Our latest blog posts

Chris Gordon interviews Rachel Khoo

by Chris Gordon

Our resident foodie Chris Gordon chats with British chef, writer and broadcaster Rachel Khoo.

First, congratulations on your second cookbook! With your background in art, I imagine you have quite a lot to do with the layout of your books? What’s that process like?

I really enjoy that part of creating a book. It all starts on the photo shoots where I work with a really talented team: David Loftus (photographer), John Hamilton (art director), Frankie Unsworth (food stylist) and…

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Australian Book Industry Awards 2015 Shortlists

The shortlisted titles for this year’s Australian Book Industry Awards have been announced. See below for the full list of titles in each category:

Literary Fiction Book of the Year

Amnesia by Peter Carey

Foreign Soil by Maxine Beneba Clarke

The Golden Age by Joan London

Golden Boys by Sonya Hartnett

When the Night Comes by Favel Parrett

General Fiction Book of the Year

Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty

Laurinda by Alice Pung

Life or Death by Michael Robotham

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What we're reading: Stephanie Bishop, Monica Dux, Krissy Kneen and Christopher Bollen

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.

Nina Kenwood is reading The Other Side of the World by Stephanie Bishop

I’m going to be annoying and write about two novels that aren’t out yet (sorry). Right now, I’m reading an advance copy of The Other Side of the World by Stephanie Bishop, an upcoming Australian novel that’s out in July…

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The Kibble and Dobbie Literary Awards 2015 Longlists

The longlists for this year’s Kibble and Dobbie Literary Awards have been announced. The Kibble and Dobbie Literary Awards are open to Australian women writers who have published a book of fiction or nonfiction classifiable as ‘life writing’. The Kibble Literary Award recognises the work of an established Australian woman writer and the Dobbie Literary Award recognises the work of a first-time published Australian woman writer.

The longlisted titles for the $30,000 Kibble Literary Award are:

Warning: The Story of

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What we're reading over the long weekend

Our staff share the books they’re planning to read over the coming long weekend.

Stella Charls is reading The Life of Houses by Lisa Gorton

A long weekend feels like an opportunity to take some time to challenge myself (at least in regards to what I’m reading). I’m looking forward to starting The Life of Houses – poet Lisa Gorton’s debut novel that Helen Garner calls, ‘shadowy, rich and restrained, a work of high literary sophistication and power’. I normally…

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Children's books to tackle childhood worries

by Emily Gale

As adults with complex worries of our own we can forget what scared us as children, how large those things loomed when a single day seemed so long. Here are some picture books, a short story collection and a junior novel that our children’s specialists love for the special attention they pay to childhood anxieties and the messages of hope they bring in funny, observant and beautiful packages.

I’m too shy at parties and things…
The Underwater Fancy-Dress Parade by…

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On reading Tove Jansson

by George Delaney

Tove Jansson is most well-known for her children’s series of illustrated Moomin novels, but I’d argue that her fiction for adults is an under-appreciated treasure.

In Fair Play, Jansson fictionalises her initially secret life with her partner, Tuuliki Pietilä, in adjacent apartments in Helsinki. The episodic novel presents two playful, sympathetic, sometimes moody women, Mari and Jonna, a writer and an artist. Both are attempting to contain their frustrations with the world of fans, publishers, critics and old friends…

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A defence of the classics

Some of our staff recently shared the classic novels and authors they believed were overrated (you can find their thoughts here). This week, some of our other staff defend these same classic novels and authors…

In defence of Shakespeare…

‘I can see he’s not in your good books,’ says I.
‘No, and if he were I would burn my library,’ says Bronte.
Keep at it Bronte and give the dude another go. He’s a true master of pop culture…

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