June new - Readings
Transcription
June new - Readings
JUNE 2013 F r ee Simmone Howell on Fiona Wood / Mel Campbell on Miles Franklin Event t Highligh ic Graph ’ n i k l Ta with s l e v o N o, d Cale r a n r Be enberg e r G i k Nic beth a z i l E & rlane a cf a M Books music film events J UNE n e w releases Neil Gaiman $27.99 p8 Philipp Meyer $32.95 / $27.95 p5 Fiona Wood Silver Linings Playbook $39.95 / $34.95 p17 Laura Marling $26.95 / $21.95 p18 more inside... Cover illustration by pat grant $16.99 p4 Graphic Novels! Ronnie Scott on Art Comics, Peanuts, Chip Kidd & more... COVERED IN MONSOON MUD AND INVITED INTO A LOCAL’S HOME FOR YAK-BUTTER TEA. TIBET, 1999. SHARE YOUR TRAVEL STORY TO WIN! lonelyplanet.com/shareyourtravelstory To enter, purchase a Lonely Planet book with a promotional sticker from Readings and enter online before 30 June 2013. CARLTON 309 Lygon St 9347 6633 HAWTHORN 701 Glenferrie Rd 9819 1917 MALVERN 185 Glenferrie Rd 9509 1952 ST KILDA 112 Acland St 9525 3852 READINGS AT THE STATE LIBRARY OF VICTORIA 328 Swanston St 8664 7540 READINGS AT THE BRAIN CENTRE 30 Royal Parade, Parkville 9347 1749 See shop opening hours, browse and buy online at www.readings.com.au 2 R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY j u n e 2 0 1 3 This month’s news COMMONWEALTH BOOK PRIZE REGIONAL WINNERS The regional winners of the 2013 Commonwealth Book Prize have been announced. The winning titles, by region, are Sterile Sky by E. Egya Sule (Africa), Island of a Thousand Mirrors by Nayomi Munaweera (Asia), The Death of Bees by Lisa O’Donnell (Canada and Europe), Disposable People by Ezekel Alan (Caribbean) and The Last Thread by Michael Sala (Pacific). The judging panel, which included our very NAXOS AUDIOBOOKS: 3 FOR 2 If you’re a lover of the classics, then you’ll be glad to hear that we’re running our annual Naxos AudioBooks sale again in June. Buy any two Mark’s Say Naxos AudioBooks from our featured range and News and views from Readings’ managing director, Mark Rubbo receive a third (of equal or lesser value) free. From Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights to Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, we have hours of wonderful stories to choose from. Offer available at our Carlton, Hawthorn and St Kilda shops. Last month, we mentioned some interesting new fiction coming out later this year and I’ve been alerted to two other major titles to look forward to. Tasmanian author Richard Flanagan has a new own Books Division manager Martin Shaw, novel in September, The Narrow Road to the Deep North, which borrows its title from the Japanese made their announcement in May, awarding poet Basho’s seventeenth century travel memoir. It’s partially set in a Japanese labour camp in 1943. each winning author prize money of £2500. See Chris Womersley, author of the acclaimed Bereft also has a new novel due in September, Cairo. more on the regional winners on page 6. It centres around the theft, and return, of Picasso’s Weeping Woman from the National Gallery of Victoria. Chris’s publisher, Scribe, will be publishing Cairo under their UK imprint. HAPPINESS & ITS CAUSES CONFERENCE Scribe publisher Henry Rosenbloom has always had an interest in featuring international books on his lists (last year, for example, he acquired the National Book Award-winning Behind the Beautiful Happiness & Its Causes is one of the world’s Forevers by Katherine Boo). When a slot came up at the Faber Factory Plus, a sales and distribution leading forums on the causes of a happy and meaningful life. Now in its eighth year, the conference will be hosted in Melbourne for the first time on 19 and 20 June, and Readings is thrilled to be the official bookseller. The conference will feature more than 35 amazing speakers, including the world’s foremost expert on the science of life satisfaction Professor Ed Diener, acclaimed psychologist and researcher in the field of motivation Professor Carol Dweck, and His Holiness the Dalai Lama. For more information, visit www.happinessanditscauses.com.au. MADMAN FESTIVAL AT HOME DVD SALE Together with Madman, we’re excited to announce Festival at Home, a new project that offers cinephiles the opportunity to curate their own film festival. To participate, simply choose any five titles from our hand-picked selection of critically acclaimed DVDs, slide them into one of the specially designed box sets, and they are all yours to take home for just $59.95. Titles include Melancholia, BLOOMSDAY IN MELBOURNE FESTIVAL The Trip, Animal Kingdom, In the Loop, Bill Cunningham New York and more. Offer available at our Carlton, Hawthorn, St Kilda The Bloomsday in Melbourne festival will celebrate its 20th year at fortyfivedownstairs and Malvern shops until the end of June. service in the UK for independent publishers, Henry jumped at the chance, although not without some trepidation. Scribe plan to publish a small list overseas. This will consist of their Australian releases, like Cairo, where appropriate, and they have also started acquiring rights to publish international titles in the UK, Europe and Australia. At the recent London Book Fair, Scribe picked up UK and Australian rights to some major US titles. They included New York Times bestseller, The Way of the Knife by Mark Mazzetti, which describes how the lines between the CIA and the American military have been blurred, and The Book of Woe by Gary Greenberg, a critical look at the psychiatrist’s bible, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). This comes out appropriately just after the release of the latest edition, the DSM-5, which has been ten years in the making. The DSM-5 has already been creating waves with its reclassification of Asperger’s syndrome as an autistic disorder, and is sure to cause further controversy. Scribe are not the only Australian publisher to venture into international waters. Lonely Planet was the first successful organisation to become a truly international, Australian-based publisher. Trade publisher Hardie Grant have also had a UK presence for some years and have recently come to an arrangement with US publisher Rizzoli to move into that market. Sandy Grant, one of