific explanation? Oliver Sacks (The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Awakenings) has written a truly remarkable book, one that also investigates the curative effect that music can have on people suffering disorders such as amnesia, autism and depression. THE PENGUIN GUIDE TO RECORDED CLASSICAL MUSIC 2008 Ivan March et al (ed.) Penguin. PB. $59.95. The new, completely revised edition of this popular reference title surveys the major classical recordings issued and reissued over the past five decades, many of which have dominated the catalogue because of their sheer excellence, irrespective of their recording dates. The most comprehensive edition to date, it indicates key recordings on CD, DVD and enhanced SACD, including those in surround sound. If you want the finest available version of any major classical work (including DVDs of opera and ballet) you will find it listed and acutely assessed in these pages. Ranging from longestablished recordings to the latest releases, this new edition represents the cream of the international repertoire and has all the information you need to select the finest classical music available. ROCKWIZ: VOLUME 2 Brian Nankervis (ed.) Hardie Grant. PB. $29.95. 1001 SONGS: ROCKWIZ EDITION Toby Creswell Hardie Grant. PB. $39.95. True aficionados of rock gravitate towards SBS’s Rockwiz like, well, beer drinkers towards a pub. Hosts Julia Zemiro and Brian Nankervis truly love music, and their knowledge of rock is encyclopaedic, enabling them to effortlessly ad-lib and riff off their contestants. Rockwiz Volume 2, edited by Nankervis himself, brings together all the questions from this year’s season so you can indulge in music trivia in the comfort of your own lounge room. It includes a bonus DVD of the first episode ever filmed (never screened), featuring Ella Hooper and Stephen Cummings. In 1001 Songs: Rockwiz Edition, respected music critic Toby Creswell tells the story of some of the most legendary songs ever written, from Gershwin and Sinatra, to Leonard Cohen to Pulp. Used as a resource for Rockwiz, this is the ultimate in music appreciation. film photography ALFRED GREGORY: PHOTOGRAPHS FROM EVEREST TO AFRICA Lantern. HB. Was $100, now $89.95. Mountaineer and amateur photographer Alfred Gregory took the iconic shot of Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing returning triumphantly to camp, having made the first ascent of Everest. Gregory went on to became a photography professional, and this collection celebrates the muchtravelled photographer’s lifetime of work. The highlight remains Everest’s gelato landscapes, and the sheer exhaustion etched on the faces of the men who climbed them. These are classics of mountain photography. Gregory’s photojournalism portrait of 1960s Blackpool and its holidaying hordes is also memorable. In his accompanying notes, the photographer poignantly observes that the Peruvian villagers he’d photographed would now be wearing jeans and baseball caps, that the glacier he’d captured on Everest has now disappeared. ‘In 1953 I photographed the silence on Everest,’ he writes. ‘It is no longer there.’ A CENTURY OF COLOUR PHOTOGRAPHY Pamela Roberts Viking. HB. $59.95. It’s not necessary to have an interest in photography to appreciate this remarkable book; each page turned reveals a little more of this extraordinary art form that we now take for granted. Beginning with cyanotypes in the 1840s and the first exquisitely hand-coloured images, and progressing to an image of a bullet travelling through a banana and 21st-century digital projections, this collection is a wonderful portfolio of images. The text that accompanies the photographs is fascinating to the lay reader and is an excellent reference for scholars – particularly as there’s also a comprehensive index of the 160 or so photographers that also includes Web links. There’s little concern for photography’s commercial use here; rather, the book focuses on the form as a creative medium milked and manipulated by a broad range of practitioners to achieve their own imaginative ends. CINEMA NOW Andrew Bailey Taschen. Flexi. $90. American film writer Andrew Bailey examines the work and key themes of 60 filmmakers working around the world today, from the best of young Hollywood to the new wave of Asian mavericks to burgeoning auteurs from Europe and Latin America. Watch Pedro Almodóvar at work. Immerse yourself in the stunning imagery of Wong Kar-Wai. Feel the emotional impact of the films of Alejandro González Iñárritu and Carlos Reygadas. Live in the strange worlds of Guy Maddin, Matthew Barney and Tsai MingLiang. Cinema Now is packed with stunning full-colour photos and exclusive on-set photography supplied by the filmmakers. Includes a supplementary DVD containing exclusive short films, extracts, trailers and much more. DONALD THOMSON IN ARNHEM LAND Donald Thomson Miegunyah. PB. Was $29.95, now $12.95. Donald Thomson was a man ahead of his time – an early advocate for Australia’s Aboriginal people and a groundbreaking anthropologist. This book is a record of his travels in Arnhem Land in the 1930s, told in his own words and illustrated with the many superb photographs he took on his travels. His highly personal style of writing (even in government reports) reflects his passionate engagement with his work and makes for a gripping narrative journey, akin to the travel journals of the early explorers. His words and images provide a valuable snapshot of the Yolungu people’s way of life during this period, covering everything from house types and fishing methods, to food sources and ceremonial life. This book includes a comprehensive biographical sketch of this significant historical figure. E.O. HOPPÉ’S AUSTRALIA Graham Howe & Erika Esau Norton. HB. $54.95. EO Hoppé was once the most famous photographer in the world. He snapped celebrities and royalty in Britain, and chronicled America over two years of travel. In 1930, he travelled around Australia, spending 10 months intrepidly trekking between Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide, tropical Queensland, central Australia, Sydney (where the Harbour Bridge was being constructed) and newly built capital Canberra (where his photographs captured the irony of a few grand buildings emerging from paddocks and bush). The wonderful images here have been buried in archives for more than 60 years. Browsing them now, the reader is struck by the relics of the past (Depression-era tin shanties, horses and carts on city streets), the exotic (a camel train in the outback, Aborigines in ceremonial dress) and the familiar (Flinders Street station, Penfolds vineyards). NEPAL Richard I’Anson Lonely Planet. HB. $79.95. World-renowned landscape photographer Richard I’Anson captures the remote beauty of one of the last remaining places still relatively untouched by the West. The crisp peaks of the Himalayas rise majestically above feathery clouds. Classic temples and tiered fields squat below the peaks. Monks in richly coloured robes perform elaborate rituals and celebrations. Market bazaars and narrow village streets pulse with life. All of these images and more spill from the pages of Nepal. Readers will wonder at the expert composition of I’Anson’s photographs, as well as the many and varied attractions of this fascinating country. An absolutely stunning book. What’s the name of the latest novel by the author of Lost in Translation? THE THEATRE OF THE FACE: A HISTORY OF MODERN PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY Max Kozloff Phaidon. HB. $99.95. This superlative volume is an intelligent, informed and lively retrospective of portrait photography over the past century. Author Max Kozloff, one of the world’s leading photography critics, has selected over 300 arresting colour and black-and-white images to represent the genre. He examines the personalities and temperaments behind and before the camera, and the curious relationship between photographer and subject. The role of the photographer as historian and witness is also explored – the ability to store a moment in time as evidence for future audiences, or to explore a new way of seeing things via the photographer’s vision. A range of styles and movements are featured and discussed, including works by Diane Arbus, Dorothea Lange, Cindy Sherman, Henri Cartier-Bresson and Robert Capa. An outstanding achievement. UNTITLED: PORTRAITS OF AUSTRALIAN ARTISTS Sonia Payes Macmillan. HB. $150. Photographer Sonia Payes has travelled extensively to produce this luxurious and hefty volume on Australian art and artists. Sixty artists have been photographed in their studios so that each profile becomes a photo-document of the artist’s life and working methods. Each photographic profile is accompanied by a straight-talking explanatory text by a recognised writer. Payes’ photographs seem flawless and include some wonderful interiors, such as the studios of Jeffrey Smart and William Robinson. In other photos the environment in which the artists live or work is emphasised and images such as Kim Westcott by a reedy dam or Robert Jacks by a red park bench seem to make subtle allusions to the art practice itself. A valuable addition to any arts library. wine food 1080 RECIPES Simone and Inés Ortega Phaidon. HB. $69.95. Spanish cuisine is hot – and we’re not talking about its use of chilli. The list of new cookbooks being released this Christmas is overwhelmingly dominated by titles with an Iberian inclination, and of all of these 1080 Recipes is the most impressive. Even the Spaniards agree – Simone Ortega wrote this hefty tome 30 years ago, and it has been a bestseller in Spain ever since, with millions of copies gracing kitchens around the country. Now Simone’s daughter Inés has joined her to update the book for a modern kitchen and introduce it to a new generation of cooks. You may not end up stealing Michelin stars from El Bulli’s Ferran Adrià, but after dipping into these 1080 traditional recipes a few times you’ll certainly be popular with family and friends. From tapas to ternera (veal) and from crema catalana to calamares en su tinta (squid in its ink), this book is sure to help you click those culinary castanets. EATING FOR ENGLAND: THE DELIGHTS & ECCENTRICITES OF THE BRITISH AT TABLE Nigel Slater Fourth Estate. HB. $35. Nigel Slater is a marvellously witty writer, as evidenced in his acclaimed food memoir Toast. Eating for England is Slater’s glorious portrait of Britain’s often contrary and eccentric culinary culture, where a cream tea may be celebrated as being quintessentially British but is harder to find in the high street than an all-American blueberry muffin. Rather than a narrative, the book is a smorgasbord of bite-sized ruminations on a rich stew of topics, from the Seinfeldian obscure (the difficulty of eating Toblerone) to the profound (the beauty of English churches dressed up for harvest festival) and the profane (Starbucks and McDonald’s). Far from being a gourmet snob, Slater reminds us of the existence of Murray Mints, Jaffa Cakes, Dairylea cheese, Fray Bentos and Tunnocks Teacakes. The perfect book to snack on. There’s a great array of science and nature titles on this summer’s newrelease shelves, including Bob Beale’s If Trees Could Speak: Stories of Australia’s Greatest Trees (Allen & Unwin, PB, $39.95), an evocative portrait of Australia – its history, culture and people – through the stories of its amazing trees. On the other side of the planet, Barbara Kingsolver, author of The Poisonwood Bible, resolved that for a year, she and her family would buy only food raised locally, grow it themselves or learn to live without it. Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: Our Year of Seasonal Eating (Faber, PB, $29.95) is her fascinating account of this undertaking. Talking of eating prompts us to mention Marco Pierre White’s The Devil in the Kitchen (Orion, PB, $27). The überchef may have made cooking look sexy in the late ’80s and ’90s, but his legendary temper made him more enemies than fans – something he recounts in this unputdownable memoir. There’s no doubt that White is a great chef, but does he know how to make traditional Italian preserves? Peter Demaio does, and he has produced a handy collection of preserving recipes based on knowledge passed to him by his Calabrian parents in Preserving the Italian Way (Memoirs Foundation, PB, $39.95). FRENCH LESSONS Justin North Hardie Grant. HB. $59.95. Serious foodies the world over acknowledge that French cooking forms the basis of most modern cuisines. Witness the Iron Chef’s main categories for its gladiatorial cooking tournaments: Japanese, Chinese and, yes, French. But many of us are untrained in the techniques that underpin this cuisine, be they making a good stock, whipping up a velouté or vinaigrette, concocting a confit or mastering the dreaded soufflé. New Zealander Justin North worked for Raymond Blanc in England before moving to Sydney and eventually opening his own restaurant, Bécasse. Here, he demystifies classic French dishes, explaining the techniques and providing easy-to-follow recipes that all of us should be able to master. The book’s photographs are a feast unto themselves. MEDIEVAL CUISINE OF THE ISLAMIC WORLD Lilia Zaouali University of California Press. HB. $44.95. Part history and part cookbook, Lilia Zaouali’s investigation into the development and spread of classic Arab cuisine makes absolutely fascinating reading. In his foreword, Charles Perry, author of Medieval Arab Cookery, notes that there are more cookbooks in Arabic from before 1400 than in the rest of the world’s languages put together – which explains the Islamic world’s incredibly refined and elegant cuisines. The first half of the book gives cultural background and culinary context; the second half gathers a selection of original recipes drawn from medieval culinary sources along with 31 contemporary North African recipes that evoke the flavours of the Middle Ages. Impress your friends by whipping up Moroccan bestilla (pigeon pie) – it and other recipes are easy to make and oh-so-delicious! MAGGIE’S HARVEST Maggie Beer Lantern. HB. Was $125, now $99.95. We hazard a guess that Stephanie Alexander might be just a wee bit nervous about the publication of this encyclopaedic and sumptuously presented book by her friend and fellow high-profile cook, Maggie Beer. And that’s because this publication could well give The Cook’s Companion a run for its money in the ‘kitchen bible’ stakes. Maggie’s Harvest has an even more attractive presentation than the Companion (is this the most gorgeous cover ever?) and an equally intuitive organization (first by season and then by alphabetised ingredient). These are the recipes your mum or grandma might have