Our latest reviews

Raff: Symphony No 2, Jarvi

Reviewed by Kate Rockstrom

Who is Joachim Raff? That was my first question on getting this recording, but as I put it on to listen, from the very first notes it didn’t matter. This has the joy and stateliness of Beethoven, with slightly more…

Read more ›

Bruckner: Symphony No 7, Runnicles

Reviewed by Phil Richards

Donald Runnicles and BBC SSO have made a stunning debut on this Hyperion label with this recording of Bruckner’s 7th symphony. I have always been an admirer of Bruckner’s majestic compositions and this new recording should please fans as well…

Read more ›

Zarebski: Piano Quintet, Quartet, Plowright

Reviewed by Kate Rockstrom

This recording from two obscure Polish composers is another first for the Hyperion label. Both works are excellent examples of chamber music from the Romantic period and wouldn’t be out of place beside Schumann, Mendelssohn or even Schubert. The skill…

Read more ›

Rachmaninov: Isle of the Dead, Litton

Reviewed by Phil Richards

This new recording from Andrew Litton and the Bergen Philharmonic is the perfect introduction to these wonderful works by Rachmaninov. Beginning with The Isle of the Dead, a tone poem dating back to 1909, and inspired by the painting of…

Read more ›

The Childhood of Jesus by J.M. Coetzee

Reviewed by Mark Rubbo

When they arrive in the town of Novilla, a child and a man are directed to a building with a large sign in Spanish that reads ‘Resettlement Centre’. The man seems to have had his memory wiped from him. The…

Read more ›

The Ghost Riders of Ordebec by Fred Vargas

Reviewed by Margaret Snowdon

The Times says of author Fred Vargas: ‘One of today’s few truly original writers of crime fiction; disturbing, unruly, droll and poetic.’ I agree with that – in a genre full of formulaic gore, Vargas is refreshing. Her mixture of…

Read more ›

Pivot Point by Kasie West

Reviewed by Anisija Gillian, age 14

As a Searcher living in a hidden world where everyone has mind powers, Addie Coleman, when faced with a choice, has always been able to see both outcomes. This has consistently prevented disaster in her life.

When her parents decide…

Read more ›

King Matt The First by Janusz Korczak

Reviewed by Louisa Dretzke

King Matt the First is a classic of children’s literature that seems to have escaped the knowledge of those outside of Europe. Indeed, it would have remained unknown to me had I not begun teaching grade six after teaching juniors…

Read more ›

Lio: There’s a Monster in My Socks by Mark Tatulli

Reviewed by Alexa Dretzke

Liō is naughty and inventive. He devises cool experiments that fool his father and get the better of bullies. He has a pet snake and octopus, but sometimes the animals fool him, even an alien or two. He has been…

Read more ›

Starring Jules (As Herself) by Beth Ain & Anne Keenan Higgins

Reviewed by Emily Gale

Jules Bloom is the central character in this new series that will appeal to fans of Judy Moody.

Quirky, fun and wholesome, the first story sees Jules tying herself in knots about an audition for a TV commercial –…

Read more ›