the principals of Hardie Grant, has extensive UK experience, having been CEO of Reed Publishing in the late 90s. Hardie Grant’s from 12 to 16 June. The festival pays tribute high quality illustrated books have found a niche in the UK. Scribe’s foray is different in that they will to James Joyce’s novel Ulysses and this year concentrate on serious non-fiction and some literary fiction. Perhaps some other publishers will follow – comprises of four events: a series of readings, Text, maybe, as their new shareholders, Tony and Maureen Wheeler, maintain a base in London? In any a dinner and a seminar, as well as a play case, I wish Scribe and our other Australian publishers well as they venture further abroad! directed by Wayne Pearn, The Seven Ages of Joyce, which dramatises Joyce’s tumultuous and free-spirited life while drawing on his often hilarious and always mercurial fiction. To book for the play, visit www.fortyfivedownstairs.com or phone (03) 9662 9966. For general information, visit www.bloomsdayinmelbourne.org.au or phone (03) 9898 2900. Readings Monthly is a free independent monthly newspaper published by Readings Books, Music & Film. Editorial enquiries: Jessica Au at [email protected] Advertising enquiries: Ingrid Josephine at [email protected] or call 03 9341 7739. Design by Sonja Meyer www.sonjameyer.com.au Thank you to Readings staff members and contributors for your reviews. CINEMA Leonardo DiCaprio Carey Mulligan Tobey Maguire The highly-anticipated new film from Baz Luhrmann “AnGROUP ambitious thriller assisted BOOKINGS AVAILABLE IN BOTH 3D AND 2D! by excellent performances” Empire NOW SHOWING NOVA Oslo Davis www.oslodavis.com RECOMMENDS Visit the Cinema Nova Bar 380 LYGON ST CARLTON www.cinemanova.com.au Join our e-news for updates on the Met Opera, National Theatre and other stage spectaculars. Léa Seydoux Diane Kruger Virginie Ledoyen Director Benoît Jacquot lavishly adapts Chantal Thomas' novel on the final days of Marie Antoinette “An ambitious thriller assisted ★★★★by SBS Film excellent performances”JUNEEmpire 6, EXCLUSIVE R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 Meet the Bookseller June Events Gabrielle Williams, Readings Malvern For more information and updates, please visit the events page at www.readings.com.au. Please note bookings do not necessarily guarantee a seat and some events may be standing room only. World environment day 14 Join us at Readings Carlton on World Environment Day. The Wilderness Society will announce the winner of the 2013 Environment Award for Children’s Literature, which honours books that promote caring and responsibility for the environment. Previous winners include Alison Lester and Coral Tulloch, Jackie French and Sue deGennaro. Singer-songwriter and exquisite musical stylist Monique diMattina will perform from her brand new album, Nola’s Ark ($24.95), featuring an all-star cast of musicians. Free, but please book on 9347 6633 or at [email protected]. Friday 14 June, 6pm Readings Carlton 309 Lygon St, Carlton, 3053. Free, no booking required. 26 Monique diMattina Justin Clemens Join us for the launch of Justin Clemens’s Psychoanalysis is an Antiphilosophy (Edinburgh University Press, PB, $44.99). Alain Badiou described psychoanalysis as an ‘antiphilosophy’ – a practice that offers the strongest possible challenges to thought. Now, Justin Clemens examines psychoanalysis under this rubric, examining the relationships of humans to drugs, animality and sexuality. What was your favourite book as a kid? I adored Paddington Bear. From the moment I read about him sitting at the train station with ‘please look after this bear’ pinned launch 5 to his coat, I felt utterly protective of him. His penchant for marmalade sandwiches, the fact that he was from deepest, darkest Peru, the respect he got from the local Free, no booking required. For bookings, please visit www.happinessanditscauses.com.au. Wednesday 19 & Thursday 20 June Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, South Wharf, Southbank, 3006. Wednesday 12 June, 6.30pm Readings Carlton 309 Lygon St, Carlton, 3053. 13 launch Free, no booking required. Paul Fearne Join us for the launch of A Schizophrenic to Strindberg: An Unanswered Letter, Paul Fearne’s epistolary novel addressed to the famous nineteenth-century playwright August Strindberg. Thursday 13 June, 5.30–7pm Readings at the Brain Centre, Dax Centre 30 Royal Parade, Parkville, 3052. launch Free, no booking required. launch I loved Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn (me and about a bazillion other people) and I thought Harvest by Jim Crace Join us for the launch of Anthony R. Jansen’s thriller Severed Past. Fourteen years ago, computer expert David Hayes surfaced from a terrible car crash with amnesia. It seemed like an accident, but was it? His search for his true identity will take him across Europe and bring him into contact with the formidable Company. was spectacular, but they’ve both been pipped at the post by Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers, which I just finished reading. It’s a fascinating insight into what makes humans tick – and tick successfully. Name a book that has changed the way you think, in ways small or large. 19 Australian Impressionists in France In celebration of the NGV’s latest exhibition, we are delighted to invite you to a special conversation with the curator of Australian art at the NGV and author of Australian Impressionists in France (NGV, PB, $39.95), Elena Taylor, and the assistant curator of Australian art, Humphrey Clegg. They’ll look at the visual journeys of Australian artists who left for France in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Gold coin donation. Please book on 9819 1917 or at [email protected]. Wednesday 19 June, 6.30pm Readings Hawthorn 701 Glenferrie Rd, Hawthorn, 3122. 20 Wednesday 26 June, 6.30pm Readings Hawthorn 701 Glenferrie Rd, Hawthorn, 3122. 