Our latest blog posts

Is A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler a good pick for book clubs?

Each month we choose a newly released book that we feel is perfect for a book club. Then we roadtest it. Here are our thoughts on whether Anne Tyler’s A Spool of Blue Thread is a good pick for for book clubs.

There are no spoilers in this blog post. To read our notes from our book club discussion, click here.

The response from this month’s book clubbers was an overwhelming thumbs up! The book was considered utterly ripe…

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Our thoughts on A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler

Each month we choose a newly released book that we feel is perfect for a book club. Then we roadtest it. Here are some notes from our own book club discussion of Anne Tyler’s A Spool of Blue Thread.

WARNING: This blog post contains spoilers. To read a spoiler-free discussion of the book, please click here.

On the novel’s unusual structure:

I think if this book had been traditionally structured in chronological order and begun with the relationship…

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If you loved this childhood classic, try this...

If you loved Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery…

…try This is the Story of a Happy Marriage by Ann Patchett

This story of the vivacious red-haired orphan who arrives on the unsuspecting Marilla Cuthbert’s doorstep is delightfully warm and welcoming – a coming-of-age narrative that features a loyal best friend and a dash of romance. Ann Patchett’s essays also feature a loyal best friend (see the essay, ‘“The Love Between the Two Women is Not Normal”’) and dash…

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What we're reading: Sarah Helm, Emily Bitto and Judy Melinek

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.

Annie Condon is reading Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies and the Making of a Medical Examiner by Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell

Last week I came across a fascinating title – ‘Working Stiff: 2 Years 262 Bodies and the Making of a Medical Examiner’. I was gruesomely intrigued, especially when I read…

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Books to read after a breakup

by Nina Kenwood

LOVE STORIES TO WALLOW IN

Who knew feeling sorry for yourself could feel so good

Rainbow Rowell’s Eleanor & Park is an extremely lovely, extremely heartbreaking story of two teenage misfits falling in love.

Speaking of misfits falling in love, Don’s journey to finding the love of his life in The Rosie Project is guaranteed to make you feel a little bit gooey and sentimental.

Sit down and cry it all out with The Fault In Our Stars.

Hit…

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When Julia Donaldson came to visit

Julia Donaldson, the author of The Gruffalo and many other wonderful children books, dropped by our Carlton shop to meet her fans and have some fun with Readings booksellers.

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Why I wrote a book about death for kids

by Andrew McDonald

A friend asked me recently why I’d written a novel about death for children. They asked with eyebrows raised, as if to suggest that the topic of death was surely not an appropriate subject matter for young readers.

Son of Death came about because I thought it would be fun to throw a rock’n’roll-obsessed 14-year-old into the middle of a secret world of grim-reaping. It was a great opportunity to play around with grim reaper mythology and tell a funny…

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Seven crime novels to read this February

by Fiona Hardy

BOOK OF THE MONTH

Wolf Winter by Cecilia Ekbäck

Swedish Lapland, June 1717 (note, this reader virtually never reads things set in the past): Finns Maija and Paavo take their children Frederika and Dorotea to Sweden, away from the fear that has beaten Paavo into a shadow of the man he once was. They settle in Lapland, beside the mountain Blackåsen, ill-equipped for living in an isolated and storm-racked area. They have been there only a short time when the…

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