Nonfiction

Unlike the Heart: A Memoir of Brain and Mind by Nicola Redhouse

Reviewed by Elke Power

In this extraordinary memoir, the reader is taken into the confidence of Nicola Redhouse: writer, editor, reader and, above all, someone who constantly seeks to better understand the human condition and her own unique mind. Unlike the Heart is an…

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From Secret Ballot to Democracy Sausage by Judith Brett

Reviewed by Julia Jackson

Judith Brett’s latest offering, hot on the heels of her bestselling (and award-winning) biography of Alfred Deakin, is a tightly written history of Australia’s electoral system. Moreover, it reads like a thriller.

Some would argue that our electoral system isn’t…

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Accidental Feminists by Jane Caro

Reviewed by Cindy Morris

Accidental Feminists is a celebration of the women who came after the Australian women who won the right to vote. These secondwave feminists grew up earning money most of their lives, a fact that is phenomenal in itself. This era…

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Beyond Words: A Year with Kenneth Cook by Jacqueline Kent

Reviewed by Ellen Cregan

In 1985, Jacqueline Kent was living in Sydney and working as a freelance book editor. At a dinner party, she met Kenneth Cook, author of classic Australian novel Wake in Fright. The two quickly fell in love, and married…

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Heartland by Sarah Smarsh

Reviewed by Kara Nicholson

The product of multiple generations of teenage mothers, Sarah Smarsh was just a child and living below the poverty line in rural Kansas when she first heard a voice from within. This voice grew into a disembodied internal power that…

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Close to Home by Alice Pung

Reviewed by Bronte Coates

Alice Pung arrived on the Australian literary scene with the 2006 publication of her memoir, Unpolished Gem. She has since gone on to write a second memoir, a series of children’s books, a young adult novel, various essays and…

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Through the Night by Ed Moreno & Caio Fernando Abreu

Reviewed by Deborah Crabtree

In 1990 Ed Moreno was given a death sentence: at just 25 years of age he tested HIV positive and doctors gave him five years to live, at best. Almost thirty years later, with the help of antiretroviral treatment, Moreno…

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The Dinosaur Artist by Paige Williams

Reviewed by Julia Jackson

Adapted and greatly expanded from her 2013 New Yorker article ‘Bones of Contention’, Paige Williams delves again, more deeply, into the heady and complex world of ‘commercial palaeontology’ and its implications regarding national cultural heritage. The crux of this book…

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Mad, Bad, Dangerous to Know by Colm Tóibín

Reviewed by Bernard Caleo

In his 2013 book New Ways to Kill Your Mother: Writers and Their Families, Colm Tóibín exposed a roster of famous writers behaving badly. With Mad, Bad, Dangerous to Know: The Fathers of Wilde, Yeats and Joyce, he…

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Boys Will Be Boys by Clementine Ford

Reviewed by Elke Power

Just as she did with the title of her first book, Clementine Ford has taken another well-known expression and repurposed it for the title of her second. Ford reclaimed Fight Like A Girl and framed the idea as a positive…

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