Our latest blog posts

Recent spooky reads for children

October, and the lead-up, never fail to provide a bounty of scary, eccentric and thrilling tales for our bookshelves. Filled with doomed school camps, wandering souls, small town mysteries and, of course, a fabulous vampire – there's something for every level of spooky comfort in the below recommended reads.

Spooky Stories of the World by Wendy Shearer & Teo Georgiey (illus.)

This spine-tingling collection of spooky stories features over 20 eerie tales from across the globe. Discover bewitching retellings of…

Read more ›

What we're reading: Yoshitake, Levy & Ward

Each week our amazing staff bring you a sample of the books or music they're immersed in.

Dani Solomon is reading I Can Open That! by Shinsuke Yoshitake

Another Shinsuke Yoshitake book, another hit. I Can Open That! begins with a little boy who laments how hard it is to open things like chocolate wrappers and orange juice. This leads to him imagining how great it will be when he can open things on his own, he'll be an official…

Read more ›

Q&A with the 2023 Readings New Australian Fiction Prize shortlist authors

With the upcoming announcement of this year's winner our New Australian Fiction Prize shortlist authors talk about their inspiration, the creative process, their perfect reader, their favourite writing advice, and what they hope readers take away from their books.

What was the initial inspiration for this story?

Amy Taylor (Search History): I’m fascinated by the way our relationships are divided between the online and offline world. When we construct an online version of ourselves and communicate with others…

Read more ›

Bestselling books in new, compact formats

These bestselling books are now available in smaller, more portable formats!

Willowman by Inga Simpson

Allan Reader, one of the last traditional batmakers in the country, keeps his family business alive in a small workshop in Melbourne.

When Todd Harrow, a gifted young batter, catches Allan's eye, a spark is lit and Allan decides to make a Reader bat for him, selecting the best piece of willow he's harvested in years to do so.

As Harrow charts a meteoric rise…

Read more ›

We test recipes from Philoxenia

Recently we tested a selection of recipes from Philoxenia: A Seat at My Table, a new cookbook from Kon Karapanagiotidis, founder of the ASRC, and his mother, Sia.

We were of course thrilled to then have Kon and Sia themselves stop by to taste test our attempts and judge the best replication.

Joe Rubbo made Spanikopita

I made the Spanikopita. Although I cheated by not making the phyllo pastry, using store bought instead. This shortcoming was spotted immediately by…

Read more ›

The October crime review

These are the crime books which have been read and reviewed by our excellent booksellers this month – all in one place!

Everyone On This Train Is a Suspect by Benjamin Stevenson

Reviewed by Lian Hingee from Readings online

Benjamin Stevenson’s bestselling novel Everyone In My Family Has Killed Someone was a comedic delight: Agatha Christie meets Knives Out via a distinctly Australian first-person narrator.

In Everyone On This Train Is a Suspect, Ernest Cunningham – mystery-solver and now…

Read more ›

Eggcelent picture books starring chickens

Some chickens cheer from the sidelines and others set their sights on outer space, but all chickens know it's best to be yourself and dare to dream. Below are four new stories about some very unique, but all equally inspiring, chickens!

Woo Hoo! You’re Doing Great! by Sandra Boynton

Whether you are learning to skate, baking a cake, or even making a mistake, this hilarious and heartfelt rhyming book reminds us that trying our best is reason to celebrate. From…

Read more ›

Top picks for book clubs this month

Australian Fiction | Lola in the Mirror by Trent Dalton

A girl and her mother are on the lam. They've been running for sixteen years, from police and the monster they left in the kitchen with the knife in his throat. They've found themselves a home inside an orange 1987 Toyota HiAce van with four flat tyres parked in a scrapyard by the edge of the Brisbane River.

The girl has no name because names are dangerous when you're on…

Read more ›

What we're reading: Lucashenko, Penelope & Boynton

Each week our amazing staff bring you a sample of the books or music they're immersed in.

Rosalind McClintock is reading Edenglassie by Melissa Lucashenko

I was lucky enough to see Melissa Lucashenko in conversation with David Marr at the BookPeople conference. Lucashenko came across as fiercely intelligent, generous and funny, that along with the passages she read aloud from her new book Edenglassie prompted me to hunt down a copy. It did not disappoint, it is all these things…

Read more ›

The best food and gardening books of the month, with Chris Gordon

by Chris Gordon

The Farm Table by Julius Roberts

Do you love Matthew Evans’ recipes? Perhaps Jamie Oliver’s? Now, combine those two tremendous cooks and consider the way they both use food in season with simple recipes. Well, move over boys because Julius is in town. This is English farmer and cook Julius Roberts’ first book, although you may have seen him on TV, and it is a beauty. It’s filled with ideas and ideals, all suited to anyone out there with a…

Read more ›