Our latest blog posts

Staff music picks, free events & pre-order new Radiohead

PRE-ORDER OKNOTOK 1997-2017

Radiohead’s landmark album, OK Computer, is set to be rereleased in a special 20th anniversary pack on Friday 23 June, and our music and DVD manager Dave Clarke is extremely excited.

He writes: ‘The year is 1997. I have just turned 29, I am obsessed with something called Saturn Return’s, and with an album by English alternative rock group Radiohead. That album is OK Computer, and it became my constant companion while considering major life…

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Three classical albums we're loving in May

Songs Without Words

by the Grigoryan Brothers

If you say the words ‘Grigoryan brothers’ to most classical music fans, they’ll smile and nod knowingly. Renowned for their musicianship since they were teenagers, they’ve released five albums together: pretty much all of them have been nominated for awards. They’re played all the time on ABC Classic FM, and in people’s homes around the world. Slava Grigoryan’s most recent album featured beautiful arrangements of the Bach Cello Suites that I still listen…

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Our children's and YA top ten bestsellers of the week

A Most Magical Girl by Karen Foxlee

Begin, End, Begin (A #LoveOzYA Anthology) edited by Danielle Binks

The Bad Guys Episode 5: Intergalactic Gas by Aaron Blabey

A Court of Wings and Ruin (A Court of Thrones and Roses Book 3) by Sarah J. Maas

The Dark Prophecy (The Trials of Apollo Book 2) by Rick Riordan

Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls by Elena Favilli and Francesca Cavallo

Release by Patrick Ness

In My Heart: A Book

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Our top ten bestsellers of the week

Fighting Hislam by Susan Carland

Work Strife Balance by Mia Freedman

Into the Water by Paula Hawkins

Depends What You Mean by Extremist by John Safran

The Museum of Modern Love by Heather Rose

The Australian Bird Guide by various

House of Names by Colm Tóibín

Anything is Possible by Elizabeth Strout

The Dry by Jane Harper

The Pleasures of Leisure by Robert Dessaix

Last week’s bestselling books include three new non-fiction reads from well-known figures in the Australian media…

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What we're reading: Lil Wayne, Shaun Considine & Hera Lindsay Bird

Each week we bring you a sample of the books we’re reading, the films and TV shows we’re watching, and the music we’re listening to.

Mark Rubbo is reading Spoils by Brian Van Reet

Set in Iraq in 2003 just after the US invasion, Spoils is a moving and complex novel that examines the illogicality of war and allegiances. Van Reet is a veteran of the Iraq war, so brings a special perspective to this complex story. His writing is…

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Exciting new releases in May

by Jo Case

There’s something both delicious and dangerous about working in a bookshop. Every other day, I discover a new – or old – book that I suddenly can’t live without. It’s tempting enough working on the shop floor at Readings Doncaster (Mondays), but now that I’m editing Readings Monthly too, my bedside book mountain is rising to ridiculous levels.

I don’t know if it was a desire to scale the mountain, or overexcitement at beginning my third stint as Readings Monthly

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Book suggestions for soon-to-be-mothers

by Bronte Coates

A perennial and tricky question that booksellers often hear is what to gift someone who is pregnant. Tricky because expectant mothers are not a separate breed to the rest of humanity and – like all of us – have changing and contradictory desires and needs. Some might want the more traditional fare (like advice books or memoirs about real-life experiences), while others might want to indulge in something completely unrelated to their current situation (like space operas or some truly…

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Q&A with artist Adam John Cullen

by Adam John Cullen

Melbourne based artist (and St Kilda bookseller!) Adam John Cullen is one of 78 dynamic Australian artists featured in Melissa Loughnan’s Australiana to Zeitgeist. We chat with Adam about his practice, and the best ways to learn more about other Australian artists.

1. Tell us a little bit about your art practice.

My practice is largely based in sculptural installation, working with themes of commodity exchange/trade, and personal histories of found objects. I studied photography at RMIT and Monash…

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Mark's Say, May, 2017

by Mark Rubbo

Like Australian publishing generally, university publishing in Australia has gone through its ups and downs. Melbourne University Publishing has dominated the sector for the last 30 years or so, but like many Australian publishers, it’s had to adjust to a changing landscape. University of Queensland Press established itself as a literary publisher in the 70s and 80s, publishing Peter Carey, Kate Grenville and David Malouf. It’s recently appointed former Australia Council Literature executive, Jill Eddington, as its director.

It’s heartening…

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Read an extract from The Hot Guy

by Mel Campbell and Anthony Morris

Film critics Mel Campbell and Anthony Morris have teamed up to create The Hot Guy, a satirical rom-com that both sends up and pays tribute to movies, romantic conventions, and inner-city Melbourne – complete with hipster jokes, fake film trailers and good-natured snark. You can read a short extract from the novel below.

We’re pleased to be hosting a free event with Mel and Anthony discussing the novel with the Good Copy’s Penny Modra on Wednesday 25 May. Find…

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