cooked, albeit sometimes refined by artisan and imported ingredients. Maggie’s enthusiasm for fresh produce and unfussy recipes shines through the pages, and her writing is both engaging and authoritative. Fabulous. Geeks everywhere will rejoice at the publication of Geekspeak: Why Life + Mathematics = Happiness by Graham Tattersall (Fourth Estate, PB, $28). Being marketed as the quirky offspring of Steven Levitt’s Freakonomics, it melds ingenious statistical analysis with edifying trivia to explain away some curious facts of life. The summer holidays are always a great time to enjoy some travel writing, and this year there are loads of new titles to choose from. After his writing debut Kitchen Confidential, gonzo chef Anthony Bourdain went on to write more foodrelated books and host a travel programme on the Discovery Channel. The entertaining book of the television series, No Reservations: Around the World on an Empty Stomach (Bloomsbury, PB, $35), sees him travelling through Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas in search of great meals. Equally entertaining is Peter Moore’s Vroom by the Sea (Bantam, PB, $24.95), his follow-up to the bestselling Vroom with a View. In it, Moore takes a trip along the Italian coast on Marcello, a Vespa that’s the same shade of orange as Donatella Versace. He catches up with some of the characters from the first book and meets plenty of new ones along the way.Moore loves Italy like Australian Ellie Nielsen loves Paris – 17 MODERN ITALIAN FOOD Stefano de Pieri Hardie Grant. PB. Was $39.95, now $14.95. Stefano de Pieri loves food – particularly of the Italian variety. And this attractive book features his modern takes on classic dishes such as yellow polenta with braised tripe, baccalà mantecato (creamed cod) and tortellini with prosciutto and chicken. Earl Carter’s wonderful photographs convey the simple allure of these dishes perfectly, and simple really is the operative word here – you won’t need to slave for hours over a hot stove or needlessly fuss with presentation to impress people with these dishes. There are interesting chapters on Italian wine and cheese, as well as a chapter dedicated to preserves. Quite possibly the greatest bargain in this year’s catalogue – grab a copy while stocks last. that is, with a passion. Nielsen’s Buying a Piece of Paris: Finding a Key to the City of Love (Scribe, PB, $29.95) is both a love song to Paris and an entertaining account of buying some of its real estate. For some travel tales from the world’s finest writers, grab a copy of The Conde Nast Traveler Book of Unforgettable Journeys, edited by Klara Glowczewska (Penguin, PB, $24.95). It includes Russell Banks writing on the Everglades, Francine Prose exploring the secrets of Prague and Robert Hughes taking us on a tour of Italy. It’s a perfect gift for the armchair travellers in your life. After reading Tony Kevin’s Walking the Camino: A Modern Pilgrimage to Santiago (Scribe, PB, $32.95), armchair travellers may well be inspired to set off on this historic pilgrimage route themselves. Kevin beautifully captures the flavour of what it was like to walk the Camino, and includes observations and anecdotes about the nature of contemporary Spain. His book is also a profound personal meditation on the nature of modern life. Uncommissioned Art: An A–Z of Australian Graffiti (Miegunyah, HB, $39.95) is Christine Dew’s comprehensive documentation of Australian graffiti since the 1970s. Lavishly illustrated and very reasonably priced, it will make a perfect Christmas gift for anyone interested in art and popular culture. Do Ants Have Arseholes? (Sphere, PB, $19.95) by Jon Butler and Bruno Vincent is bloody ridiculous – but very funny. A silly collection of questions taken from the popular letters page of the fictional Old Git magazine, it tackles questions we’ve all wanted to have answered at some stage or another (eg, where exactly is the middle of nowhere?). Equally silly is Nosepicking for Pleasure (Roland Flicket, Simon & Schuster, PB, $14.95). It’s sure to be a major hit with adolescent boys (or those with their adolescent boy still trapped inside). What Pets Do While You’re at Work (Bev West, Scribner, PB, $14.95), an album of caught-in-the-act photos your beloved furry ones never meant you to see, will appeal to animal lovers with a sense of humour. AJ Jacob describes himself as Jewish by birth but not by inclination and The Year of Living Biblically (Heinemann, PB, $35) is his hilarious account of a year spent trying to live up to exactly what the Good Book says. Avoiding shellfish was easy, but stoning adulterers proved a little more difficult – and potentially controversial… The Reverend Guppy’s Aquarium (Philip Dodd, Random House, HB, $39.95) is one of the cleverest titles we’ve seen in the shop for a while. It explores the lives of an astonishingly diverse range of people who happen to have one thing in common: for better or worse, they have left their names deeply embedded in the language and consciousness of future generations. And finally: humour, a love of adventure and a lavish application of nostalgia made The Dangerous Book for Boys a bestseller last Christmas, and we’re pleased to see a dedicated Australian edition (Conn & Hal Iggulden, HarperCollins, HB, $45) hitting the shelves this Christmas. food 18 MOVIDA: SPANISH CULINARY ADVENTURES Frank Camorra & Richard Cornish Murdoch. PB. $45. Frank Camorra runs Melbourne’s most popular Spanish restaurant, and has titled this book in its honour. Like the food served up at MoVida, there’s an emphasis here on simplicity; Camorra encourages home cooks to buy the best local produce available, be led by the season and enjoy the cooking process. There’s a huge array of tapas dishes to prepare as well as loads of mains, including a chapter on rice (if you’ve ever wanted to cook paella, this book will show you how to do it properly) and one on smallgoods (you can even impress guests with some home-made chorizo). With plenty of information about Spanish ingredients, cooking methods and culinary traditions, MoVida captures the essence and exuberance of Spanish cuisine. MY CHINA: A FEAST FOR ALL THE SENSES Kylie Kwong Lantern. HB. $79.95. As much a travelogue as a cookbook, My China recounts Kylie Kwong’s trip through China exploring its food and culture. Here, the popular Australian chef really hits her cookbook-writing stride, eschewing the occasionally infelicitous flirtations with other cuisines in her previous books and concentrating on what she cooks best – truly great Chinese dishes. She travels around eight provinces of China, pops into Tibet and Hong Kong and samples many extraordinary meals along the way. There are loads of recipes here as well as a banquet of photographs and cultural tidbits. Truly delicious. SECRETS OF THE RED LANTERN Pauline Nguyen Murdoch. HB. Was $59.95, now $49.95. With Secrets of the Red Lantern: Stories and Vietnamese Recipes from the Heart, Sydney chef Pauline Nguyen has written an unusual and very moving cookbook/memoir. Nguyen’s family came to Australia as refugees from Vietnam in the late 1970s, and here she recounts the story of forging her new life in Cabramatta. Growing up with emotionally distant restaurateur parents was clearly difficult, but Nguyen acknowledges the influence her mother and father have had on her life and career, and in many ways this book is a tribute to them. If you’re a devotee of Vietnamese cuisine and are keen to emulate some of the classic dishes in your own kitchen, this richly designed book will show you how. A delight. TURQUOISE: A CHEF’S TRAVELS IN TURKEY Greg & Lucy Malouf Hardie Grant. HB. $69.95. Greg Malouf is one of Australia’s best known chefs, celebrated for his ‘modern Middle Eastern’ style, which draws on his Lebanese heritage. He and Lucy Malouf have co-authored three bestselling food books; here, they travel to Turkey to explore an exciting yet under-appreciated cuisine, while immersing themselves in a great culture. This gorgeous book combines two of life’s greatest pleasures – travel and food – blending travelogue and recipes with inspiring photographs. Some of the recipes are authentic, collected from locals along their travels, but many more are Greg’s original interpretations of classic recipes, inspired by his experiences. Turquoise proves that Turkish food is so much more than the ubiquitous eggplant or lamb kebabs – it’s a rich and varied seasonal cuisine with an inherent reverence for its ingredients. What’s wrong with Tinker Bell? MY FRENCH VUE: BISTRO COOKING AT HOME Shannon Bennett Simon & Schuster. HB. $49.95. Melbourne-based chef Shannon Bennett follows up his bestselling tour of French cuisine, My Vue, with this exquisitely presented, seductively simple guide to French cooking at home. The owner of Vue de Monde presents easy-to-cook modern French food for the home. The secret of this book (and the recipes within) lies in the details. Simon Griffiths’ sumptuous photography illustrates the enticing elegance of the perfect sardines on toast, duck salad, green peppercorn sauce and warm pistachio cupcakes. The ingredients here are easy to obtain, the techniques familiar, the instructions easy to follow; this is one beautiful cookbook that won’t linger on the bookshelves – it’s sure to find its place on the kitchen bench, to be used over and over again. NIGELLA EXPRESS Nigella Lawson Chatto & Windus. HB. Was $69.95, now $59.95. It’s a truism to say that most of us lead busy lives and don’t have time to fuss around in the kitchen. Here, the kitchen goddess helps us all by showing how to whip up delicious meals in a hurry. The number of photographs of Nigella is annoying, but the recipes themselves are varied and universally pleasing – they are particularly good for children or inexperienced cooks to try as the instructions are clear and simple and each recipe is accompanied by a full-page colour photograph showing presentation. There are chapters on giving parties, cooking Mexican food, zooming through Christmas preparations and concocting comfort food. With its short-cuts, tips on time-saving and guide to hitting the kitchen running, Nigella Express gives the term ‘fast food’ an alluringly different meaning. THE WEEKEND COOK Matthew Evans Random House. PB. $34.95. NEVER ORDER CHICKEN ON A MONDAY Matthew Evans Random House. PB. $34.95. It seems only yesterday that Matthew Evans began his recipe column in the Good Weekend. In fact, he’s been delighting us with his simple but tasty recipes for a decade. The Weekend Cook is a diminutive but useful ‘best of’ collection from the GW column. There are loads of breakfast and brunch ideas (he’s clearly a late riser) and a melange of predominantly Italian and traditional Anglo recipes (everything from soft polenta with braised mushroom ragout to shepherd’s pie). Evans is as good at writing about food as he is at cooking it, something that’s clear in Never Order Chicken on a Monday, his just-published kitchen memoir. Clearly aspiring to be the Antipodean Anthony Bourdain, he writes compellingly about his apprentice days in the kitchens of two Canberra restaurants and his five-year tenure as the chief restaurant reviewer with the Sydney Morning Herald. THE WORLD ATLAS OF WINE: 6TH EDITION Hugh Johnson & Jancis Robinson Michell Beazley. HB. $79.95. Written by the world’s most authoritative wine duo, the new edition of this essential reference reflects current realities in the world of wine. Each of its 200 detailed maps has been thoroughly researched and updated, with pages devoted to the New World showing a lot of changes – three new maps have been added to California (Rutherford, Oakville, Stags Leap), three to Australia (Barossa Valley, McLaren Vale, Limestone Coast), two to New Zealand (Central Otago, Martinborough) and one to South Africa (Constantia). In addition, the South American section receives a complete revamp. In Europe the dynamism of the new Old World is in evidence, with Sicily, the Douro, Greece and Germany all receiving extra pages. philosophy THE ATHEIST’S BIBLE Joan Konner Hardie Grant. HB. $24.95. In the wake of a recent deluge of books propounding and promoting atheism, there now comes The Atheist’s Bible – a nifty little number that collects together the atheistic thoughts of a host of dead and living thinkers. From ancients such as Aristotle, through to 18th-century luminaries such as Voltaire, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson, and on to 20th-century figures from Woodrow Wilson to Frank Sinatra, Joan Konner’s book provides hundreds of quotes from those who have not only questioned religion, but dared to speak their minds. Whether you agree with them, or think that they come across as being as arrogant and intolerant as the religious folk they deride, their thoughts make for very interesting reading. THE HUMAN TOUCH Michael Frayn Faber. HB. Was $59.95, now $19.95. Would the universe really exist if we weren’t here to perceive it? Well, perhaps it would – but we can help give it meaning. In a work of philosophy on a grand scale, Michael Frayn looks at the part humans have played in shaping an understanding of the universe. From the Renaissance to Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein, he covers every aspect of the human experience. If the big bang was the beginning of the universe, what was there before it? What about cause and effect – is everything linked to everything? And what about space, time and numbers – if we humans didn’t know about them, would they matter? Ruminating and speculating on everything under the sun, The Human Touch will be welcomed by all lovers of in-depth, heavy-duty philosophy. THE PORTABLE ATHEIST Christopher Hitchens (ed.) Da Capo. PB. $35. The fiercely opinionated, prodigiously talented Christopher Hitchens is famous for his passionate opposition to religion in all its forms. In 2007, he joined fellow atheist Richard Dawkins on the bestseller lists with God is Not Great. Here, he continues his argument with the help of fellow travellers, old and new. He presents a selection of almost 50 writings on the subject – many of them excerpts from longer texts – designed to inspire the interested reader to follow the most intriguing trains of thought further, while benefiting from a varied, holistic approach to the topic. Hitchens himself is in fine form in his lacerating introduction; other contributors include John Stuart Mill, Karl Marx, Philip Larkin, Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Salman Rushdie. A SECULAR AGE Charles Taylor Harvard University Press. HB. $69.95 It’s common now, at least in the West, to think of society as secular: we no longer belong to a single faith, but have wildly different views about meaning, religion, spirituality and materiality. What are the implications for our communities? How has secularism changed us? How did it all come about? Philosopher Charles Taylor offers a detailed historical perspective and gradually unearths a fresh and insightful understanding of the many-faceted ideas and beliefs we harbour. His chapter headings say it all: The Impersonal Order; The Dark Abyss of Time; The Expanding Universe of Unbelief; Religion Today; Cross Pressures; Dilemmas. This is a substantial, absorbing work that will inspire readers to examine their own ideas about what it means to live in this radical new era. travel THE ASIA BOOK Lonely Planet. HB. Was $55, now $49.95. THE AFRICA BOOK Lonely Planet. HB. Was $55, now $49.95. These stunning books each showcase a continent – region by region, country by country – using lavish full-colour photography accompanied by informed and fascinating text. The entries cover landscape, potted histories, myths and legends, random facts, film and writing set in or about the place, trademarks, wildlife, marketplace, and the urban scene. The reader discovers information as diverse as where exactly the famous phrase ‘Dr Livingstone, I presume?’ was uttered, when and where the dodos lived, the best ecotourism spots and how to read a newspaper while floating in the Dead Sea. These books promise hours of browsing pleasure, whether it’s planning your next trip or simply taking in the wonders of some of the most exotic places on earth from the comfort of your own armchair. BRINGING TUSCANY HOME Frances Mayes & Edward Mayes Random House. HB. Was $49.95, now $14.95. After Frances Mayes fell in love with Tuscany and Bramasole, millions of readers read of the experience through her three bestselling memoirs. Here, Frances and her husband Edward share the essence of Tuscan life as they have lived it, offering specific ideas and inspiration to bring the beauty and spirit of Tuscany into everyone’s home decor, meals, gardens and entertaining. This sumptuously illustrated book will help you do everything from cultivating a Tuscan garden to selecting the best Italian vino and baking delicious biscotti. In addition, it will help to make the most of a trip to Tuscany, as Frances also writes about her favourite hill towns, restaurants, small museums and other places. CHASING BOHEMIA Carmen Michael Scribe. PB. $32.95. Travel industry executive Carmen Michael landed in Rio de Janeiro with a jaded ‘seen everything’ air. South America was the only continent she hadn’t ‘done’ and she planned to stay only a few days; instead, she stayed for four years, shedding her cynicism and rediscovering the passionate traveller within. This is a sparkling, charismatic, unpredictable ride through a wildly disparate Brazil, led by a writer as likely to travel alone to a macho-fuelled out-of-town rodeo as to turn up at the door of a fabulous mansion and wheedle her way into living there. Chasing Bohemia brings alive the beaches and slums, the decadent bohemian district, the frivolous high-society gatherings and the hedonistic culture of Brazil. DEER HUNTING WITH JESUS Joe Bageant Scribe. PB. $32.95. This marvellous blend of reportage, political commentary and storytelling attempts to articulate the experience of white working-class Americans, and to explain why their vote has been so successfully captured by the Republican party – against their own interests. Joe Bageant writes about his home town of Winchester, Virginia, using it as a microcosm to represent small towns like it across America: fundamentalist Christian, beer swilling, gun loving, television addicted, hard-working and perilously deep in debt. He sits in the local pub, visits gun shows, chats to his preacher brother and old friends who still work at the local Rubbermaid factory, and talks frankly with one of the town’s mortgage brokers. Bageant is like a cross between Michael Moore (with less ego), Studs Terkel and Barbara Ehrenreich, and this masterful book is affectionate and angry all at once. A HOUSE IN FEZ Suzanna Clarke Viking Australia. HB. $49.95. When Suzanna Clarke, current arts editor of the Brisbane Courier, and her husband Sandy McCutcheon, formerly of ABC Radio National, first travelled to Morocco in 2002, little did they think they would end up buying and painstakingly restoring a house there. The idea was preposterously 19th century, as one of their friends dismissively commented, and their lives were well and truly based in Brisbane, not in the Maghreb. But the medieval medina in Fez, Morocco’s most historically important city, worked its magic on them and soon they were the proud owners of a 300-yearold, architecturally significant riad (traditional courtyard house). This book tells the story of their painstaking restoration of the house, and of Suzanna and Sandy’s growing understanding of the Moroccan people and their wonderfully rich culture. LONELY PLANET BLUELIST 2008 Lonely Planet. PB. $34.95. Now in its third year, Lonely Planet’s Bluelist annual offers a smattering of ‘go-to’ destinations for 2008. The editors have searched the world for the most intriguing destinations: some of them timeless in their attractions (Bologna, Italy; Fez, Morocco), others off the beaten track (Papua New Guinea, Yemen). But don’t go looking for London, Sydney or New York – the idea of this travel taster is to offer experiences you might not have thought of yourself, not to go over the most obvious traveller pitstops. The feature on travel through the world’s Islamic countries (by noted Muslim writer Waleed Aly) goes beyond the stereotypes to reveal a diverse, culturally rich range of possibilities. And the excellent lists of risky pursuits, travel fads, green travel experiences and mythic journeys will whet anyone’s travel appetite. NEW EUROPE Michael Palin Weidenfeld & Nicolson. PB. $49.95. The ever-affable Michael Palin is now almost as well known for his BBC travel documentaries as for his Monty Python work. This beautifully produced, copiously illustrated book is the companion to his most recent BBC adventure. Palin’s latest itinerary is both exotic and familiar – a journey through Europe’s former Communist countries, from the newly fashionable Croatian coast to the Ukraine to East Germany. He talks to locals, government officials, celebrities and tour guides, capturing both centuries-old and recent history, as well as the vibrant contemporary culture that characterises each destination. The shadows of the Iron Curtain, the Holocaust and the often-fraught transition to capitalism are ever-present, but this is also a journey of discovery and celebration as the new millennium dawns on a new, united Europe. Intriguing and engaging. RHYTHMS OF THE KIMBERLEY Russell Guého Fremantle Press. PB. $35. This gorgeous book takes the reader on a journey through the breathtaking contrasts of Western Australia’s Kimberley. The beautiful illustrations pulse with colour: rich red sands, shocking blue skies, the luscious pastels of underwater anemones. Guého records the seasonal events that measure the march of time through the region, including massive tides, cataclysmic cyclones, the flowering plants and the impact of exotics on the environment. Tim Winton provides the foreword, and praises the book for ‘its sense of intimacy and its gentle guidance’. A homage to the natural beauty of this dramatic place. 19 SOFFRITTO Lucio Galletto & David Dale Allen & Unwin. HB. Was $49.95, now $44.95. In Italy in 1938, 16-year-old Anna Galletto ran away with Gino Guelfi, a charming gelato-maker she had met at a local dance. Thirty-seven years later, their nephew Lucio arrived to work at the restaurant his father, Anna and Gino ran near Rome. In what was becoming a family trait, he met a beautiful girl in the restaurant bar and ended up running away to Australia with her and becoming a successful restaurateur. In Soffrito (the term for the core ingredients from which a great dish is built), David Dale traces Lucio’s journey back to his birthplace Lunigiana, in northwest Italy, on a mission to understand the Ligurian family, food and culture that are at the core of both his career and his identity. THROUGH THE CHILDREN’S GATE Adam Gopnik Quercus. PB. $29.95. Early in Through the Children’s Gate, Adam Gopnik writes that his young daughter Olivia, when riding in New York cabs, always demanded to sit before the schematic map of Manhattan on the back of the cab’s front seat, while the city sped by beside her. ‘This book is like that map’, he tells us. ‘New York is always somewhere else, across the river or on the back of the front seat.’ In a serious of beautifully written sketches, he captures the essence of a city so diverse that it can only be understood piece by piece: through the intricacies and absurdities of apartment-hunting; the decline and fall of psychoanalysis; and the certainties of daily life that remain, and always will remain, in the post-9/11 world. TO HELLAS AND BACK Lana Penrose Viking. PB. $29.95. This Australian 30-something’s memoir about living in the sun-soaked Mediterranean has more than a whiff of ‘Almost French in Greece’ about it. Lana Penrose was working for MTV and living in an apartment with harbour views when her boyfriend was offered his dream job in Athens. She was more than happy to follow him, imagining a glamorous life of leisure. Obstacles are to be expected in this genre: language barriers, culture shock, encounters with eccentric locals. All those ingredients are here, but there’s more than that, too. Lana tells it like it is, rather than filter her experiences through rose-coloured glasses. To Hellas and Back: My Modern-Day Greek Tragedy is raw, darkly funny and often poignant, likeably capturing the realities of adjusting to life in a new country. TRADING IN MEMORIES: TRAVELS THROUGH A SCAVENGER’S FAVOURITE PLACES Barbara Hodgson Chronicle. HB. $29.95. Sometimes the flimsiest souvenirs provide us with the richest memories of our travels. Canadian author Barbara Hodgson collects fragments of people’s material lives when she travels: lost animal posters, bundles of letters and photographs, bills and receipts. Her favourite cities for collecting ephemera are Brussels over Amsterdam, Naples over Rome, Los Angeles rather than New York. The result of her foraging in dusty bookshops and flea markets is this sumptuous little book of curiosities. She guides us through London’s cemeteries, the markets of Paris, Budapest’s bookstores, the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul and the souqs of Damascus and Aleppo – and she also reminds us that scavenging for cast-offs closer to home can be the best experience of all. humour 20 BORAT’S GUIDE TO THE U, S AND A Borat Sagdiyev Boxtree. HB. Was $35, now $29.95. Sacha Baron-Cohen’s satirical superstar creation is now an author – despite his attachment to a form of English that is not so much broken as obliterated. This dangerously funny book doubles as a guide to the US and to Borat’s Kazakhstan. Did you know that the Americans have stolen the Eiffel Tower and the cities of London, Paris and Venice and moved them to Las Vegas? Or that Mount Rushmore was created when ‘four terrible sex criminals were punished by being turned into stone by gypsy curse’? Of course, in Kazakhstan, sex criminals are celebrated...and brothers and sisters play sex games, persecution of Jews is a national sport and women are ‘milked’ to make cheese. Not recommended for those with weak stomachs. THE CHASER ANNUAL 2007 The Chaser Text. PB. $27. George W Bush waged a war on terror, but only The Chaser has had the vision and courage to wage a War On Everything. This year, no target has been spared in The Chaser Annual 2007: The Other Secret. The hit list is comprehensive: John Howard, Telstra, the Pope, the Dalai Lama, Mother Teresa, Kim Beazley, Simone Warne and – most of all – those annoying people who write feeble hyperbole in TV press kits. Here, the team behind CNNNN and The Chaser Decides have done what they do best – confronted and lampooned key players from the world of politics, business, religion, media and culture. THE RIDDLES OF THE SPHINX David Bodycombe Penguin. PB. $26.95. The full title of this book is The Riddles of the Sphinx…and the puzzles, word games, brainteasers, conundrums, maps, mysteries, codes and ciphers that have baffled, entertained and confused the world over the last 100 years. It’s a grandiose title for a very clever idea – examining the most fascinating stories behind the world’s most popular varieties of brainteasers. Why are they so popular, who are the people that have developed them, and where have they come from? Skipping from Lewis Carroll’s word ladders to how the Times crossword won WWII, The Riddles of the Sphinx is the bible for anyone who likes a brain teaser. SIGNSPOTTING 2 Doug Lansky Lonely Planet. PB. $19.95. After even the most cursory flick through this laugh-outloud little book, it’s clear why the first Signspotting deserved this sequel. World traveller Doug Lansky has a quirky hobby: he collects inadvertently funny signs. For many, the humour comes from mistranslation from other languages (‘soft fried crap’ instead of ‘crab’) or instances where the author is obviously unaware of double entendres (the ‘Fat Ho Elderly Center’). However, the funniest – and most numerous – examples here come from cultural oddities in English-speaking countries. A sign in Idaho reads ‘Warning to Tourists: Do Not Laugh at the Natives’. A crisis counselling phone at a suicide spot on the Golden Gate Bridge is out of order. In Venice Beach, a notice implores ‘Host & Dishwasher Needed: Live the Dream’. Wonderful. FREE ORDER SERVICE gift THE BAREFOOT INVESTOR Scott Pape Pluto. PB. $25.95. A refreshingly no-bullshit guide to finance, for people who are more concerned about living the life they want than getting rich quick. This is the revised and updated version of the original bestseller that launched the career of author Scott Pape, now a respected national media commentator on financial affairs. The Barefoot Investor is written in direct, straighttalking language, and its message is as gimmick-free as its prose. Don’t borrow to buy things you can’t afford and don’t need. Make sure you put aside money to pay your bills and expenses, plus a little bit extra for investing – then go and enjoy yourself with what’s left over. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Invest in what you know. Simple, sensible and eminently logical. THE DARING BOOK FOR GIRLS Andrea J. Buchanan & Miriam Peskowitz Harper. HB. Was $45, now $37.95. Why should boys have all the fun? Hot on the heels of the bestselling The Dangerous Book for Boys comes this manual for everything that girls need to know. Female heroes in history, secret note-passing skills, science projects, friendship bracelets, double dutch, cats cradle, the perfect cartwheel or the eternal mystery of what boys are thinking – this book has it all, even a guide to giggling at sleepovers! Whether readers consider themselves tomboys, girly-girls or a little bit of both, this book is every girl’s invitation to adventure. TIGGER ON THE COUCH Laura James HarperCollins. PB. $23. ‘The more she read, the more she realised that Neverland was indeed a dysfunctional community.’ These are the words of Laura James, author of Tigger on the Couch. A lover of fairytales as a child, she grew up to wonder why there was so much suffering amongst these characters – and with her interest in psychology, she suspected there could be a psychological reason. Viewed from the therapist’s couch, it is clear that Tinker Bell has Borderline Personality Disorder, Eeyore is dysphoric, and that Tigger could do with a good dose of Ritalin. With short, snappy segments on mental and personality disorders, this book provides interesting insights into the reasons behind these characters’ oddities – and might help you diagnose a few individuals suffering similar problems in the real world! WHEN WE WERE FIFTY Christopher Matthew John Murray. HB. $29.95. ‘At 50 the world can suddenly seem everyone’s oyster. One is still young enough to rediscover long-forgotten pleasures.’ So says Christopher Matthew in his introduction to When We Were Fifty – and he has written a book of witty and irreverent poems to prove it. Not for him the business of encouraging 50somethings to become dull, responsible, respectable citizens who spend their days making money and finally finding time to read the Iliad. As one poem puts it: ‘I’ve better things to do all week/Than waste my time on some old Greek’. In his hands, 50 becomes a time to run off to France, indulge in plastic surgery, take up flamenco dancing or make a humiliating spectacle at one’s birthday bash…the possibilities are endless! Our special order service is free, fast and efficient – if we don’t have it, we’ll get it for you! BEING ELIZABETH BENNET Emma Campbell Webster Atlantic. HB. $29.95. Witty, wisecracking and infectiously alluring: that describes Elizabeth Bennet, one of the most admired literary heroines ever. It also describes this beautifully presented little book, which gives readers the chance to dwell in an alternate universe (at least, for a while) and imagine themselves into the shoes of Elizabeth herself. This choose-your-own adventure for grown-ups invites you to enter the world of Pride and Prejudice and make your own decisions at various crossroads along the way – which will, of course, affect the development of the story and your chances of landing the delectable Mr Darcy (surely every thinking woman’s dream husband!). As you go, you can earn and lose points in the categories of Accomplishments, Intelligence, Confidence, Connections and Fortune. Great fun for Austen fans! GALLOP! Rufus Butler Seder Workman. HB. $19.95. This quirky picture book combines retro appeal with state-of-the-art animation technology to create the feel of an oldfashioned kinetoscope within its pages. Each page is adorned with a seemingly simple black-and-white illustration of an animal or object behind a vertical screen. As the reader moves the opposite page, the illustration comes to life, making a horse gallop, a rooster strut, a chimp swing and one shining star sparkle. The illustrations in Gallop! are each accompanied by a chirpy, sing-song line of text aimed at the young reader (‘Can you gallop like a horse?’), but the book is equally likely to appeal to admirers of all ages, who will be seduced by its magical inner workings. SIDNEY NOLAN CALENDAR & CD Art Gallery of NSW, Special Price $49.95. LITTLE THINGS SUSTAINABLE LIVING DIARY 2008 Andrew Cooper Text. PB. $24.95. Two of our most popular Christmas products from last year are available in 2008 editions! The annual calendar released by the Art Gallery of NSW is always gorgeous, but this year’s effort is the most striking to date. It accompanies the Sidney Nolan retrospective that recently opened at the gallery, and features topquality reproductions of 12 major works. There’s also a CD titled Sidney Nolan: A Painter’s Journey in Music. Sold separately, the calendar costs $27.95 and the CD costs $30. We’re also pleased to welcome back The Little Things Sustainable Living Diary, every page of which suggests little things you can do at home and in the office to become more sustainable. Both products make great gifts, but be warned: once you’ve taken them home to wrap, you’re going to want to keep them for yourself! DOGS Catherine Johnson Phaidon. HB. $24.95. This charming collection features anonymous snapshots of dogs from the turn of the century to the early 1950s. See hundreds of dogs in all kinds of settings: under the Christmas table or in the sea; posing for the family portrait or being squeezed tightly by an overenthusiastic toddler; a Chihuahua in a tea cup or a Great Dane standing as tall as its young owner. With its charming days-gone-by aesthetic and its cute-but-never-cloying subject matter, Dogs is sure to be judged best in show by dog lovers this Christmas. gift SOCK AND GLOVE MIYAKO KANAMORI WEIDENFELD & NICOLSON. PB. $19.95. This highly original craft book embraces the art of recycling: it’s all about using cast-off socks and gloves to create gorgeous soft toys. It’s not surprising that something this endearingly off-beat originated in Tokyo, home of ‘cute’. A menagerie of 16 soft friends, including a dog, a bear, a rabbit and a mouse, tell the story of their creation in a bright, attractive photo montage, followed by step-by-step instructions on how the reader can create their own sock-and-glove gang. Adorable, practical and easy to recreate at home, this is an ideal craft book for beginners, as well as for enthusiasts looking for something a bit different. THE 700 HABITS OF HIGHLY INEFFECTIVE PEOPLE Jonathan Biggins MUP. PB. $24.95. So you’ve always meant to master the seven habits of highly effective people, but never got around to it? Jonathan Biggins has come up with an easy answer – and provided you with 700 tips on what not to do. It’s a system he calls Passive Improvement: ‘a lifestyle enhancement program specifically designed for those who simply cannot be bothered’. Not only does Biggins show that ineffectiveness isn’t nearly as bad as it’s made out to be, he goes further, showing how truly dangerous effective people can be (they’ve been responsible for lead petrol, CFCs, military disasters etc). Sensible, serious people who believe in hard work will be mortified by this book – but everyone else will love it! FREE GIFTWRAP 21 THE SECRET PULSE OF TIME Stefan Klein Scribe. PB. $30. Science journalist Stefan Klein is expert at making seemingly arcane subjects endlessly fascinating. His bestselling The Science of Happiness was a nononsense guide to leading a happier life, based on sound scientific evidence. The Secret Pulse of Time examines how time works – both as a natural phenomenon and as a human concept. By answering questions like ‘why does time fly when we’re happy?’ and by looking at how we make use of our time, he subtly carries on the work he began in the first book. His goal is not simply to share interesting facts, or even to lead us to a greater understanding of how time works – it’s to give us insights into how we can master time in our daily lives, enabling us to survive the often hectic pace of contemporary life. SOFTIES Viking. PB. $29.95. Experienced crafters and curious newcomers alike will be entranced by this gorgeous book of patterns and instructions for making plush toys. This is new-millennium craft: the 22 patterns have been drawn from bloggers around the world, and their blog addresses are included at the top of each entry. This makes the book more than just 22 patterns – it’s a starting point for exploring the world of craft. Perhaps it also contributes to the delightfully individual and quirky nature of the toys here, made using a variety of materials, from op-shop retro fabrics to oldfashioned felt. Softies combines colourful, inviting photographs, easyto-follow instructions and straightforward patterns to create a winning – and impressive – package. We’ll giftwrap all books on request when you organise delivery through us! THE WAYS OF THE BUSHWALKER Melissa Harper UNSWP. PB. $32.95. This endearingly quirky history of bushwalking in Australia traces the pastime of trekking for leisure in the bush back to the early days of settlement. The enthusiastic letters home from First Fleet surgeon George Worgan describing the pleasures of his ‘rambles’ in the ‘Woods’ are at odds with the usual (and, we’re sure, more common) experience of settlers enduring rather than enjoying a hostile and alien landscape. Melissa Harper has uncovered a series of often eccentric characters throughout the past 200 years who carried on the English tradition of ‘rambling’ in the new environment of the Australian outdoors, often driven by a love of adventure and exploration as much as an appreciation of the natural beauty of the bush. A delightful, beautifully presented book that celebrates one of life’s simpler pleasures. THE BALL IS ROUND: A GLOBAL HISTORY OF FOOTBALL David Goldblatt Penguin. PB. $35. Here, David Goldblatt describes the rise of football (soccer to us) from a chaotic folk ritual to a sector of the globalentertainment industry. This is the story of players and managers, fans and owners, clubs and national teams. But it’s also a history of states and markets, money and power. And, above all, how all these forces interact. The book looks at the careers of Pele and Maradona, Puskas and George Best; as well as the histories of the Wunderteam and the incomparable Hungarians, the anti-futbol of Estudiantes de la Plata and the futbol arte of Brazil 1970. It also explores the cultural meanings and political uses of football in Peron’s Argentina, Adenauer’s West Germany, Stalin’s Soviet Union and Mussolini’s Italy. A BOOK OF UNCOMMON PRAYER Theo Dorgan (ed.) Penguin. HB. $29.95. This collection of spiritual and devotional texts is drawn from both inside and outside the limits of the world’s religious traditions. It is organised with attention to the occasions of prayer, prayerful thought and meditation. In an age marked at once by religious violence and the falling away of orthodox religious observance in the West, here is a book that recognises – and demonstrates – the universality of prayer. THE GREEN AND GOLDEN AGE Gideon Haigh Black Inc. PB. $32. Gideon Haigh is one of Australia’s finest journalists, full stop. He writes ably and engagingly about a range of subjects, from business to books. But his passion, and the area in which he truly shines, is cricket. This selection gathers together his most memorable cricket writing over the past 10 years, drawn from a range of original sources, including The Age, The Guardian, The Bulletin and Wisden. Fans of both cricket and good writing are in for a treat: this book showcases Haigh’s wealth of knowledge, experience and insight about the game, and his formidable talent in capturing it on the page. The Green and Golden Age reports on the great players, the big matches, the seedy scandals and the great rivalries of international cricket – and on Australia’s continuing dominance of the game. As a special Summer Reading Guide offer, you’ll receive a free copy of the same author’s All Out: The Ashes 2006–2007 (Black Inc, PB, usually $26.95) when you purchase this title. There are loads of great kids’ titles on offer this summer. Many are reviewed on the following two pages, but there are plenty of other titles worthy of a mention. New readers will love looking at, chewing on and playing with Baby ABC: A Very First Book for the Baby You Love (Priddy Board, $16.95, age 0+). For preschoolers, we recommend Margaret Wild and Kerry Argent’s Ruby Roars (Allen & Unwin, HB, $24.95, age 3+), with brightly coloured illustrations and an exuberant story that will have them roaring with approval. The 4+ brigade will love to be read Kveta Pacovska’s The Little Flower King (Minedition, $24.95, age 4+), which has funky illustrations to accompany its charming tale of the little king seeking a princess and happiness. All ages will appreciate the message of Whole World Mini (Fred Penner & Christopher Corr, Barefoot, HB, $16.99, age 5+), a cute little book that comes with a CD to get little ones singing along to the message that we’ve got the whole world in our hands, and need to protect it Kids who like to know weird and gross stuff (isn’t that all kids?) will be thrilled to receive a copy of Simon Eliot’s Everything You Need to Know from your Backyard to the Galaxies (Allen & Unwin, PB, $14.95, age 8+), a compendium of facts both fascinating and frightening. Boys and girls aged 9+ will love Stephen Biesty’s Quest for the Lost City of Gold (Dorling Kindersley, HB, $39.95), with its spreads on the world’s great buildings (the Parthenon, Sydney Opera House, Colosseum, Temple of Karnak etc). There are riddles to answer before completing the quest, a drawing to colour in, a tunnel viewer to construct and lots of stickers, too Harry Potter devotees will find themselves charmed by Hocus Pocus: A Tale of Magnificent Magicians and their Amazing Feats (Paul Kieve, Bloomsbury, HB, $24.95, age 11+). Kieve was the magic consultant for the film of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban – here he writes about the great magicians, explaining their secrets and showing aspiring Houdinis how to perform some of their tricks. Readers around the same age will be equally fascinated by George’s Secret Key to the Universe (Doubleday, PB, $27.95, age 10+), which is about how George, his next-door neighbour Annie and Annie’s scientist father Eric discover a way to travel through the vastness of space. Written by eminent scientist Stephen Hawking and his daughter Lucy, it includes loads of facts about our universe, the planets and black holes. Junior readers of a literary bent will adore Tales from Shakespeare by Charles and Mary Lamb (Thames & Hudson, boxed set, $29.95, age 12+), which includes stunning illustrations by Joelle Joliver. And they’ll be excited to realise that there’s a new book out this summer by Sally Gardner, the author of I, Coriander. The Red Necklace (Orion, HB, $30, age 12+) is a dramatic story set in the French Revolution with lots of plot twists and turns to keep the reader enthralled. One of the local publishing highlights this summer is Joel and Cat Set the Story Straight by Nick Earls and Rebecca Sparrow (Penguin, PB, $19.95, age 14+). This hilarious story is about Joel and Cat, schoolmates who hate each other. When Cat’s dad and Joel’s mum start dating, Joel and Cat finally agree on something – this terrible situation has got to stop! And finally, we want to mention the books on which the upcoming film The Golden Compass is set. Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy (Northern Lights, The Subtle Knife and The Amber Spyglass) is an absolute masterpiece and we’re thrilled that new collectors’ editions of the books with woodblock engraving covers by John Lawrence have been released – start by reading Northern Lights (Scholastic, PB with flaps, $24.95, 13+) and we guarantee you’ll be hooked! 22 kids AMELIA DEE AND THE PEACOCK LAMP Odo Hirsch Allen & Unwin. PB. $15.95. Amelia thinks that her neighbour Mr Vishwanath, the yoga teacher, must be a failure, because he never seems to have any students – except for a cranky old Princess in exile. And from the moment the Princess and Amelia meet, they dislike one another. However, when the Princess sees the peacock lamp in Amelia’s house, a mysterious connection becomes clear. Older girls will love this quirky Australian novel about defining yourself, rather than depending on others to do it for you. Age 10+ ARAMINTA SPOOK: VAMPIRE BRAT Angie Sage (illus. Jimmy Pickering) Bloomsbury. HB. $14.95. ‘Why can’t authors write about nice things?’ Well, the more safe, predictable and middle class we make children’s lives, the more they want to walk on the wild side, however briefly, in their books. So horror’s back. Mind you, it’s pretty tame – and funny. There’s so much bat poo in the dank basement at Spook House that they shovel it out the poo hatch, bag it up and sell it at the front gate. There’s still a disgusting smell, though. At first Araminta thinks it’s a werewolf, but she soon realises she needs to get her Vampire Trapping Kit together. Age 8+ THE ART BOOK FOR CHILDREN 2 Amanda Renshaw Phaidon. HB. $29.95. If you love art, don’t always understand it, but hate gallery bores, this is the perfect book. The first volume was such a huge hit that readers wanted a second. So here’s another fascinating walk through contemporary and classical works by 30 artists including Dürer, Matisse, Dali and Hockney, with gentle questions about the ways we see and process a world of changing imagery. Age 8+ DO NOT OPEN John Farndon Dorling Kindersley. HB. $49.95. Here’s an author who knows how to get kids to read: use reverse psychology in the title and then make the first test whether they can actually get the book out of its slip case! Inside there’s a multicoloured stash of secret stuff about UFOs, safecracking, what’s in your food, what’s in the Vatican and whatever happened to Elvis. There are also a couple of spreads that will make parents nostalgic for the old Magic Eye pictures – if you once cracked the code, you can probably still do it. Age 10+ THE DRAGON COMPANION Carole Wilkinson (ed.) & Dean Jones (illus.) Black Dog Books. HB. $27. No more Harry Potter (or Tolkien)? Illustrated in brilliant colour like a medieval illuminated manuscript, here’s everything you’ve ever wanted to know about dragons in ancient myth and more recent fiction – and some that you didn’t! The stories are often gross and sexist, like the men who imagined them. But the author of the Dragonkeeper trilogy has a writer’s eye for the kind of tale young readers will love, like the dragon that everyone in the village has to bare their backsides to whenever it appears, or the many dragons that can only live on the blood of maidens. Strong stuff – but it’s classic, right? Age 8+ THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF IMMATURITY Klutz. HB. $30. Tribal knowledge here for seven- to tenyear-olds. Clearly, adults have forgotten to pass this learning on, so the publishers have put it into a book: how to make rude noises with your armpit, how to whistle with your hands or a blade of grass, how to walk the dog with your yoyo – and, in case all that seems too frivolous, how to hurl Shakespearean insults. It might be a boy thing, but the title’s catchy. Age 7+ Most reviews on these pages were written by Mark Macleod, the only exceptions being The Enemy, Moon Rock, Not a Box, Pippi Longstocking and Iggy Peck Architect. ELEPHANTS: A BOOK FOR CHILDREN Steve Bloom Thames & Hudson. HB. $29.95. Although there’s minimal text here, the subtitle is misleading. The photographs alone will make readers of any age want to protect these wonderful, long-suffering animals. You’ll love learning that just as we are right- or left-handed, elephants are right- or left-tusked, that elephant mothers breastfeed their babies till they’re 10, and that an African elephant has two ‘fingers’ on the tip of its trunk, while an Asian elephant has one. Age 7+ GIRL STUFF Kaz Cooke Penguin. PB. $39.95. Eeeks – 550 pages of ‘Your Full-on Guide to the Teen Years’! Just as well you’ve got a few years to get through it. Teens would never take this much advice from a parent or grandparent, but they’ll dip into a book because they can shut it again when they need to. The good news for parents is that the advice is good and there’s lots of fun along the way. Not just about the usual body parts and how they fit together, it covers mobile phone addiction, budgeting, bullying, voting and the ‘F-word’ – Feminism (with a belated thanks to our foremothers). Age 11+ THE ENEMY: A FABLE OF PEACE & UNDERSTANDING Davide Cali (illus. Serge Bloch) Wilkins Farago. HB. $29.95. A moving and poetic meditation on the big questions in life in the tradition of The Little Prince, this contemporary picture book speaks to both adults and older children. Set in a war that could be any war, a soldier tells of his loneliness, fears and deprivation. The wonderful artwork features photographic collage and simple line drawings. Age 8+ THE FLOODS: FAMILY FILES AND THE FLOODS 1: NEIGHBOURS Colin Thompson Random House. Set. Was $39.95, now $29.95. THE FLOODS 5: PRIME SUSPECT Colin Thompson Random House. PB. $14.95. The Floods are the Addams Family for the noughties and in Prime Suspect, their latest adventure at Transylvania Waters, there’s been a murder at the children’s school, Quicklime College. Then, in The Floods Family Files, you can meet the ghoulish lot of them in full colour. There’s Valla with a martini glass hooked up to a whole rack of bags at the blood bank – including one from a family pet and one with the author’s name on it. Packed with hundreds of visual gags and word games, this book will make your kids want to take a bath, or run out and play in the fresh air. Could be useful. Our special Christmas offer includes a copy of the first book in the series with every copy of Family Files sold. Age 8+ THE GHOST’S CHILD Sonya Hartnett Penguin. HB. $24.95. A strange boy suddenly appears in a lonely old woman’s lounge room. As she serves him tea, Hartnett observes that the milk turns the tea ‘a pressed-rose brown’ and immediately we are in a world where language makes exhilarating leaps with apparently no effort at all. Conversation with the boy sends the woman back to a troubled childhood and another ghost of a boy, whom she once thought the most beautiful thing in the world. This deceptively simple fable about love is full of wisdom and beauty for young adults who enjoy literary fiction. Age 12+ GO GIRL! ANGELS SET Various authors Hardie Grant Egmont. Gift Set. $39.95. MY FAVOURITE GO GIRL! GIFT SET Various authors Hardie Grant Egmont. Gift Set. $29.95. Don’t be put off by the glittery covers and the big heads with animé eyes. (The kids won’t be!) There’s more to this internationally successful Australian series than you might think. A girl can have a friend who’s a boy, can’t she, without him being her boyfriend? Someone with a broken arm can still be a useful member of the team. And divorce is not the end of family life. Challenges important to young readers are worked through with a light and optimistic touch. The Angels set includes six books and a charm bracelet; the My Favourite Go Girls! set includes four books and a GoGirls! watch. There’s a fun website, too. Age 7+ IGGY PECK ARCHITECT Andrea Beaty (illus. David Roberts) Thames & Hudson. HB. $24.95. ‘Young Iggy Peck is an architect and has been since he was two, when he built a great tower – in only an hour – with nothing but diapers and glue.’ This utterly charming picture book is about young Iggy, who builds a mud Sphinx in the back garden, a Renaissance-style tower out of glue and (sadly dirty) nappies, and temples and towers from piles of fruit. And then he saves the day on a school excursion using his genius for design and construction. Perfect for Duplo devotees. Age 5+. JUST SHOCKING Andy Griffiths (illus. Terry Denton) Pan Macmillan. PB. $14.95. WHAT BUMOSAUR IS THAT? (LIMITED FULL-COLOUR EDITION) Andy Griffiths (illus. Terry Denton) Pan Macmillan. HB. $19.95. Those adults who were outraged at The Bad Book by these two naughty boys didn’t read that book carefully enough. It was surprisingly conventional in its moral values. And, similarly, the title Just Shocking here is a bit of a con, because the most shocking subject in this sixth collection of short stories is the theme of climate change that lurks behind many of the gags. On the other hand if you never read the word ‘bum’ again it’ll be too soon! A fullcolour guide to the fundamentals of ancient beings such as the Tyrannosore-arse, What Bumosaur is That? surely is the end of it all – but probably isn’t. Age 8+ THE KEY TO RONDO Emily Rodda Scholastic. HB. $29.95. DELTORA QUEST: THE ULTIMATE COLLECTION Emily Rodda Scholastic. Boxed Set. $79.95. Stubborn Mimi breaks one of the rules when she winds the key of a music box covered in painted miniatures four times instead of three, and this leads to consequences. One minute there is a baby in the paintings; the next a wolf comes out of the forest and the baby disappears. Then Emily Rodda’s fantasy novel definitely has your attention! Exciting and surprisingly funny, with fairy-tale references dropped like a trail of crumbs, this is a terrific story in which nothing is quite as it seems. And if your young reader hasn’t yet been introduced to the Deltora Quest books, he or she will be thrilled to receive The Ultimate Quest boxed set, which includes the 15 novels of the first three series in three handsome volumes. Age 10+ kids THE LEGEND OF LITTLE FUR Isobelle Carmody Penguin. HB. $24.95. THE LEGEND OF LITTLE FUR: A FOX CALLED SORROW Isobelle Carmody Penguin. HB. $24.95. THE LEGEND OF LITTLE FUR: A MYSTERY OF WOLVES Isobelle Carmody Penguin. HB. $24.95. At their best, Books 1, 2 and 3 of the legend of the elf-troll Little Fur capture the tone of shamanistic storytelling. Patricia Wrightson may have a stronger sense of the forces that any tiny spirit is up against when its quest is nothing less than the healing of the earth, but Carmody’s spacey and beautifully poetic new-age fantasy will charm many younger readers. Age 8+ THE MOON ROCK Boriana & Vladimir Todorov Simply Read Books. HB. $29.95. When Elliot steals his grandfather’s Moon Rock, he finds himself at the centre of a civil war on the Far Side of the Moon – and he’s the only one who can help the Librarian to defeat the marauding Defiers. The illustrations give birth to a dark, surrealist Wonderland and the gripping narrative evokes the greatest quest stories: a brave child defeats a host of death-defying obstacles to save a fantasy world, discovering himself in the process. Age 9+ CHARLIE AND LOLA: MY COMPLETELY BEST AND VERY BUSY BOOK Lauren Child Penguin. HB. $16.95. CHARLIE AND LOLA: THIS IS ACTUALLY MY PARTY Lauren Child Penguin. Boxed Kit. $35. As the titles suggest, there’s a slight risk that your six-year-old will start talking like a time-warped Sloane Ranger after reading these books, but Lauren Child gives young readers so much to do! This is Actually My Party offers a complete boxed kit of recipes, biscuit cutters, masks and board games to make – there’ll be no crying at this party. And when it’s all over, Charlie and his little sister Lola keep the ideas coming in the Busy Book. Two great alternatives to slumping in front of a screen. Age 5+ NICHOLAS AND THE GANG René Goscinny (illus. JeanJacques Sempé) Phaidon. HB. $29.95. Who wouldn’t love any book illustrated by Sempé? Here he is with the author of Asterix in a collection of short stories first published in French 45 years ago. Nothing against PlayStation, but there’s a very appealing energy in these adventures of kids who play marbles or chess after school and worry that the school doctor might be coming to take their appendix out – rather than give them therapy. And when a new bookshop opens, the whole gang goes along to check it out! Scat-free, fast-paced and funny, Nicholas and the Gang is absolutely charming from its stylish cover in. Age 8+ NOT A BOX Antoinette Portis Harper Collins. HB. $20. Inspired by the memory of sitting in a box on her driveway with her brother, Antoinette Portis captures the thrill of when pretend feels so real that it actually becomes reality. Her wonderfully simple, spare text and illustrations show that seeing truly depends on the ability to believe in the possibilities. Age 1+ 23 OLIVIA HELPS WITH CHRISTMAS Ian Falconer Simon & Schuster. HB. $26.95. With all that snowy white space on the page, everyone’s favourite pig had to do Christmas, and here she is – as helpful as ever – feeding blueberry pie to the baby, lopping the top off the Christmas tree so she has a perfect centrepiece for the table, and presenting the family with a lovely self-portrait for the lounge-room wall that is simply too big to hide. A wonderful celebration of family memories. Age 4+ PIPPI LONGSTOCKING Astrid Lindgren (illus. Lauren Child) Oxford University Press. HB. $34.95. This children’s classic is presented here in a gorgeous full-colour gift edition illustrated by Lauren Child (of Clarice Bean fame). Pippi Longstocking is nine years old. She has just moved into Villa Villekulla where she lives all by herself with a horse, a monkey and a big suitcase full of gold coins. And though the grown-ups in the village try to make Pippi behave in ways that they think a little girl should, she has other ideas. She’d much rather wrestle a circus strongman, dance a polka with burglars or tug on a bull’s tail. Enormous fun for girls and boys aged 8+. SLAM Nick Hornby Penguin. PB. $29.95. It won’t surprise Nick Hornby’s fans that he’s written his first book for teens. Sam, a 16-year-old skater (as in board, not blades), drifts into having sex with Alicia and suddenly she’s pregnant. He says that the difference between having a baby and an iPod is that no one’s going to mug you for your baby. Hornby’s understanding of the paper-thin bravado of men is as sharp as ever here. And the only person Sam can talk to