The Stalking of Julia Gillard, Kerry-Anne Walsh

A profoundly personal, passionate, frequently sarcastic look at the wrecking ball behaviour of Rudd and cronies in the fight for the leadership of the Australian Federal Labor Party.

This is a scathing account of the machinations, which makes no bones about the side on which the author firmly sits. Having said that there is an obvious position being taken here, the lengths and depths to which the fight for power stretched, regardless of the outcome is breathtaking. The blatant use of sarcasm means you can almost hear the collective "you can't say that" mutterings going on. ... Read review

Deadly Intent, Laraine Stephens

The second in the Reggie da Costa Mystery series from local author Laraine Stephens, DEADLY INTENT is set in Melbourne, in October 1923.

In this outing, heavy rains have battered Melbourne, and local crime reporter Reggie da Costa finds himself at the centre of a story when he discovers that a trunk, hidden away in what became a flooded basement, contains the decomposing remains of a wealthy widower. Cornelius Stout has been missing for two years, and it doesn't take long for da Costa, and his sidekick in this outing - teacher Dotty Wright - to uncover other missing ... Read review

Blue Hotel, Chad Taylor

Ray Moody is washed up. He drinks too much and won't look after himself. He's separated from his wife (it's more complicated than that), living in the house that her family still pays for and he's got a full time pre-occupation with separating himself from his career. So explaining the double disappearance of Blanca Nul in small-town New Zealand becomes his quest, as well as an excellent way of pretending that the meltdown that is his own life isn't happening.

BLUE HOTEL is darkest crime noir. It takes place in old fashioned newsrooms, questionable newsagencies, seedy ... Read review

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The Final Call, Jen Shieff

A sequel to THE GENTLEMEN'S CLUB and THE VANISHING ACT, THE FINAL CALL is set in 1979 (10 or so years after THE VANISHING ACT) located in Remuera New Zealand, where Rita Saunders is the boss at The Gentlemen's Club, a high class brothel. Rita's more than a madam to her girls though, and the brothel is more than just a house of prostitution, Rita's girls are comfortable, protected as much as she possibly can and as safe as they can be in a country where prostitution was illegal up until the early 2000's.

Switching the concentration a little in this book, Carmel O'Sullivan ... Read review

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Wipptee, Jai Baidell

I used to keep count of "girl in a hat" (and man standing on a foggy street corner) book covers. But in this case, you know the sort of thing, book covers for rural / romance styled novels with girls looking off into the distance, over fields of golden (dry) grass, akubra style hat firmly on head. Not a sign of sun blemishes, squinting eyes, dry skin, chafed hands, bandaids, broken fingernails, bruised arms, or scratches from the hay bales. The hats are pretty well always devoid of signs of wear, tear and the sort of battering that comes from being trampled in stockyards... So ... Read review

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Missing, Presumed Dead, Mark Tedeschi QC

Mark Tedeschi AM QC was, until 2019, the Senior Crown Prosecutor, and the head of Chambers of the Crown Prosecutors for New South Wales. He's now a private barrister, but in 35 years with Crown Prosecution he has prosecuted many high-profile trials in Australia, some of which have involved the worst of the worst murderers and offenders this country has ever seen.

MISSING, PRESUMED DEAD is the story of the disappearance of two women in particular - 74 year old Dorothy Davis and 39 year old Kerry Whelan, both of whom had the great misfortune to come into contact with one of ... Read review

Shadow Over Edmund Street, Suzanne Frankham

Edwina Biggs has lead a quiet life, battling to make ends meet, working a mundane job with antisocial hours, living a restrained life in a contained neighbourhood. Things were changing at last though as she'd recently swapped the big family home for a small cottage on Edmund Street, learnt to drive, and bought herself a car and some freedom. For a long time though, she's been a blurry character to all around her, one of those myriad of quiet women, living unremarkable lives. Until she died on a wet, blustery, cold Sunday morning, in her recently acquired car, at the foot of a cliff, ... Read review

Tall Tales and Wee Stories, Billy Connolly

I'm a massive fan of anything Billy Connolly does, says, narrates or writes. Having seen him perform live, he writes very much as he talks, and his musings, wanderings, and sometimes dragging things to a conclusion are all reflected in this whimsical collection of odds and ends, many of which those who have followed him for many years will already know.

But as he says, he's been asked many times to write down some of his best known tales from his stand-up days and always resisted until now as the stories had a life of their own. Having now retired from live stand-up it sort ... Read review

A Runner's Guide to Rakiura, Jessica Howland Kany

Started this book with absolutely no idea what I was going to get, got through the first quarter with no idea what was going on, ended the whole thing thoroughly enjoying every word of it.