27 Gold coin donation. Please book on 9347 6633 or at [email protected]. Thursday 20 June, 6.30pm Readings Carlton 309 Lygon St, Carlton, 3053. I have to go back to Outliers. While it may be that this book is the first thing that comes to mind because I’ve only just finished it, I’m seriously and constantly astonished by what he has to say. I’d even use the word gobsmacked. Gladwell’s research and writing has completely changed the way I look at everything. Brown Brothers Winter Poetry Festival What’s your favourite book? Our winter poetry festival continues and as the nights get colder, the verse gets warmer. This session features multi-award winning poet and critic Jill Jones, writer and artist A. Frances Johnson, and emerging poet Caroline Williamson. I can’t name a favourite book because that would feel disloyal to all my other favourites, although I will admit to loving Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights. This novel is still the most intense, Gothic, intuitive exploration of human nature that I’ve ever read. (Just don’t tell all my other favourite books I said that.) Free, no booking required. Talkin’ Graphic Novels Join Bernard Caleo of Cardigan Comics, Dr Elizabeth MacFarlane of the University of Melbourne and graphic novelist Nicki Greenberg (of The Great Gatsby and Hamlet fame) as they discuss the power of the unwritten word, and the next wave in comics. launch launch Join us for the launch of Robin Jeffrey’s The Great Indian Phone Book: How the Cheap Cell Phone Changes Business, Politics and Daily Life (Hurst, HB, $45). This is a multidimensional tale of what happens when a powerful and readily available technology is placed in the hands of a large, still predominantly poor population. Anthony R. Jansen Thursday 27 June, 6.30pm Readings Carlton 309 Lygon St, Carlton, 3053. 28 launch 12 Robin Jeffrey bargain, his partiality to ‘elevenses’ – I mean, he was completely beguiling. Free, no booking required. Free, no booking required. Thursday 6 June, 6.30pm Readings Hawthorn 701 Glenferrie Rd, Hawthorn, 3122. 26 shopkeepers because he drove a hard What’s the best book you’ve read lately? Brother Johnstone Join us as local band Brother Johnstone launch their brand new album, Ghost, a mesmerising soundscape of indie-folk hooks, laid-back grooves and acoustic rock, produced by the ARIA award-winning Chris Thompson. Free, no booking required. Friday 28 June, 6pm Readings St Kilda 112 Acland St, St Kilda, 3182. launch Join us for the launch of a very special young adult debut, The Whole of My World (Random, PB, $18.95) by Nicole Hayes. Desperate to escape her grieving father and harbouring her own terrible secret, Shelley disappears into the intoxicating world of Aussie Rules football, joining a motley crew of footy tragics. Finally, things seem to be working out, if only she and her team can keep winning. Happiness & Its Causes is one of the world’s leading forums on a happy and meaningful life. This year’s conference features more than 35 amazing speakers, including special guest His Holiness the Dalai Lama. launch Nicole Hayes Wednesday 26 June, 6.30pm Readings Carlton 309 Lygon St, Carlton, 3053. launch 19-20 Happiness & Its Causes Conference launch 6 launch Wednesday 5 June, 6.30pm Readings Carlton 309 Lygon St, Carlton, 3053. GOLD COIN DONATIONS: We’re now asking people who attend our events to please make a small gold coin donation, when possible, to The Readings Foundation. There will be a tin for donations at each event. All contributions over $2 are tax deductible. Thank you for your support. Why do you work in books? Working in a bookshop is like conducting my own mini-marketing research every day. As a writer, I’m fascinated by what motivates readers to choose certain books. Is it zeitgeist, word of mouth, reviews, literary awards? What? So every day I get to go to work and talk to customers about books, while secretly grilling them on their book-buying habits. Oh, and also, I love books. Or did I mention that already? What’s the best experience you’ve had in a bookshop? Having someone come up to the counter and say, ‘I’m looking for a book by someone called Gabrielle Williams.’ It’s happened a couple of times and each time I look around to see if someone’s set me up, to see if the guys from Punk’d are lurking behind the new release section. 3 4 R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 New Australian Writing Feature Fiona Wood won readers over with her debut novel, Six Impossible Things, which was also shortlisted for the 2011 CBCA Book of the Year Awards. Wildlife, a loose follow-up, tackles teenagehood, contraband, sex, survival and moving on in the theatre of the great outdoors. Here, she talks to Simmone Howell. F iona Wood’s much-loved debut, Six Impossible Things, was a funny and forensic look at the life of 14-year-old nerd-boy Dan Cereill. The novel worked through his impossible love, his depressed mother, his gay dad and his dying dog. In her sophomore release, Wildlife, Wood opens the tent fly on teenage social and sexual mores at a private school’s outdoor education campus. The year tens at the prestigious Crowthorne Grammar have the dubious honour of spending their fourth term at Mt Fairweather in the Victorian highlands. There they will partake of the fresh air, consider their relationship with nature, run a lot and NOT be alone with the opposite sex. Ostensibly. If you ever went on school camp, you may remember the lack of privacy, the strain of the share, the realisation that your body was built to embarrass you. If not, consider Wildlife an education and a serious entertainment. Wildlife alternates between narrators Sibylla and Lou. Early on, Lou observes that ‘If you ever went on school camp, you may remember the lack of privacy, the strain of the share, the realisation that your body was built to embarrass you. If not, consider Wildlife an education and a serious entertainment.’ Me, You and Everyone We Know Simmone Howell interviews Fiona Wood about her latest YA novel, Wildlife. camp ‘is functional, but also concerned with appearing to be functional’. Yet this description could easily apply to herself and Sibylla, both of whom are outwardly calm while a sea rages within. Sibylla’s recent appearance on a billboard (as the face of a perfume called Jeune Femme Sauvage) has elevated her status from class nondescript to Person of Interest. Now that she’s uncharacteristically kissed golden boy Ben, she must navigate all that tricksy romance stuff in the ‘fishbowl’ camp environment. Sibylla is egged on by Holly, who is a ‘good friend but a mean enemy’ and looked after by Michael, her ‘weird’ friend. Lou is the new arrival, staying in the same house. She’s a girl with a secret: she’s grieving the death of her boyfriend, Fred, who was killed in a road accident. Lou is at Mt Fairweather to heal, but healing is a long way off: ‘My heart is its own fierce country where no one else is welcome.’ Wildlife is a companion book of sorts to Six Impossible Things. Lou had a smaller role in SIT, but remained for Wood a character who lived off the page. Wood explains, ‘Lou and Sibylla’s stories were separate ideas that ended up intersecting. I wanted to write about Sibylla, a character in a state of flux who’s being torn between old and new friends, and finding those worlds hard to reconcile. As well, I had loved writing Lou and Fred in Six Impossible Things, and wanted to spend more time with one of them. So when I started thinking about what sort of friend Sibylla needed, it was someone like Lou. And to get Lou into a different school, something had to have changed in her life. The thing that changed was someone dying. Having lost someone she loved, she then became uniquely situated to help Sibylla.’ Wood’s great strengths are voice and characterisation. The girls’ voices are distinct, though they share the sophistication/bluff dialectic that, to me, spells Teenage. Reflecting on Fred’s death, Lou notes, ‘So much swings on shitty timing.’ Lou’s voice, bleak in the first half of the novel, then growing warmer, tempers Sibylla’s parabolas of insecurity. Post party, and post kiss with Ben, Sibylla’s mind rolls on: ‘What’s it going to be like seeing him today? My lips still tender, chin scratched. It had to be a casual hook-up, right? A party thing? Please, party-fling fairy, oh please visit and tell me what face to put on this morning.’ Initially, both Sibylla and Lou are focused on their own dramas but as the weeks progress and camp-life infiltrates, change begins to happen. Lou develops a friendship with Michael, and Sibylla realises that what she thinks she wants is actually what somebody else wants. Through Lou, she is presented with an alternative friendship to the one she has with Holly. Increasingly, each girl delivers commentary on the actions of the other. And the reader feels privy to the happenings – it’s a royal-court-ish kind of feeling. Meanwhile, the students are studying Othello, and jealousy, manipulation and betrayal are happening all around them. Wildlife is a novel concerned with getting through, or over, things. Wood says that the setting helped to push the theme. ‘Initially an outdoor education campus was appealing simply because it was a place away from parents, texting and Facebook. But wilderness also suggests the Romantic Movement and the primacy of emotion and feeling over reason.’ There is a classicism to Wood’s writing that makes sense when she reveals her teenage reading. She cites Charlotte Brontë, Nancy Mitford, Jane Austen, Lynne Reid Banks and F. Scott Fitzgerald as influences. ‘Books were so vivid and offered such compelling say youth is youth, fads change but feelings stay the same. If I stretch my memory I can alternatives to my actual (so-called) life at that age.’ And yet, Wildlife sits firmly in the world of contemporary young adult fiction. Wood writes picture my own school camp at Somers in year 11. Somewhere there exists a photograph about sex and desire with cool-headed clarity: ‘Because I was going there, I also wanted to say a few things around the topic – from remembering about safe sex, to ‘drunk means no’, to GLBTG are all normal. At certain ages, you probably don’t want to listen to parents or teachers talking about sex, but if you come across it in fiction, that’s fine. By dealing well with sex and sexuality, YA fiction can help to counteract homophobic and misogynistic attitudes that still abound.’ As a writer who is often faced with the old head/young heart question, I always of a four-bed cabin packed with flaming youth and nary a smoke alarm in sight. There was jealousy, laughing so hard that I thought I’d die, hopeless crushes, daggy teachers, pranks, theatre sports and contraband. Reading Wildlife brought it all back in a mad flood with art and insight and beautiful lines. It’s a truly satisfying read. Simmone Howell is the author of Girl Defective (Pan Macmillan). She likes op shops, sand dunes, polished floorboards, girl gangs, freesias, old records and chocolate. Find her at www.simmonehowell.com. R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 New Fiction book of the month The Son Philipp Meyer Vintage. PB. Was $32.95 Special price $27.95 Review: If John Wayne were still alive, he’d be salivating. For Phillipp Meyer’s second raid on the American heart is the story of Texas, where strength, men, dust, violence, gunpowder, cattle and oil come together to shine in a blood-soaked cowboy state. Meyer’s first novel, American Rust, took place in a dilapidated small town. In stark contrast The Son is a broad sweeping epic that traverses multiple generations, with enough horror and violence to rival Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian. But this is not simply a tale of war and incoherent brutality; it’s about what it is to be American. The McCulloughs are a powerful Texan dynasty, and each chapter is narrated by a different family member, decades apart. Their patriarch is one of the most formidable men in Texas, known as The Colonel. He was kidnapped by Comanche Indians as a boy, and reared on the plains of war and battle cries. Eli is renamed Tiehteti by the Indians, and eventually lives to be 100 years old. His years spent with the Comanche are narrated until the 1870s, where the story shifts into the hands of his son Peter. Told through journal entries from 1915-17, Peter is haunted by the murder of a neighbouring Mexican family. The third voice is Jeannie, the Colonel’s great-granddaughter, who wanders through her memories from the floor of the family mansion after suffering a fall in 2012. You can