Our latest blog posts
Our best comfort reads
Booksellers share their favourite books and best advice for comfort reading.
Nina Kenwood recommends seriously good fantasy.
I don’t think you can go past a good fantasy series for comfort – a nice long read set in a world that isn’t yours can do wonders to take your mind off of your problems. The Harry Potter series are an obvious example. They contain many crucial elements that give me great comfort – boarding school, Englishness, descriptions of food, and the…
Baillie Gifford Prize longlist 2016
The £30,000 Baillie Gifford prize (formerly known as the Samuel Johnson prize) is the UK’s most prestigious award for nonfiction writing. This year’s longlist has been announced and Chair of Judges, Stephanie Flanders, says that each of these 10 titles ‘takes you on a journey that is as engrossing and imaginative as any novel’.
Here is the longlist in full:
Second-Hand Time by Svetlana Alexievich, translated by Bela Shayevich
The Vanishing Man by Laura Cumming
Being a Beast by Charles…
Children’s books for Dementia Awareness Month
Today is World Alzheimer’s Day, and September is Dementia Awareness Month in Australia. The theme this year is `You are not alone’ – a great reminder to sit down with the kids in our lives and read about how dementia impacts the people we know and love.
Here are some of our recommendations for children’s books that explore the impact of dementia and Alzheimer’s on families.
Celia and Nonna by Victoria Lane and Kayleen West
Celia loves spending quality time…
Our top picks of the month for book clubs
For an entertaining, old-fashioned afternoon tea…
Closed Casket by Sophie Hannah with Agatha Christie
Our crime fiction columnist had some concerns about dipping into Sophie Hannah’s imagining of a brand-new Hercule Poirot mystery – Agatha Christie is a singular voice! – but happily, she was entranced by the tale. In her own words, this witty mystery is ‘just too wonderfully delicious’. And we have a strong suspicion this delicious read would go down extremely well with some delicious…
Why you should read Ruins by Rajith Savanadasa
We’re delighted that Rajith Savanadasa’s debut novel is one of the six books shortlisted for this year’s Readings Prize for New Australian Fiction. Here’s why we think you should read this book.
1. Ruins is a refreshing take on the ‘big, messy, dysfunctional family’ narrative.
Many of us here at Readings are big fans of novels about dysfunctional families (who isn’t?) and it’s an area of literature that’s often dominated by American fiction. So it was exciting to get our…
Our children's and YA top ten bestsellers of the week
Do Not Open This Book by Andy Lee and Heath McKenzie
An A-Z of Creatures by Karen Allen
The 78-Storey Treehouse by Andy Griffiths and Terry Denton
Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs (including the film tie-in edition)
Welcome to Country by Joy Murphy and Lisa Kennedy
Ada Twist, Scientist by Andrea Beaty and David Roberts
Mega Weird (WeirDo Book 7) by Anh Do and Jules Faber
Empire of Storms (Throne of Glass Book…
Our top ten bestsellers of the week
Grant and I by Robert Forster
Black Rock White City by A.S. Patrić
The Age Good Food Guide 2017 edited by Roslyn Grundy
The Best of Adam Sharp by Graeme Simsion
The Hidden Life of Trees by Peter Wohlleben
Enemy Within – American Politics in the Time of Trump (Quarterly Essay 63) by Don Watson
Neighbourhood by Hetty McKinnon
A Handful of Sand: The Gurindji Struggle, After the Walk-off by Charlie Ward
Nutshell by Ian McEwan
What we're reading: Sarah Bannan, Jimmy Barnes and Mary Gaitskill
Each week we bring you a sample of the books we’re reading, the films we’re watching, the television shows we’re hooked on or the music we’re loving.
Chris Gordon is reading Working Class Boy by Jimmy Barnes
Last night, I started reading Jimmy Barnes’ forthcoming memoir about his childhood Working Class Boy. I didn’t expect to be captivated. I didn’t expect that his story would be one of poverty, abuse and addiction. I didn’t expect to be moved by…
National Book Awards longlists 2016
The longlists for this year’s National Book Awards have been announced. Here they are in full.
Fiction
The Throwback Special by Chris Bachelder
What Belongs To You by Garth Greenwell
Imagine Me Gone by Adam Haslett
News of the World by Paulette Jiles
The Association of Small Bombs by Karan Mahajan
The Portable Veblen by Elizabeth McKenzie
Sweet Lamb of Heaven by Lydia Millet
Miss Jane by Brad Watson
The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
Another Brooklyn by Jacqueline Woodson
…
Come along to the Czech and Slovak Film Festival of Australia
The fourth Czech and Slovak Film Festival of Australia (CaSFFA) is on this year from 14 to 23 September, with the theme of ‘Text and Texture’ encompassing all those points where the cinematic and literary arts collide.
Inspired by Melbourne (2008) and Prague’s (2014) newly shared status as ‘UNESCO Cities of Literature’, the 2016 CaSSFA program includes a pick of the greatest film adaptations of Czech and Slovak literature, such as Cutting it Short and the medieval epic Marketa Lazarova…