Maudie is the central character of this novel, a millenial New Yorker who, on assigment to cover Aotearoa New Zealand's southern-most running trails, takes herself to Rakiura Stewart Island. She's erratic, impulsive, and very American when she first arrives in the eccentric, self-sufficient, laid back community that captures her heart and energy. Despite a sense of constant "otherness" ... Read review

The Woman in the Library, Sulari Gentill

The Wikipedia definition of metafiction is:

"Metafiction is a form of fiction which emphasises its own constructedness in a way that continually reminds the audience to be aware they are reading or viewing a fictional work. Metafiction is self-conscious about language, literary form, and story-telling, and works of metafiction directly or indirectly draw attention to their status as artifacts."

It's a notoriously difficult style to execute, and compelling and very clever when done well - and Sulari Gentill is proving herself ... Read review

Power Play, Julia Banks

Read for a f2f bookclub gathering (which somewhat "ironically" was severely hampered by the constant need of a few of the male members to talk about other things over the top of those of us trying to discuss the book....), this was worth the time taken.

It's been a book that has been on my radar for quite a while, wanting to get some perspective of why, at this point in history, a successful woman would be attracted to running for the Liberal Party in the first place - which question wasn't really answered. It was somewhat startling to sense a certain level of "surprise" in ... Read review

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Boiling A Frog, Christopher Brookmyre

The 3rd in the Jack Parlabane series, the audio of this book kept mildly freaking me out. Originally published in 2000, the political satire, the social commentary, and the sheer breathtaking bloody awfulness of the "powers that be" could be right now. So right now, that it was freaky, distracting, unbelievably disappointing, hilariously funny, scarily on topic, and scathing in it's portrayal of the Catholic Church in all it's pestilence, politician's in all their connivance, and political minders in all their brutality of purpose (and the utter lack of ethics, morals, decency and I ... Read review

Folded, Tina Clough

The 3rd book in the Hunter Grant series, FOLDED sees Hunter and Dao reluctantly pulled into the darkweb and dangerous human traffickers.

After office-worker Grace finds a series of calls for help, folded in tiny origami shapes, dropped outside a high-rise city apartment building on her way to and from work, followed by a physics textbook with tiny writing between the lines, she turns to a work friend for help instead of the police, and then disappears herself. Which leads to the work friend, Linda, asking Hunter and Dao for their help. Initially reluctant, Hunter and Dao ... Read review

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Criminals, James O'Loghlin

Into the crime fiction reader's life something different should lob more often. CRIMINALS is not only different, it's brilliantly different.

Well known ABC presenter James O'Loghlin has taken his inspiration for this novel from his time as a criminal lawyer, and told the tale in a laid back, yet funny and compassionate style. There's a fine line being teetered on here, with three seemingly ordinary people being flung into each other's orbits as a result of one act, revealing more and more about those people as the story progresses. The humour is always there, but it's ... Read review

The Lady in the Van, Alan Bennett

Very readable, very engaging, very short little tale about a woman who starts off like a bit of a "classic English eccentric" but ends with quite a sad story.Read review

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The Happiest Man on Earth, Eddie Jaku

Emotional, uplifting but without too much sugar coating, Eddie Jaku is somebody with a lot to teach about gratitude, kindness, never forgetting but forgiving. Amazing man. Amazing, emotional story.Read review

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Death at the Belvedere, Sue Williams

The fourth book in the Cass Tuplin mystery series, set in the dryland farming areas of Victoria, somewhere sort of north west of Bendigo (I think), in the fictional town of Rusty Bore, with a takeaway that always makes me think of Wycheproof. (There's nothing whatsoever in these books that makes you think Rusty Bore is anything other than completely fictional and I've no idea why that's been in my head since the opening novel..., but I digress.)

Which I think is probably encouraged by reading the Cass Tuplin series - she of (as it turns out in this novel), "a lot of ... Read review

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Knitting Needles and Knives, Rodney Strong

Alice Atkinson is back, laid up with an injured ankle and mildly bored. When her friend, and fellow resident of Silvermoon Retirement Centre, Owen asks for her help with his wayward granddaughter who has gotten herself into a spot of trouble. Nothing compared to the trouble she's going to be in when her boyfriend is found dead on the Centre grounds, and she keeps conveniently "forgetting" to make with all those little details of a story that mean that Alice can think her way to a solution.

Being laid up doesn't stop Alice, although it does complicate the investigation ... Read review

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I Wanna Be Yours, John Cooper Clarke

The soundtrack of your life often reflects the time when you were a teenager, when everything sears into the memory, embeds itself deep in the psyche and remains with you. Come my old age, my nursing home will have a very different soundtrack to the Hits of the Blitz that the grandparents favoured. For me it will be The Clash, The Slits, The Sex Pistols, The Ramones, Blondie, Siouxsie and the Banshees and of course, The Saints. Interspersed with the most unlikely offerings that came with the disco era. What can I say, the 70's and 80's were a weird, weird, gloriously outrageous, ... Read review

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