almost feel your own scalp being ripped off by the complexity of such a long-sweeping narrative, but Meyer kindly includes a genealogy for us to return to. After all, it’s family he is concerned with, and the vast differences between siblings and the choices (or lack of) available to them. Meyer dissects this idea through Texas – the classic American son – where ‘the strong must be encouraged, and the weak allowed to perish’. Luke May is a freelance reviewer Australian Fiction Now Showing Ron Elliott Fremantle Arts Centre Press. PB. $29.99 Review: Now Showing is quick, punchy and pulls you from page to page like a series of explosions. That is, it takes you to the movies. Ron Elliott’s second book comprises of five long short stories – novellas, really – that depict a relationship drama in the desert, a botched mafia job, a post-office heist gone wrong, the mishaps of a gambler and a crazy sociopath who can’t handle not getting his way. All of this is peppered with sharp dialogue and plenty of guns – some of them homemade. Elliott is a screenwriter by trade and these stories are the result, in his own words, of ‘adapting backwards’. That is, transforming his unpublished screenplays into prose. ‘They taste a little like films,’ he says in the introduction, and ‘if you don’t like movies, you won’t like these stories’. For Elliott hasn’t just rewritten his film ideas in the short story form, he’s actually attempted to retain the cinematic nature of the original screenplays, focusing on the traditional three-act structure; short, crosscut scenes; a sense of immediacy; and the inscrutability of a character’s inner thoughts. I confess, I was initially sceptical – but it worked. When I visualised the stories as if I were watching them on television, they really came to life. Dialogue and description that would’ve perhaps seemed wooden in a more traditional novel seemed incredibly vivid and convincing when I imagined it being enacted by the characters on my favourite TV shows. Elliott states that the stories aren’t for literary consumption, but are for reading while consuming popcorn, which I think is an apt description. The speedy, action-packed nature of the stories means you can read through them quickly without missing anything, and have clear, colourful imagery in your head at the same time. A very fun read. Julia Tulloh is a freelance writer and a PhD candidate in American Literature. A Wrong Turn at the Office of Unmade Lists Jane Rawson Transit Lounge. PB. $29.95 Review: Picture Melbourne in 2030 – what do you see? Jane Rawson paints a bleak picture. There’s a heatwave, clean water is hard to come by and disparity of wealth is rife. UN troops are a common sight and basic necessities like food and soap are expensive. The landscape is almost apocalyptic as you’re guided through it by Caddy. As a narrator, Caddy is charming in her bluntness, living off the streets and getting by on what she can. She once had a husband, a home and a cat, before an explosion on the Maribyrnong River left her to fend for herself. Now, she sleeps in a humpy on the riverbank, living day to day. She has no perceivable goals for the future and spends most of her time dreaming of a different reality. Jump back to 1997, San Francisco. Two kids, Sarah and Simon, have been sent to see America. Not just to see it, but to stand in every 25-foot square of the country. Although the book deals with some pretty big ideas, Rawson manages to integrate them into an endearing narrative. Sustainability is one of the issues raised. 2030 is not that far away, but realistically what resources will still be readily available to us? Characters ask for water in a bar but realise beer will be cheaper. Caddy relies on drinking boiled river water, which isn’t clean but is the only source she has access to. Playing with the idea of parallel universes and reality versus the imagination, the plot of this book is unpredictable, to say the least. This is Jane Rawson’s first novel. She is currently the section editor for environment and energy at The Conversation. Ella Mittas is a freelance reviewer From the Books Desk —Martin Shaw, Readings Books Division Manager Late last year, I was very honoured to be invited to join the judging panel for the Commonwealth Book Prize, an annual award for a best first novel from member countries. We were asked to choose winners from the five Commonwealth regions, and from those five to also elect an overall winner. So it was that in early January we began to whittle down an 80-odd longlist, which by late April became a shortlist of 20, and finally just five. Needless to say it was a staggering amount of reading. But it was also fascinating to look at books from such diverse parts of the world, including some countries that have only a modicum of the literary apparatus that we take for granted in Australia. I was also struck by how literature functions differently in different societies: a novel that emerges from war-torn Nigeria or Sri Lanka, for instance, is very unlikely not to bear traces of such conflict. Of course, one of the Australian shortlistees – Majok Tulba’s Beneath the Darkening Sky – is also marked in this way, as he tries to make sense of the homeland he escaped as a teenager, Sudan. I would of course recommend all of the winning titles to you very highly. From Australia, there’s Michael Sala’s wonderful The Last Thread, which one of my fellow judges described as ‘deeply touching’ and ‘unforgettable’. Sri Lankan-born Nayomi Munaweera writes a heartfelt and utterly magical reckoning with her homeland in Island of a Thousand Mirrors, and Scot Lisa O’Donnell has The Death of Bees, which takes on a confronting issue – parental neglect and abuse. The novel transports us through with a dramatic opening scene, and contains some of the most tenderly-drawn and endearing characters I’ve encountered in fiction in a long while. Turning to June releases, we have some exciting new novels by Philipp Meyer, Colum McCann and Rachel Kushner. Also, there is a welcome retrospective of James Salter’s wonderful short fiction, Collected Stories, which is likely to be an essential volume for all fans of contemporary American literature. In non-fiction, Anne Summers’ The Misogyny Factor explores the relevance and meaning of the term in contemporary Australian society. Meanwhile, Mel Campbell examines the fashion industry in Out of Shape, and how sizing and fit is a social construct. ‘It’s about bodies and ideals, reflections and distortions, gazes and doubts,’ reflects our reviewer, Jessica Au. Finally, our pick of Australian fiction this month is a young adult novel: Fiona Wood’s Wildlife. It's a followup to her enormously successful Six Impossible Things, and there’s a veritable clamour around it here at Readings pre-publication. Our children’s book buyer Emily Gale simply says, ‘Amazing!’ WHO WE WERE just_a_girl Text. PB. $29.99 UWAP. PB. $24.99 Melbourne, 1938. Annabel’s dream is to be a scientist. Falling in love is not part of her plan. But when she meets Bill Whitten, she knows instantly that they are destined for each other. After the war, the newlyweds emigrate to New York, where they meet Frank, an exCommunist from Hungary, and his playwright wife, Suzy. Frank, Annabel and Bill find work as microbiologists, experimenting with lethal infectious diseases. But it’s the 1950s and the Cold War is in full swing, with suspicion, paranoia and deceit threatening to unravel everything. Layla is only 14. She cruises online. She catches trains to meet strangers. Her mother, Margot, never suspects, even when Layla brings a man into their home. Margot is caught in her own web: an evangelical church and a charismatic pastor. Meanwhile, downtown, a man opens a suitcase and tenderly places his young lover inside. A Puberty Blues for the digital age, just_a_girl tears into the fabric of contemporary culture and explores what it’s like to grow up in a world of Facebook, webcams, internet porn and cyberbullying. Lucy Neave The Asylum John Harwood Random. PB. $32.95 Georgina Ferrars wakes to find herself in a private asylum. She has no memory of the past six weeks. Dr Straker, the charismatic physician in charge, tells her that she has suffered a seizure – and that her name is not Georgina Ferrars, but Lucy Ashton. Her protests only serve to convince the doctors that she is in the grip of ‘hysterical possession’ and Georgina is certified insane. With no money, and no one she dares trust, Georgina is left with only a stubborn determination to find out what happened during those missing weeks, no matter how terrifying the consequences. Kirsten Krauth Poetry Novelties Fiona Hile Hunter Publishers. PB. $19.95 Novelties is a collection that resonates with wildlife, love and literature – the traditional Australian ballad is thwarted through playful language to provide a counterfeit narrative, the history of love is seized and re-written, and an easel is a guillotine for writing poems about nature. This is prize-winning poet Fiona Hile’s first full-length collection. 5 6 R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 COMMONWEALTH BOOK PRIZE: REGIONAL WINNERS HIGHLIGHTS Island of a Thousand Mirrors Nayomi Munaweera (Sri Lanka) International Fiction THE FLAMETHROWERS Rachel Kushner Harvill Secker. PB. Was $32.95 Asia Perera Hussein Publishing House. PB. $22.95 Special price $27.95 A few months after the 1983 riots, a Sinhalese family leaves Sri Lanka for America. The two children, Yasodhara and Lanka, adapt to their new life quickly, but memories of their childhood on a tropical island are seared into their souls. Meanwhile, Saraswathi, living in the middle of a war-torn country, is struggling to be a teenager in a land that is anything but normal. Review: It’s possible that, in another life, I lived in New York, rode a motorcycle and was in love with an Italian artist. This would certainly explain why I find myself captivated by Rachel Kushner’s The Flamethrowers – her second and much-lauded novel. The Flamethrowers is set in the mid-70s, and the novel’s narrator, nicknamed Reno (it’s where she’s from) is a young woman obsessed with speed, motorcycles and, to a lesser degree, art. We first encounter Reno setting records at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. This racing turns out to be a catalyst for her art; she wants to photograph the traces her bike leaves in the earth. A year later, she arrives in New York, where she falls in with a rather outrageous group of artists, and finds herself girlfriend to Sandro Valera, an estranged scion of the Moto Valera motorcycle and tyre empire. As it happens, it’s a Moto Valera that Reno rides and this convenient coincidence helps to set up the story’s darker subplot. Later, after Sandro abandons her in Rome, Reno finds herself in the midst of a violent demonstration led by Italian radicals. She falls in with the welcoming group of militants, and it is at this point that the simmering political menace of the novel finally goes up in flames. Reno’s story is cleverly entwined with nominal doses of history, from the radical New York artistic scene of the 70s to the Red Brigades and proto-fascists of Italy, and the riots that ensued. Kushner’s narrative stays brilliantly alive despite a less than electric denouement. Her prose is sharp and her characters are sublimely real, complemented by vivacious dialogue. This is a story of losing one’s innocence and finding one’s place in the complex social and political contexts of the time. The Death of Bees Lisa O’Donnell (UK) William Heinemann. PB. $19.95 At the Hazlehurst housing estate in Glasgow, 15-year-old Marnie and her little sister Nelly finish burying their parents in the back garden. Meanwhile Lennie, the old guy next door, soon realises that the girls are all alone, and need his help – or does he need theirs? As the year ends and another begins, the sisters’ friends, neighbours and the authorities begin to ask questions. And as one lie leads to another, darker secrets about Marnie’s family come to light. The Last Thread Michael Sala (Australia) Affirm. PB. $24.95 Michael Sala’s The Last Thread recounts a life in fiction. From his early years in the Netherlands to growing up in Australia during the 1980s, Michael recalls how events from the past fractured his family. And, as his life unfolds, Michael – now a father himself – must decide if he can free himself from the dark pull of history. WHAT I LOVED The Complete Peanuts Charles M. Schulz Fantagraphics Books. HB Review: There’s this story about Charles M. Schulz, the creator of Peanuts, that I really love. After drawing and writing strips for close to 50 years, uninterrupted except for a five-week break in late 1997 to celebrate his 75th birthday, he was diagnosed with cancer. The illness soon began to affect his ability to see clearly and, as a result, he announced his retirement. Later, in an interview on The Today Show in 1999, Schulz said that some time after drawing his final panel, he looked up and thought, ‘You know, that poor, poor kid, he never even got to kick the football.’ For those who’ve never read a Peanuts comic, Schulz is referring to a long-running gag where the main protagonist, Charlie Brown, is repeatedly thwarted in his attempts to kick a football by the bossy, vivacious Lucy. Much like a television sitcom, the world of Peanuts features a cast of characters who all operate within their own idiosyncratic framework, from Lucy’s enduring love for the musically talented and definitely-not-interested Schroeder to Peppermint Patty’s mistaken belief that Snoopy is just a ‘funny-looking kid with a big nose’. (A mistake easily made given the dog’s lovable tendency to act human.) Perhaps it is Schulz’s adherence to this winning formula – one that rewards our love for nostalgia – that has ensured the overwhelming popularity of Peanuts over the years. Back in 2003, Fantagraphics Books announced an ambitious project: the complete reprinting of every Peanuts strip, to be published in 25 volumes over 12 years. Now up to volume 19, this is a mammoth undertaking and I’m more than a little in love with it. Reading from the very beginning, it’s fascinating to see how Schulz’s comics have developed in terms of artistic style as well as character and narrative. For example, even the famous football gag I mentioned earlier was originally performed by another little girl named Violet, who later disappeared. One of my favourite Peanuts moments (first published in a strip on 25 April, 1960 and later the inspiration for a book with the same title) is ‘Happiness is a warm puppy’. To regular readers, Lucy and Snoopy’s animosity is well known. They fight and treat one another with disdain. Perhaps most memorably, Snoopy will often plant a surprise kiss on Lucy, causing her to run away screaming. Yet in this particular strip the girl embraces the ‘stupid beagle’ to the pleasing sound of ‘mmmmm’. As a dog lover, this sweet, simple interaction tugs a heartstring, but what I really like is the implied understanding that while Lucy and Snoopy will invariably clash, there’s love here as well. Even as Schulz is delivering the familiarity we so often seek as readers, he suggests there will always be exceptions to the rule. And so I wonder, why didn’t he make an exception for Charlie Brown? Just imagine if, in that final strip, the little boy had kicked that football. On the one hand, I do wish for the pleasure such a triumphant moment would have awarded me, yet I also like that Schulz withheld this ending. His decision reveals a deeper truth: a sense that sometimes things don’t happen and ‘that's the way it goes’. Charlie Brown is not going to be anyone other than Charlie Brown, and that’s okay too. Bronte Coates – Readings Monthly & Online Assistant Nicole Mansour is from Readings St Kilda It’s rare for sex to be merely erotic in Salter’s work, and it’s never prurient. Collected Stories is a book that brings together Salter’s two collections, Dusk and Other Stories and Last Night, plus one other piece. It’s sometimes an uneasy mix and a Selected Stories might have been a more welcome option to a reader encountering Salter for the first time. However, you can rest assured that despite a few poor examples there are undeniable masterpieces of the short form to be found in what is a deeply rewarding book. A.S. Patrić is from Readings St Kilda TransAtlantic Colum McCann Bloomsbury. PB. $27.99 Review: I have to confess to being a fan of Colum McCann’s writing. When I read his 2009 novel Let the Great World Spin, I raved about it for months afterwards, so needless to say I was very excited to receive his latest offering, TransAtlantic. McCann was born in Dublin but now resides in New York, and the Irish-American connection has been a recurring theme in his work. As the title suggests, this is again the case with TransAtlantic. Similarly to Let the Great World Spin, McCann sets his fiction against historical events to deliver a book that is immediately absorbing. The opening chapters are seemingly unrelated and could almost be considered a collection of short stories. However, it soon becomes clear that what McCann is doing is delivering a series of snapshots of characters and the moments of history that they find themselves in. It is a saga that spans three generations of women and covers the Irish potato famine in 1845, the American Civil War, the Troubles in Northern Ireland and the first non-stop flight across the Atlantic in 1919, as well as the present day. McCann’s writing is so wonderfully descriptive that it’s not difficult to be transported to another era or to share the experiences of his characters. His account of the flight across the Atlantic, for instance, had me nervous for the two aviators; I could almost feel the icy air that made ‘the bones in their ears ring’. Not only did I enjoy TransAtlantic as a work of fiction, but I enjoyed it as a work of history as well. A great book to curl up with in front of the fire on a cold winter’s day. COLLECTED STORIES Sharon Peterson is from Readings Carlton Picador. HB. $39.99 AND THE MOUNTAINS ECHOED James Salter Review: James Salter is a deeply satisfying combination of raw power and finetuned precision. He writes stories that are never content to rest at perfection – they push and shove for more. Writers are often described as elegant and polished as though that were the epitome of literary art, but the ugly and ragged are just as vital for a genuine reflection of life. And the Collected Stories of James Salter