Our latest blog posts

The Winners of the Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards 2015

The winners for the 2015 Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards have been announced.

The winner of the fiction prize is To Name Those Lost by Rohan Wilson.

The winner of the non-fiction prize is The Europeans in Australia by Alan Atkinson.

The winner of the young adult fiction prize is The Protected by Claire Zorn.

The winner of the poetry prize is The Beautiful Anxiety by Jill Jones.

The winner of the drama prize is Resplendence by Angus Cerini.

The winner…

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Four free and fantastic events at St Kilda this February

Join us this February for four fantastic, free events at our St Kilda shop, located at 112 Acland St in St Kilda.

Belle Rosco Live In-Store

Get your blue suede shoes on and join in the St Kilda Festival Live n Local series with Belle Rosco as they perform from their new album, Boom Boom. This wonderful indie pop rock sound is the personification of summer itself.

6pm, Tuesday 3 February
Free, no booking required

Story Time Yoga

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Wild: Book vs. Film

Nina Kenwood and Bronte Coates talk about Cheryl Strayed’s memoir, Wild, and how the recent film adaptation compares to the book.

Bronte: I read Wild based on your recommendation but otherwise I never would’ve picked it up as it didn’t sound like the sort of thing I’d enjoy. I absolutely loved it (of course). Why did you pick it up in the first place?

Nina: I think I read something about it online, and I’d just gotten into hiking…

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What we're reading: Nicholas Rombes, Lauren Sams and Jane Gleeson-White

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.

Gerard Elson is reading The Absolution of Roberto Acestes Laing by Nicholas Rombes

After a promising beginning, I was ultimately frustrated by film scholar Nicholas Rombes’ first work of literary fiction. The novel finds a journalist travelling to a remote location to interview a rare film librarian about a selection of destroyed films…

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January Children's & Young Adult Highlights

by Emily Gale

It’s great to see an author-illustrator partnership taking off and I think that’s the case with Clare Freedman and Kate Hindley. Their first book,

The Great Snortle Hunt

, was really good fun and several customers told me it was their pre-schooler’s favourite. The latest,

Oliver and Patch

, is a heart-breaker (probably more so for the adult reading it) but nicely uplifting. Warm and lively illustrations, and the cover alone put a smile on my face.

Staying on the…

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Why you should keep track of every book you read

by Nina Kenwood

For the past three years, I’ve kept a record of all the books I read in an Excel spreadsheet. I note the title, author, publication date, genre, month I read the book and I give each book a letter grade (I like the report card feel of assigning a letter grade – I feel very authoritative and teacherly). I can’t remember exactly why I formed this habit, but it’s one I’ve stuck to. And now I think that keeping track…

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What books should I read before I travel to Japan?

If you’re planning a holiday to Japan you might like to consider reading one of the following books.

The Guest Cat by Takashi Hiraide (translated by Eric Selland)

A couple in their thirties live in a small rented cottage in a quiet part of Tokyo, and work at home as freelance writers. They no longer have very much to say to one another. One day a cat invites itself into their small kitchen…

Kitchen by Banana Yoshimoto

Grieving the grandmother…

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Every Kazuo Ishiguro novel, ranked

by Bronte Coates

In anticipation of Kazuo Ishiguro’s upcoming novel The Buried Giant – his first in ten years – Bronte Coates ranks his previous novels from worst to best.

6. The Unconsoled

A dreamlike and surreal novel about three days in the life of famous pianist Ryder The Unconsoled is undoubtedly a challenging read. While some consider the novel a masterpiece (it’s arguably Ishiguro’s most ambitious work), it’s generally accepted as the author’s weakest – literary critic James Wood famously said it…

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