is a poster of his hero, skater Tony Hawk – a risky idea that the writer only just pulls off. It’s as if Judy Blume had written her controversial 1980s novel Forever a generation on. Expect this novel to be read and passed around by teenage boys and – if we’re lucky – the girls who want to understand them. Age 14+ THE SECRET GARDEN Frances Hodgson Burnett (illus. Inga Moore) Walker Books. HB. $34.95. The smaller our suburban gardens are in the future, the more attractive this classic tale of the rebirth of an orphaned girl and her secret garden is likely to become. In a new gift edition, the strange ghostliness of Inga Moore’s lavishly detailed illustrations will draw many older readers in and delight their mothers and grandmothers with memories of a book they themselves cherished when they were children. Age 8+ THE SHAGGY GULLY TIMES Jackie French (illus. Bruce Whatley) Angus & Robertson. HB. $25. Who knew that the famous wombat diarist, Josephine the ballet-dancing kangaroo and hairdresser Pete the Sheep all lived in the same country town? Here’s the town’s newspaper, demonstrating that if Australia’s short on water, it’s happily still long on shaggy stories. Packed with news, ads, puns, jokes, a ‘horror scope’ and letters to an agony aunt who’s a parrot, this is a breathless romp through the bush that will leave you gasping for ‘mouse-to-mouse resuscitation’. Age 7+ ONE CITY, TWO BROTHERS Chris Smith (illus. Aurelia Fronty) Barefoot Books. HB. $29.95. The love of two brothers is so great that each keeps trying to surprise the other with a gift, only to find that his generosity has already been reciprocated. Just as Daniel Barenboim uses music to bring together the warring sides in the Middle East, Smith and Fronty retell Solomon’s ancient story in glorious colour to remind us that the city of Jerusalem is a symbol of reconciliation and love. An inspiring counterpoint to the daily news of destruction and hate. Age 8+ PUFF, THE MAGIC DRAGON Peter Yarrow, Lenny Lipton, Eric Puybaret Koala Books. HB. $27. This beautiful gift package includes gently fey illustrations and a CD so that today’s kids can enjoy their grandparents’ favourite classic song, free of the 1960s speculation that it might all have been about a voyage on wacky baccy. Puff the magic dragon is the eternal child, who frolics in the world of the imagination long after boys and girls like Jackie Paper grow up and leave it behind. Age 4+ SNAKEHEAD Anthony Horowitz Walker Books. PB. $16.95. The snakeheads make other criminal organisations such as the mafia and the triads look like amateurs. They’re involved with people smuggling and a threat to bomb an international conference, so 14year-old agent Alex Rider has been recruited by both MI6 and Australian intelligence to help foil their plans. While the G8 summit is being held in Rome, there’s an alternative summit in Australia to ‘make poverty history’ and every delegate is marked for death. Topical and gripping, this seventh Alex Rider novel demonstrates once again why Horowitz is so far ahead of the game. Age 10+ WHAT I WAS Meg Rosoff Penguin. PB. $17.95. The 16-year-old narrator of this dreamy and beguiling novel has been sent to a remote boarding school where they practise ‘torture by nutrition’. On a crosscountry run one day he meets a young hermit called Finn. Finn’s birth was never registered, so, as he says, he doesn’t exist. And that’s the attraction. The narrator is not just drawn to him as a solitary friend in this barren place; he wants to be him. Through their unlikely friendship, the narrator begins to understand what he calls ‘the riveting nature of my self-pity’. Written with an insight that’s rare in young adult fiction. Age 14+ ZAC POWER: ZAC ATTACK! THE FIRST MISSIONS BOXED SET HI Larry (illus. Ash Oswald) Hardie Grant Egmont. Boxed Set. $29.95. ZAC POWER: ZAC ATTACK! 2 THE NEXT MISSIONS BOXED SET HI Larry (illus. Ash Oswald) Hardie Grant Egmont. Boxed Set. $29.95. The subtitle captures the Zac Power series perfectly: ‘24 Hours to Save the World – and Get Home for Dinner!’ They’re basically computer games on the page – the pace is exhausting, they’re inventive and not to be taken too seriously. Unlike the Go Girl! series from the same publisher, these stories are about physical scrapes rather than moral dilemmas. Some girls will read Zac Power and you could try Go Girl! on the boys – but don’t be too disappointed. For younger readers it’s still a sexist world. Each set includes four books and a bonus watch. Age 7+ 24 music A BOOK LIKE THIS Angus & Julia Stone. $29.95. CHROME DREAMS II Neil Young. $29.95. Angus and Julia Stone, siblings from the northern beaches of Sydney, seem impossibly talented and accomplished on this, their debut album. Still only in their 20s, the duo’s songs, written separately, have an assured, grounded feel. And while their sound is essentially acoustic, with guitar and piano backed by a rhythm section from fellow northern beaches act The Beautiful Girls, they’re confident enough to make some interesting choices in the arrangements; ‘Horse and Cart’ features a clarinet solo followed by a chorus of whistling, for instance. Julia Stone’s voice is a notable instrument on its own, a sort of Björk/Joanna Newsom blend. Frequently beautiful, this album showcases a major new Australian act. Also available as a limited-edition CD/DVD in book cover ($34.95). The numerous tragics of the great Canadian singer will instinctively know all about the first Chrome Dreams album, recorded in 1977 but pulled before release and subsequently widely bootlegged. For the 21st-century version of the album, Young has held on to three older songs and reworked them, while coming up with seven new cuts. Ten tracks, with one coming in at 13 minutes and the other, the ‘Cortez the Killer’–like ‘Ordinary People’, extending beyond 18 minutes, means that this album resembles 1989’s Freedom in its widely diverging styles. Performed with pedal steel guitarist Ben Keith, bassist Rick Rosas and Crazy Horse drummer Ralph Molina, there are soft ballads and rave-ups as well. One more brilliant addition to a stunning body of work. Also available in a CD/DVD audio edition ($32.95). ALL THE LOST SOULS James Blunt. $30.95. CIVILIANS Joe Henry. $29.95. Poor old former squaddie James Blunt, he of the high-pitched voice and an existence plagued by loneliness, can’t get a break from the critics. His debut album sold a truckload and this follow-up has already done very well, but the cultural gatekeepers aren’t keen. Really, they should cut Blunt some slack. He’s part of a musical movement that, whether the critics like it or not, will help to define the popular music of this decade – one spearheaded by Coldplay, with its soaring, wounded balladeering. The idea on All the Lost Souls is to recreate the sort of sensitive troubadour albums that were being made back when Blunt was born in 1974. In fact, he carries the project off with aplomb, helped by former Beck producer Tom Rothrock, who gives the songs a good deal of rhythmic oomph. Few artists are able to attract talented performers to their side in quite the way Joe Henry can. Having produced Mavis Staples, Aimee Mann, Ani DiFranco, and Elvis Costello and Allen Toussaint in the recent past, he’s got music legends Bill Frisell and Van Dyke Parks helping him out on this new album. For this effort, Henry has opted for a minimalist sound. There are no horns and the essential sonic motif of the album is David Piltch’s exquisite upright bass. Henry is getting wordier with every album; the 12 songs here are loaded with long-form poems more than lyrics, as he finds more and more to say. He’s roaming in the stylistic territory inhabited in recent years by Tom Waits, with songs such as ‘Civil War’ reflecting a provocatively bleak take on the human condition. BLOOM Lou Rhodes. $29.95. DEDICATED Renée Geyer. $29.95. The former Lamb singer took an unexpected turn when that duo broke up. Having made a major contribution to the trip-hop genre, Lou Rhodes reinvented herself as a folk singer and her first album Beloved One was nominated for the prestigious Mercury Prize. Bloom builds on Rhodes’ achievements with that impressive debut. But here she injects little bits of Lamb into her sound. Songs build to dramatic climaxes, and are then subjected to strange twists or abrupt endings. Rhodes’ throaty vocal technique has never sounded this good; her singing is restrained but highly evocative and sensual, and the arrangements are immaculate. Although lyrically less dark than its predecessor, Bloom continues Rhodes’ examination of the junction between pleasure and pain in a relationship. A powerful album. It’s hard to believe, but Renée Geyer’s solo recording career began 34 years ago, and while her big-voiced soul vocals have gone in and out of style in that time, the quality of her singing and her unique ability to interpret material has never changed. The beauty of this, her 22nd album, is the range of approaches she pursues across the 11 tracks. Eschewing the lushness that can sometimes gum up modern rhythm and blues, Geyer opted not to include strings on Dedicated; it’s an organ-dominated band sound, topped up with horns. And some old songs get a stunning makeover. The Mamas and the Papas’ ‘Dedicated to the One I Love’ is done as a reggae piece, so that it sounds like the Wailers with James Brown out front. What else is there to say – she’s still got it! Reviews by Shaun Carney of The Age DYLAN Bob Dylan. 3 CD Set. Was $59.95, now $51.95. The problem with Bob Dylan is this: how can anybody agree on what constitutes his best work? This retrospective comes as a three-CD set sliced into three distinct periods of his career. Disc 1 covers 1962–1967, from Bob Dylan to John Wesley Harding; disc 2 covers 1967–1985, from The Basement Tapes to Empire Burlesque; and disc 3 covers 1986–2006, from Knocked Out Loaded to Modern Times. All up there are 51 tracks with liner notes by American music journalist Bill Flanagan. Dylan is the giant of modern music, the most influential artist of them all, and the span of the songs here, from his troubadour days to his rock material to his latterday persona as a sort of archivist of American song, is breathtaking. FEVER ITALIA 2 Various artists. $30.95. GRAND NATIONAL The John Butler Trio. $29.95 In recent years, the great Australian musical success story of this decade was veering perilously close to becoming a caricature of himself with his mercury-fast guitar solos and what seemed like a single pace through most of his songs. But on Grand National, John Butler takes some risks and does a terrific job of refreshing his music by extending the trio’s rhythmic palette. Some of the credit for this presumably must go to Mario Caldato Jr, best known for his work with the Beastie Boys, but there’s also a wonderful new maturity in every aspect of Butler’s writing, singing and playing. The sound has moved beyond the live-in-thestudio ways of the past, the Bull sisters add some vocals, Money Mark plays keys and there are some real surprises, including the string-soaked ballad ‘Caroline’. IN OUR NATURE José González. $25.95. As many as 50,000 people attend the Italian Film Festival each year, but even if you didn’t make it in 2007, that doesn’t mean that the soundtrack to the event doesn’t stand up pretty well as an album in its own right. The music from previous festivals has tended to reflect a tendency towards contemporary folk and pop sounds, including hiphop and dance. There are still elements of those styles here, particularly the lo-fi ‘Io So’ by Roberto Kunstler and the moody but spirited ‘Il Mondo’ by Milan’s Cristina Dona. But the bias on the new collection favours a sort of rough cabaret style embodied by Radio Cuba’s ‘Stanco’ and Giorgio Conte’s ‘Cannelloni’ – a pleasing exercise in musical and filmic nostalgia. It’s difficult to think of a soloist who can so artfully blend his own songs with inspired covers as well as Sweden’s José González. He’s already done Kylie Minogue and Joy Division. Here, the cover is of Massive Attack’s ‘Teardrop’, performed with González’s trademark lo-fi folkie vocalising, mixed back to blend with his high-powered fingerpicking guitar work. Interestingly, his own material is the best stuff. This is a better album than his debut, Veneer. He seems to have put more thought into its construction and to have refined the sense of melancholy that informs pretty much everything he performs. The overall effect is to blend the austere sound of John Martyn with the seductive vocal phrasing of James Taylor – a beguiling combination. GOIN’ HOME: A TRIBUTE TO FATS DOMINO Various Artists. 2 CD Set. $29.95. JOURNEY Archie Roach. DVD & CD Set. $29.95. How often have you listened to a tribute album and wished a law had been passed to prevent cruelty to songs? There’s no need to worry with this two-CD tribute to Antoine ‘Fats’ Domino, the 79-year-old slightly displaced resident of New Orleans (he lost his home in Hurricane Katrina but still lives in the city). The line-up of artists here is mind-boggling: BB King, Randy Newman, Willie Nelson, Neil Young, Elton John, Lucinda Williams, Los Lobos, Norah Jones. There’s Paul McCartney doing a killer Domino impersonation on ‘I Want to Walk You Home’ with New Orleans hero Allen Toussaint, and The Dirty Dozen Brass Band teaming up with young British soulster Joss Stone and Buddy Guy on ‘Every Night About This Time’. Brilliant stuff. This is not so much a CD as a visual and musical package that embraces and exposes the pain, injustice and social isolation felt by generations of native Australians. Accompanying the 10-track CD of new Archie Roach songs is a DVD of the acclaimed documentary Liyarn Ngarn, in which the British actor Pete Postlethwaite recounts stories told to him by Patrick Dodson and Bill Johnson. Roach made his own magnificent contribution to the film, but listening to these songs, produced by Shane Howard and engineered and co-produced by Nash Chambers, is a stunning experience in itself. Featuring guest appearances by Paul Kelly, David Bridie, Troy Cassar-Daley, Shane Howard and The Pigram Brothers, Journey could well be Roach’s masterwork. music THE MOON LOOKED ON Clare Bowditch & The Feeding Set. $29.95. RAISING SAND Robert Plant & Alison Krauss. $29.95. From its opening moments, The Moon Looked On signals a new sort of Clare Bowditch, one whose music contains a greater sense of urgency. Electric guitars noodle about and the drums propel the opening song ‘You Looked So Good’ into territory that the Melbourne singer has never before inhabited. Having gone as far as she could deploying a bent, slightly jazz-tinged feel to her folk-pop songs, Bowditch and her husband, collaborator and band member Marty Brown, have come up with a big, compelling record full of hooks and varied musical approaches. Bowditch’s voice has never sounded this good before. It’s deeper, more direct and no longer reliant on irony or novelty. Here, it’s matched with the best songs of her career. 