Our latest blog posts
Jo Case interviews Jessica Friedmann
Jo Case interviews Jessica Friedmann about her debut collection of essays, Things That Helped.
The opening chapter in Jessica Friedmann’s memoir-in-essays, Things That Helped, closes with her lying on her bathroom floor in the middle of the night, resolved to drown herself in the Maribyrnong River, but unable to get up. She’s a young woman engulfed by early motherhood, distanced not just from her creative self, but from her very grasp on language. Her body is scarred and…
Our top ten bestsellers of the week
The White Queen - One Nation and the Politics of Race (Quarterly Essay 65) by David Marr
See What I Have Done by Sarah Schmidt
The Barefoot Investor by Scott Pape
The Dry by Jane Harper
Between a Wolf and a Dog by Georgia Blain
They Cannot Take the Sky by Michael Green, Angelica Neville, André Dao, Dana Affleck and Sienna Merope
First, We Make the Beast Beautiful by Sarah Wilson
Our children's and YA top ten bestsellers of the week
The Beast of Hushing Wood by Gabrielle Wang
Really Weird! (WeirDo Book 8) by Anh Do and Jules Faber
Slow Down, World by Tai Snaith
A Most Magical Girl by Karen Foxlee
I’m Australian Too by Mem Fox and Ronojoy Ghosh
The Red Book by Beck and Matt Stanton
Florette by Anna Walker
Escape to the Moon Islands (Quest of the Sunfish Book 1) by Mardi McConnochie
Grover Finds a Home (Grover McBane, Rescue Dog Book 1)…
25% off a select range of popular cookbooks
Throughout April, we’re offering a special offer on a select range of our most popular cookbooks!
Online customers will receive 25% off the full price of any of the cookbooks found here.
In-store customers will receive 25% off cookbooks that feature an orange ‘25% off ’ sticker.
This offer includes cookbooks from some of our favourite Australian cooks, such as Neighbourhood from Hetty McKinnon, Salads & Vegetables from Karen Martini and The Cook’s Companion by Stephanie Alexander.
Seafood lovers…
What we're reading: Bernadette Brennan, Zoe Whittall and John Darnielle
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.
Stella Charls is reading Universal Harvester by John Darnielle
I recently inhaled John Darnielle’s creepy and wonderful second novel. As I wrote in my review, Universal Harvester is a remarkable psychological thriller, as original as it is ambitious. The narrative starts out as a suspenseful page-turner, then evolves into a unsettling study of family and…
Exciting new releases in April
In international fiction, there was almost a bookseller stampede for John Darnielle’s much-anticipated second novel, Universal Harvester. Our marketing and events coordinator Stella Charls describes it as ‘a wonderfully strange and moving reading experience’. American journalist Omar El Akkad’s American War, a dystopian novel set in a near-future where a second Civil War rages, is reviewed with relish by Bronte Coates, our digital content coordinator. Locally, there’s Elizabeth Tan’s Rubik, a novel in stories that’s as tantalising…
Upcoming changes to Readings at the State Library Victoria
The State Library Victoria has announced plans for an $88.1 million redevelopment of the iconic Melbourne institution, commencing in July 2017 and due for completion by 2020. We are delighted that the plans will involve our State Library bookshop moving to a new, larger space within the building.
Managing director Mark Rubbo says: ‘We are very excited to be part of this wonderful project that will transform the iconic institution.’
The new designs, created by internationally acclaimed firms Architectus and…
Feminist texts, old and new
Our events manager Chris Gordon reflects on the echoes that linger between the feminist texts she read growing up, and the feminists texts being released today.
It feels important I state that I’m a white, educated, middle-aged, middle class woman living in inner-North Melbourne together with two healthy and wonderful children, and a bloke that loves and supports me. I’m aware that I’m privileged in these ways, and many others. I was lucky to have access to feminist texts and…
Novels that reflect current world events
Salman Rushdie’s upcoming novel Golden House takes place in the rise of the Trump era, tackling issues like love, terrorism, hatred and politics head on. If art is a mirror held up to nature, then here are some of the best examples of novels that reflect current issues shaping the world.
Autumn by Ali Smith
The first book in Ali Smith’s seasonal quartet takes place in the immediate aftermath of the Brexit vote and describes a country divided. In the…
The International Dylan Thomas Prize shortlist 2017
The 2017 shortlist for the International Dylan Thomas Prize has been announced.
The six shortlisted titles for this year are…
The Story of a Brief Marriage by Anuk Arudpragasam
Pigeon by Alys Conran
Cain by Luke Kennard
The High Places by Fiona McFarlane
The Essex Serpent by Sarah Perry
Dog Run Moon by Callan Wink
Chair of Judges, Professor Dai Smith CBE, says: ‘From a deeply impressive long list of 12 works of literature from across the globe, the judges…