Biography and memoir

Group by Christie Tate

Reviewed by Tristen Brudy

Christie Tate, by most objective measures, is a success. She’s graduating top of her class from law school and is well on her way to a high-powered career. But underneath her veneer of control lies an unsettled body and mind…

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One Day I’ll Remember This: Diaries 1987–1995 by Helen Garner

Reviewed by Mark Rubbo

This is the second volume of Helen Garner’s Diaries to be published and covers the years 1987–1995. The Helen in these entries is more mature, more established, and perhaps not as happy. Professionally, things are going well. She’s working on…

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Mantel Pieces by Hilary Mantel

Reviewed by Amanda Rayner

On the 4th February 2013, two-time Booker Prize–winner Hilary Mantel gave a speech at the British Museum for a London Review of Books event. The speech was entitled ‘Royal Bodies: From Anne Boleyn to Kate Middleton’ and even now some…

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Only Happiness Here by Gabrielle Carey

Reviewed by Marie Matteson

‘I think I’ve so got into the habit of being happy inside and quite secretly …’ So wrote Elizabeth von Armin in her diary, in the year before her death, according to Gabrielle Carey in her new memoir and biography…

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Unseen by Jacinta Parsons

Reviewed by Flick Ford

About 9.5 million Australians live with a chronic illness. Many of these conditions are not outwardly visible, so symptoms and side effects are often experienced by sufferers in solitude.

Unseen is a powerful memoir about chronic illness by ABC broadcaster…

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Show Me Where It Hurts by Kylie Maslen

Reviewed by Bec Kavanagh

In Kylie Maslen’s generous debut collection of essays, Show Me Where It Hurts, she invites the reader into her experience of chronic pain. Hers, not anyone – or everyone – else’s: ‘I only hope that others find some kinship…

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Hysteria by Katerina Bryant

Reviewed by Clare Millar

I’m an avid reader of Australian debut writing, especially from younger authors. If you haven’t heard of it, Voiceworks is a literary journal produced by and for writers and artists under twenty-five. That in itself is amazing, but what is…

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Into the Suburbs: A Migrant’s Story by Christopher Raja

Reviewed by Chris Gordon

Personal stories of migration to Australia always break my heart a little. It is within these affecting portraits of someone’s life that we see an Australia that is racist, classist and so arrogant. Christopher Raja’s story of arriving from Calcutta…

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Diary of a Young Naturalist by Dara McAnulty

Reviewed by Angela Crocombe

This book by a young Irish teenager is an extraordinarily beautiful seasonal diary of observing and appreciating nature, teeming with stunning descriptions of the natural world. As he observes the changing of the seasons, the author shows a passion for…

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The Details by Tegan Bennett Daylight

Reviewed by Jeremy George

Reading a book written about reading books involves a certain doubled type of readerly attention and produces an equally doubled readerly experience. That is, you have to keep track of at least two registers and how they interact – the…

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