25 SHINE Joni Mitchell. $29.95. SUNDIRTWATER The Waifs. $29.95. This is the sort of team-up that, if you’d suggested it was a likelihood, could well have caused you to be placed in a straitjacket and locked up. The queen of bluegrass and the Led Zeppelin frontman doing an album together? Well, they have and it’s great. Producer T-Bone Burnett has overseen a record that defies categorisation. Sometimes it’s country, sometimes it’s Texas blues that’s beamed in via gamma rays, sometimes it’s a sort of folk hybrid. A lot of Raising Sand has a shimmering, haunting effect. Every note in the gothic break-up ballad ‘Please Read the Letter’ sounds disturbing, from Marc Ribot’s electric guitar to Krauss’s fiddle playing. The musical surprise packet of 2007. Five years ago, Joni Mitchell declared that it was all over: no more new records; music and the music industry were rubbish. So what’s changed? It seems that the way in which the world changed, especially as the so-called War on Terror was pursued, got Mitchell worried. All through Shine, there’s a sense of foreboding, of unease. Over banks of synthesised woodwind, piano, Greg Leisz’s pedal steel and West Coast jazz-style horns, Mitchell pokes and prods at the egos and preening religiosity of the men who’ve prosecuted the invasion of Iraq. For good measure she reworks ‘Big Yellow Taxi’ almost 40 years on just to show that she was right all along. Rich, immensely rewarding music from one of the giants of popular music; a very welcome return. Is it unpatriotic to feel grateful that a big-selling Australian group took itself over to Nashville to record an album and that the trip took some of that act’s annoying Australian-ness out of its sound? The nasal twang that characterised some of The Waifs’ best-known songs is thankfully nowhere to be found here, and the band is much better for it. In fact, the trio plays to all of its strengths on Sundirtwater, with the arrangements sounding agreeably rootsy and the songs being much moodier than the band’s previous work. Donna Simpson’s ‘Vermillion’, for example, is utterly chilling and expertly performed, as is the lilting title track, sung and written by Vikki Thorn. More country than folk, Sundirtwater displays a band making a big, confident artistic leap. MOTHERSHIP Led Zeppelin. 2 CD Set. $32.95. RIPE Ben Lee. $29.95. SO MANY NIGHTS The Cat Empire. $29.95. WE’LL NEVER TURN BACK Mavis Staples. $29.95. Does any band represent the ambitions of rock music as the ’60s segued into the ’70s better than Led Zeppelin? This 24-track, two-CD collection would seem to be just about the last word on the quartet’s output during its 12-year life. And what a catalogue of songs the three surviving members, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones, had to choose from. There are cuts from all eight of the band’s studio albums, including the obvious ones – ‘Kashmir’, ‘Stairway to Heaven’, ‘Whole Lotta Love’ and ‘Immigrant Song’ – as well as a few less predictable tracks such as the reggae spoof ‘D’YerMaker’. Although often viewed as the proto-metal band, there’s far more subtlety and musical reach than you’ll ever hear from most of those acts who regard themselves as Zep’s modern-day standard-bearers. No-one would dare to suggest that Ben Lee has ever lacked self-confidence, but it could be said that for part of his musical journey he lacked the songwriting and singing chops to back up his boastfulness. Fortunately, his previous album Awake is the New Sleep pointed to a Lee who had grown into his talents, with a pared-back vocal style and a comfortable way of writing pop. Ripe continues the process. Lee is the current king of the playful tune, so much so that large slabs of this come off like Crowded House on Prozac. Ringing chords, big choruses, optimistic lyrics, even a stylistic doff of the cap to Bon Jovi on ‘Sex Without Love’ means that it’s all a lot of fun. The question that’s always hovered over Melbourne’s The Cat Empire was whether they could manage to hold on to the energy and irrepressible enthusiasm that has made them such a live drawcard while also making an enduring album. Until So Many Nights, hitting that sweet spot had proved to be elusive. But happily, it can be reported that this is the breakthrough album; the one you can listen to without thinking ‘This would probably sound more engaging at a show’. Singer Felix Reibl has sent out a strong signal about the band’s broadening artistic horizons with the first single ‘No Longer There’, a straight but lovely mid-tempo ballad. The sense of fun and mashing together of Afro, Cuban and soul rhythms is still there, but so too is a welcome new maturity. Well, it’s just magnificent. At 66, Mavis Staples has found the songs – and the idea – to take her to a truly great level. By choosing to record a series of classic freedom songs and by teaming up with Ry Cooder, who produced, played guitar and helped with some writing chores, Staples has found the gold. It all could have been pretty awful, of course. The straightforward piece ‘Eyes on the Prize’ is not really much more than a gospel chant, but here it’s transformed into something eerie and ethereal, with Jim Keltner’s drums pounding out a tattoo while Cooder’s slide guitar sounds as smooth as molasses. The other 11 tracks are just as wonderful. NO PROMISES Carla Bruni. $30.95. RIVER: THE JONI LETTERS Herbie Hancock. $29.95. STOLEN APPLES Paul Kelly. $29.95. WASHINGTON SQUARE SERENADE Steve Earle. $25.95. This could have been a nightmare: wealthy, gorgeous model picks up guitar and sets 11 poems by writers including Dorothy Parker, Emily Dickinson, WB Yeats, WH Auden, Walter de la Mare and Christina Rossetti to music. But we already know from Carla Bruni’s previous album, the wonderful Quelqu’un m’a dit, which sold two million copies around the world, that she’s a seriously talented musical performer. And there’s no falling away of standards here. Witness the country lilt in the rendition of Yeats’ ‘Before the World was Made’ courtesy of producer Louis Bertignac’s precise guitar figures, and the swamprock treatment accorded Dickinson’s ‘I Felt My Life with Both My Hands’. Bruni is no flighty folky chanteuse; this is good, full-bodied stuff. After having in the late 1990s conducted an album-long – and only partly successful – musical tour of the works of George Gershwin, Herbie Hancock now turns his acute artistic eye towards one of the truly unique writers of the rock era, Joni Mitchell. His choices shouldn’t surprise, given that they mirror Hancock’s own dual sensibilities; he’s a jazz artist with a real pop sense, while both Gershwin and Mitchell could be classed as pop artists with an innate feel for jazz. A crack fivepiece band featuring saxophonist Wayne Shorter re-examines 10 Mitchell songs, helped by Leonard Cohen, Tina Turner, Norah Jones and Mitchell herself. A standout is a seven-minute instrumental deconstruction of ‘Both Sides Now’. The song will never be the same again. After his forays into bluegrass, soundtracks and stripped-back balladeering, it’s somehow comforting to hear Paul Kelly return to rock, the style in which he first imprinted himself on the public consciousness. Stolen Apples has a brash, swaggering feel throughout. The songs fairly roll along, driven by Melbourne’s best rhythm section of Peter Luscombe on drums and Bill McDonald on bass. And Kelly’s delivery is relaxed, mixed back into the band sound, suggesting that everything with this material was just so, from writing to arranging to recording. It’s one of Kelly’s easiest sounding albums, typified by the only slightly tongue-in-cheek love song ‘You’re 39, You’re Beautiful and You’re Mine’. On the first song of this wonderful record, Steve Earle signs off on his past persona as a good ol’ boy from Nashville as he drawls: ‘Goodbye, Guitar Town’. This album is the singer’s love letter to his new home in New York’s Greenwich Village, and its brash, acoustic tones highlight the crafting of a sort of urban folk, underpinned throughout by hiphop beats overseen by producer and Dust Brother, John King. Earle is clearly inspired by the polyglot nature of Manhattan; the Brazilian group Forro in the Dark provides rollicking Brazilian rhythms on ‘City of Immigrants’ and his wife Alison Moorer helps out on the Beatle-y ‘Days Aren’t Long Enough’. Direct and self-assured, Washington Square Serenade extends Earles’ run of great albums through the decade. classical 26 Most reviews by Tony Way of The Age. ANDRÉ RIEU ON HOLIDAY 2 DVD set. $39.95. THE CLASSIC 100 CONCERTO Various artists. 8 CD Set. $87.95. Just in time for the holiday season! This doubleDVD set of André Rieu features a Christmas concert (Christmas with André Rieu) and a New Year’s Eve concert (New Year’s Eve Punch). Neither DVD has been released in Australia until now and to have them in a twin pack will be a welcome space-saver for the many Rieu mavens around. If this is your Christmas pudding, it’s got all the right ingredients – a healthy round of Christmas carols and plenty of tinsel and glitter. The New Year’s Eve concert was filmed in Hanover, and features Bond and Russell Watson. Rieu and his orchestra have the time of their lives, making music that’s both romantic and scintillating and being silly and merry while doing so. The concerto is the highlight of any orchestral concert. But with thousands of them, which ones are the absolute favourites? The concertos in this collection were voted for by the general public, so there’s no surprise that they include the regular suspects – Beethoven, Mozart, Brahms, Prokofiev, Dvorak and Schumann – and everything from cello soothers to piano knuckle-breakers. The artists here are a real ‘who’s who’ of names, including Ashkenazy, Schiff, Ortiz and Belkin, as well as ensembles of repute such as I Musici and The English Concert. The great thing about sets like these is that the further you drop in the list, the more unique are the concertos you get. Who’d have thought Glazunov’s Saxophone Concerto, for instance, might have made the cut? Plenty of surprises are contained in this generous package, and each of the eight CDs is brimful with good music. BEETHOVEN COMPLETE WORKS Various artists. 85 CD Set. Was $289.95, now $209.95. Beethoven is brilliant! And here’s the proof – his complete compositions in one volume, newly released by Brilliant Classics. This 85-CD set literally contains the works – symphonic, chamber and solo, folk songs and canons – with distinguished conductors and world-famous artists giving significant performances. Includes the nine symphonies by Gewandhausorchester Leipzig and Masur; the Borodin’s string trios; the Guarnieri’s quartets; and Haskill, Grumiaux and Szeryng’s sonatas. Also features Brendel, Gulda, the LSO and the VPO – what we have here is the legendary performing the finest. Extensive sleeve notes plus librettos to accompany all vocal pieces show that this set leaves nothing to be desired. Amazing quality at a very special price. Note: stock is limited at this price. HARMONIA MUNDI: THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY BOXED SET Various artists. 30 CD Set. Was $250, now $149.95. Prestigious French label Harmonia Mundi was hailed by Gramophone magazine as its label of the year in 2006. This was a well-deserved accolade because Harmonia Mundi has been at the forefront of musical exploration for 50 years. This is one label that has remained a stylish presenter of interesting music interestingly performed, and the breadth of this 30-disc set is testimony to the label’s wonderful sense of adventure. From early organ and vocal music, through to the glories of the baroque era and to new ways of performing classical and romantic works, Harmonia Mundi has attracted an impressive roster of artists. Alfred Deller, Philippe Herreweghe, Fretwork, Les Arts Florissants, Andreas Scholl, René Jacobs and the Jerusalem String Quartet are but a few of the featured artists here. This exciting voyage of musical discovery even includes the music of our own time, and is not to be missed. THE CAMBRIDGE BUSKERS COLLECTION Cambridge Buskers. 4 CD Set. $49.95. JACQUELINE DU PRÉ – A CELEBRATION DVD Was $54.95, now $49.95. The Cambridge Buskers were a step ahead of the office revolution, having condensed five CDs full of Beethoven’s nine symphonies onto a single fourminute track before the rest of us migrated from typewriters and squeezed our filing cabinets full of documents into computer kilobytes. Here’s the ultimate fun CD-set for Christmas. Where else would you be able to fit 130 tracks with very nearly the complete Cambridge Buskers recordings in clean-as-a-whistle remasters from the original Deutsche Grammophon tapes onto four CDs? Nothing’s sacred here. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry, you’ll shake your head in amazement. But most of all, you’ll enjoy classical music like you’ve never heard it before. One of the greatest cellists of the 20th century, Jacqueline du Pré’s life was in every way as inspiring as her music. Robbed of the ability to perform by multiple sclerosis while still in her 20s, du Pré continued to lead a remarkable life until her death in 1987. Veteran filmmaker Christopher Nupen, a longstanding friend of the cellist, brings together previously unreleased material to offer us an absorbing portrait of this wonderful human being. Of particular interest is an interview with du Pré recorded in 1980 that reveals much about her approach to music and life, as well as a cheeky sense of humour. Extensive interviews with friends and fellow artists also attempt to answer the fascinating question ‘Who was Jacqueline du Pré?’ Now that we can no longer experience the euphoria of a live Pavarotti performance, we need more than ever to rely on the great tenor’s audiovisual legacy. The Pavarotti Forever DVD relives the unique atmosphere of the tenor’s spectacular outdoor concerts in Hyde Park and Central Park and includes such operatic favourites as ‘E lucevan le stelle’ from Tosca and ‘Nessun dorma’ from Turandot, as well as Italian evergreens ‘Torna a Sorriento’ and ‘O sole mio’. The Pavarotti Forever two-CD set showcases a generous selection of Pavarotti’s varied repertoire and includes guest appearances with Cecilia Bartoli, Andrea Bocelli and even Frank Sinatra! An excellent tribute to an unforgettable performer. BACH: SONATAS FOR VIOLIN AND KEYBOARD Richard Tognetti. 2 CD Set. $38.95. HANDEL ARIAS Danielle de Niese. $29.95. Born in Australia but raised in Los Angeles, Danielle de Niese has taken the opera world by storm and is now acclaimed as one of its bright new stars, having already triumphed on such famous stages as Glyndebourne and New York’s Metropolitan Opera. In this accomplished first recording she sings 12 Handel arias accompanied by Les Arts Florissants under the deft direction of William Christie. A vivacious personality shines through the various moods of the music, which includes such beloved works as ‘Lascia ch’io pianga’ from Rinaldo and ‘Da tempeste’ and ‘Piangerò’ from Julius Caesar. With her extreme versatility and agility, de Niese is definitely a talent to enjoy now and to watch for future developments. PAVAROTTI FOREVER Luciano Pavarotti. DVD $29.95. 2 CD Set. $29.95. MARIA Cecilia Bartoli. $29.95. Cecilia Bartoli has become more than a little fascinated with one of the 19th century’s most amazing singers, Maria Malibran; and not without good reason. Malibran was dead at the age of 28, but in her short career she had captivated audiences in both Europe and America and had inspired such important composers as Rossini, Bellini and Paganini. Bartoli’s musical reincarnation of Malibran will leave you fascinated as well. In addition to some of the famous bel canto arias with which Malibran was associated (such as ‘Casta diva’ from Norma), Bartoli also offers eight world premiere recordings in this recital with the Orchestra La Scintilla under Adam Fischer. Accompanied by a lavish hardcover booklet, this disc is a splendid tribute to an unjustly neglected talent. MARIA CALLAS – THE COMPLETE STUDIO RECORDINGS Maria Callas. 70 CD Set. $139.95. Thirty years after her death, the powerful magnetism of Maria Callas is still as strong as ever. EMI has found the perfect way to perpetuate the diva’s memory and introduce another generation to her astounding achievements – a 70-disc set containing all her studio recordings made in the epic years spanning 1949 to 1969. In addition to 26 operas (including four studio remakes), there are a dozen discs of recital material as well as a CD-ROM that contains complete song texts and a picture gallery of this extraordinary artist. Offered at an irresistibly low price, this set is essential listening for all opera lovers. Richard Tognetti’s recording of Bach’s sonatas for violin and keyboard brings to a glorious conclusion a distinguished trilogy of Bach recordings that also includes the concertos and solo partitas and sonatas. With the sensitive collaboration of Neal Peres Da Costa on organ and harpsichord and Daniel Yeadon on gamba and cello, Tognetti amply demonstrates that he is equally at home in the intimate sound world of these sonatas as he is in the more extrovert world of the concertos. As ever, the lustrous tone of Tognetti’s Gaudagnini violin beguiles the listener. This two-disc set is available separately and as part of a boxed set of all Tognetti’s Bach recordings ($89.95). VIVALDI MASTERWORKS Various artists. 40 CD Set. $69.95. Venice’s flamboyant ‘red priest’, Antonio Vivaldi wrote a great deal more than The Four Seasons. Here’s the perfect opportunity to explore the prolific output of this clever and colourful giant of baroque music. This 40-disc set not only covers all the major instrumental works, but includes an extended survey of the vocal music including such famous masterworks as the Gloria and the Stabat Mater as well as other church music and the superb dramatic oratorio Juditha triumphans. Amongst the excellent artists represented are Salvatore Accardo, Felix Ayo, Felicity Lott, Elly Ameling and Heinz Holliger. This quality set is brilliant value for money, giving the listener some 40 hours of music and fine accounts of some 200 works. Can you afford not to buy it? DVDs AFTER THE WEDDING $24.95. Available from 5 December 2007. GODARD NOUVELLE VAGUE COLLECTION $69.95. THE EAGLE VOLUME THREE $44.95. Available from 5 December 2007. A festival hit and one of the best foreign films of 2007 – this unrelenting drama features Danish man-of-the-moment Mads Mikkelsen as humanitarian Jacob Petersen. Attending a wedding, Jacob finds himself at a critical juncture between past and future and experiences the most intense dilemma of his life. Specially created for our discerning customers! We’ve pooled a varied selection of Godard’s films to form this recherché collection just in time for Christmas. Breathless, Alphaville, Pierrot le Fou, Woman is a Woman and Passion – encompassing the French auteur’s deft versatility in genres throughout his career. This hard-hitting Danish series has garnered legions of fans with its gripping storylines and outstanding cast. Its psychological drama reels you in and leaves you with a chill that lingers longer than a Scandinavian winter. Crime buffs can complete their collections with The Eagle Volume One ($39.95) and The Eagle Volume Two ($44.95). THE CAMOMILE LAWN $34.95. UNFOLDING FLORENCE $29.95. A DANCE TO THE MUSIC OF TIME $64.95. Introducing two superb series from Acorn Films. Celebrating the nostalgic years of upper-class British life spanning the 1920s to the 1960s, The Camomile Lawn and A Dance to the Music of Time will satisfy lovers of scintillating drama! Design enthusiasts will love this documentary directed by Gillian Armstrong about one of Australia’s most enigmatic characters. A flair for self-promotion ensured that wallpaper designer extraordinaire Florence Broadhurst was a flamboyant figure on the Sydney social scene before her brutal murder. Yet this is just a small part of her story... DEATH IN BRUNSWICK: COLLECTOR’S EDITION $29.95. THE JOHN CASSAVETES COLLECTION – DISTINCTION SERIES $79.95. A riotous roller-coaster of murder and mayhem, this hit Australian comedy-thriller stars Sam Neill as Carl, a no-hoper cook. After his dalliance with barmaid Sophie sparks a gangland feud, Carl turns to best mate Dave (John Clarke) to be his protector. Extras include commentaries, interviews and a featurette. Roll in for the local premiere of this collection by the father of the American indie movement. Includes Shadows, Faces, A Woman Under the Influence, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie and Opening Night in stunning transfers. With extra docos and alternative cuts, this is a must-have for true fans of cinema. PLANET EARTH: THE COMPLETE SERIES $99.95. The epic story of life on earth – an unforgettable journey of rare action and intimate moments with our planet’s best-loved, wildest and most elusive creatures in the earth’s most extreme habitats. This spectacular collection also includes accompanying ‘making of’ shorts and three extra episodes of Planet Earth: The Future. LITTLE PRINCESS PRETTY PURSE BUNDLE The Little Princess is insatiably curious about how the world works and has many adventures and discoveries. Buy any two of the Little Princess DVDs – Castle Adventures, Spring and Summer (available 5 December 2007) – at just $19.95 each and flit away with a free pretty purse perfect for your inner princess! 27 I LOVE PARIS – SPECIAL GIVEAWAY We love Paris every moment of the year, but especially this gift season…mais oui! Sink your teeth into these three dishy French offerings: Paris Je t’Aime, The Valet and Paris Vu Par. Buy two of these and receive either The Dinner Game or The Closet free! Bon appétit, mes amis! THOMAS AND FRIENDS LIMITED EDITION ACTIVITY BOX SET $79.95. PRIME SUSPECT: THE COMPLETE COLLECTION $99.95. Available from 1 December 2007. Available for the first time in its entirety, this bumper nine-disc box set of the TV series includes a bonus disc of ‘behind the scenes’ footage with over 26 hours of hard-hitting entertainment – who could resist the mesmerising Helen Mirren and an amazing cast including David Thewlis, Tom Wilkinson and Ralph Fiennes? ROMULUS, MY FATHER $34.95. Lovers of Australian literature and cinema will enjoy this adaptation based on Raimond Gaita’s critically acclaimed memoir. It celebrates the unbreakable bond between Romulus and son Raimond, who tries to balance a universe described by his deeply moral father against the experience of heartbreaking absence and neglect from a depressive mother. THE SISSI COLLECTION $49.95. Romy Schneider stars in four captivating films based on the tumultuous life of the beloved Austrian Empress, Sissi. The story of the early years of Empress Elisabeth of Austria and her beloved Franz Joseph, the Sissi films (released 1955–57) continue to exert a romantic and nostalgic spell on audiences worldwide. All aboard for this special gift edition of Thomas & Friends! There are over 11 hours of classic Thomas & Friends to enjoy on five DVDs, as well as an activity booklet, fridge magnets, a bedroom nameplate and sticker sheets. This limited edition gift box is only available while stocks last! THE STANLEY KUBRICK COLLECTION $79.95. Available from 5 December 2007. The most anticipated boxed-set release for the year is here – a 10-disc remastered collection of Kubrick’s most iconic films: 2001: A Space Odyssey, A Clockwork Orange, Eyes Wide Shut, The Shining and Full Metal Jacket. Includes bonus featurettes and interviews that give a rare look into the mind of the master filmmaker. VOLVER $29.95. Here, Spanish auteur Pedro Almodóvar presents us with a rich tale of three generations of women who survive by means of occasional lies and boundless vitality. The plot has Raimunda visited by the ghost of her mother, who wants to revisit some unresolved family issues. Perfect for the caliente mujeres in your life, Volver exudes warmth, humour and genuine emotion. ORDER FORM Your name Your address Order online at www.readings.com.au Postcode / / / Tel (BH) Readings has been Melbourne’s pre-eminent independent bookseller since 1969. From our beginnings in Carlton, Readings has expanded in size and scope and now offers a vast array of books, music and DVDs in five ideal locations: Carlton, Hawthorn, Malvern, Port Melbourne and St Kilda. Email address Cheque enclosed ❏ Please charge my credit card: BC ❏ Card number / / Expiry date / / / / / / / / / MC ❏ / / Card verification code / VISA ❏ / / / / / / We offer customers an outstanding range of products, from cutting-edge music and films to classic texts. Readings is passionate about Australian literature, music and film, and we regularly hold high profile in-store book and music events and launches throughout the year that are free and open to the public. Name on card Cardholder’s signature Please send me information about your newsletter and events ❏ Please fax or mail your completed order form to us at the address indicated under shop details (see right) or place your order by telephone or email. TITLE QTY PRICE Sub total $ $6.50* $7.95* $7.95 $10.00 PLUS DELIVERY (Melbourne metro) or PLUS DELIVERY (Elsewhere in Australia) or PLUS DELIVERY (New Zealand – one to three items) or PLUS DELIVERY (New Zealand – four items or more) READINGS CARLTON READINGS PORT MELBOURNE 309 Lygon Street Carlton VIC 3053 Tel: (03) 9347 6633 Fax: (03) 9347 1641 Email: readings@readings.com.au Open: Mon–Fri: 8am–11pm Sat & Sun: 9am–11pm Phone orders from 8am weekdays 253 Bay Street Port Melbourne VIC 3207 Tel: (03) 9681 9255 Fax: (03) 9681 9797 Email: portmelbourne@readings.com.au Open (including café): Mon–Fri: 8am–7pm Sat: 8am–6pm Sun: 9am–6pm READINGS HAWTHORN READINGS ST KILDA 701 Glenferrie Road Hawthorn VIC 3122 Tel: (03) 9819 1917 Fax: (03) 9815 0649 Email: hawthorn@readings.com.au Open (including café): Mon–Fri: 8am–8pm Sat & Sun: 9am–6pm 112 Acland Street St Kilda VIC 3182 Tel: (03) 9525 3852 Fax: (03) 9534 0444 Email: stkilda@readings.com.au Open: Daily: 10am–10pm (except Christmas Day) READINGS MALVERN MAIL ORDER 185 Glenferrie Road Malvern VIC 3144 Tel: (03) 9509 1952 Fax: (03) 9509 4957 Email: malvern@readings.com.au Open: Mon–Fri: 9am–7pm Sat: 9am–6pm Sun: 10am–6pm Order online www.readings.com.au Fax orders; 03 9347 1641 Mail orders to: Readings PO Box 1066 Carlton VIC 3053 Note: All opening hours given are valid for 1-31 December 2007. (Express and overseas rates available on request) *NB: Postage free with seven or more items Total $ Please note: Although all details are correct at the time of printing, prices may change without notice due to the vagaries of the exchange rate and the will of publishers. FREE GIFTWRAP On a separate sheet, clearly indicate which books are to be wrapped, where they are to be delivered and what greeting you would like written on the card. The delivery charge applies to each separate delivery address. WIN AN INSTANT LIBRARY! First Prize To win an instant library worth more than $5000, or one of five $100 gift book vouchers: • pay close attention as you read the reviews in this guide • answer the ten questions scattered throughout the guide • fill in the form below with your answers • attach the form to a receipt from a purchase of an item from this catalogue (NB: your purchase must be from one of our shops) • return to one of our shops in your state by MONDAY 4 FEBRUARY 2008 A selection of the titles featured in this catalogue – the very best of this summer’s fiction, travel, history, politics, biography and much more. Total value more than $5000! Second Prizes One of five $100 book gift vouchers. I’d like to enter the competition to win more than $5000 worth of great books. My answers are: 1. The Readings gift card is the perfect gift for friends, family or work colleagues. It's also a great corporate gift. Cards can be used to purchase books, CDs or DVDs at all Readings shops. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Entries must be received by 5pm on Monday 4 February 2008. The prize will be drawn at Gleebooks, 49 Glebe Point Road, Glebe NSW at 5pm on Wednesday 13 February 2008. To be eligible to enter, you must purchase an item from this catalogue at a Readings shop, attach the proof of your purchase to your completed entry form and return it to a Readings shop. The winners will be notified by post and announced in The Australian newspaper on Friday 15 February 2008. Prizes are not transferable and may not be exchanged for cash. Titles are selected for first prize at the discretion of the promoter. Employees (and their immediate families) of participating bookshops are not permitted to enter the competition. Promoter: Gleebooks, 49 Glebe Point Road, Glebe NSW Tel: (02) 9660 2333. NSW Permit No.TPL 06/10616. ✁ 10. PROJECT MANAGEMENT: VIRGINIA MAXWELL. TITLE SELECTION: DAVID GAUNT, KATHY KOZLOWSKI, MARK RUBBO, CATHERINE SCHULZ & MARTIN SHAW. REVIEWS: JANET AUSTIN, JO CASE, PETER HANDSAKER, ROBERT HOLLINGWORTH, HELEN LARDNER, JUDITH LORIENTE, MARK MACLEOD, DAVID MCCLYMONT & VIRGINIA MAXWELL. EDITING: VIRGINIA MAXWELL. PROOFREADING: JANET AUSTIN. COVER ILLUSTRATION & LETTERING: MICHAEL LEUNIG. DESIGN: ALTCREATIVE. PRINTING: HANNANPRINT NSW.