do indeed reflect the long and varied life of a man who has been a fighter pilot for the US Air Force, a Hollywood screenwriter and a mountain climber. Running through almost everything Salter has written is sexual passion. It’s a particular sense of vitality that animates his writing in the same way as with the works of D.H. Lawrence, Henry Miller and Anaïs Nin. In most fiction, the sexual life is often seen as an experience of encounters. Yet in Salter’s stories, we are more likely to discover long relationships that are examined or informed through sexuality, and the ways in which it waxes and wanes. While this might provide frisson in an otherwise flat story, there’s also an implacable sense of hunger for life that it gives each of his characters. Khaled Hosseini Bloomsbury. PB. Was $33 Special price $27.95 Review: And the Mountains Echoed is Khaled Hosseini’s much-anticipated third novel, following bestsellers The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns, which combined sold more than 38 million copies worldwide. Despite similar themes of love, loss and powerful yet fragile family connections, this is a quieter story than his previous epics. The novel begins in 1952, in the small village of Shadbagh, Afghanistan. Kaboor, a labourer, tells his 10-year-old son, Abdullah, and daughter, Pari, a story about a young child being taken from his family in distressing circumstances. In the fable, the father makes a brave pilgrimage to faraway mountains to save his son, only to realise that the child is being raised in paradise. He needs to make the difficult decision of whether to take him home to a life of poverty or leave him there. In the end, he leaves him. R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 Kaboor later hands Pari over to a wealthy poet in Kabul, who is barren and in a loveless marriage, for the money that will keep his remaining family alive in their impoverished village. The poet moves with Pari to Paris, and the girl is never told that she was adopted, let alone that she was paid for. The novel then radiates from this small, broken family nucleus into the second generation. Here, we meet Abdullah’s daughter, also named Pari, who, as a middle-aged woman, meets her aunt and learns the terrible truth of her beginnings. This is a beautifully crafted novel and the true story lies within Hosseini’s multigenerational, layered strands. He moves from Kabul to Paris to San Francisco to the Greek island of Tinos, encountering wives and mothers, refugees and druglords, doctors and villagers. It explores the many ways in which families love and betray each other and how often we take these formative bonds for granted. Emily Harms is Readings’ marketing manager VIENNESE ROMANCE David Vogel (translated by Dalya Bilu) Scribe. HB. $29.95 Review: In 2012, poet and novelist David Vogel posthumously set the Israeli literary world alight with his unpublished manuscript, Viennese Romance. Scribed on 15 large sheets of paper in tiny writing, it was uncovered during a search for Vogel’s 1934 novella, Facing the Sea. Most likely written in the 1920s, it is the latest of his works to be translated for the English-speaking world. The protagonist of Viennese Romance is 18-year-old Michael Rost, a Russian-Polish Jew who arrives in Vienna with no money or direction. In the smoke-filled cafes and bars, he soon finds himself in the company of aristocrats, artisans and actors, all of whom have Woody Allen-style obsessions with philosophy, despite Rost’s own disengagements. ‘In my opinion most men of action invest themselves in activity itself, in order to save themselves from the boredom and emptiness of doing nothing, and the goal incidental … How do you intend to live?’ asks the man who later becomes Rost’s patron. The novel is also an account of Vogel’s sexual awakening. In Vienna, Vogel himself had an affair with his landlady and his landlady’s daughter. Here the women are fictionalised as Gertrude, a woman whose loneliness and nearobsession with Rost is born out of ‘existing in a state of constant thirst, forever unsatisfied’, and her 16-year-old daughter Erna, who although initially wary of Rost’s involvement with her mother, later only wishes to ‘hide her hand in [Rost’s] forever; to be buried inside him, reduced to a tiny, distant dot at the core of his being’. Each woman is acutely drawn, and in this arena Vogel’s observations are deeply felt. Vogel later died in Auschwitz. Viennese Romance is a seminal addition to the secular Hebrew canon, providing vital insight into the history of the Jewish diaspora. Along with its author, it must not be forgotten. Nicole Lee is a freelance reviewer The Son Michel Rostain Headline. PB. $24.99 Review: Filmmaker Michael Haneke’s Amour (2012) offers viewers an unflinching look at death, or rather the less-talkedabout aspects of dying. Chronicling the final days of an elderly woman being cared for by her husband in their Parisian apartment, Amour has an honesty and compassion that devastates its viewers. It is a film that everyone should watch, but for many might be unwatchable. A far more accessible meditation on grief is Michel Rostain’s novel The Son, winner of France’s Prix Goncourt Debut Novel award. Rostain tells the story of a father struggling to cope after the unexpected death of his son from an aggressive virus. Although told through a softer, more hopeful lens than Haneke’s masterpiece, the novel still delves into uncomfortable territory, from the body’s frightening decay to the business side of funerals. Punctuating the chapters are quotes from famous writers and thinkers, musing on those age-old concepts of love and death. The acknowledgements section sadly reveals The Son is loosely autobiographical. It’s clear that when faced with the unexplainable, we, like Rostain, seek solace in literature where words are carefully measured, at once intimate and universal in their reach. How well the novel’s second person, omniscient narration works is a matter of individual reception. Some might find its tone preachy, others consoling. To be fair, The Son is coming to readers as a French-to-English translation. Rostain also makes clear in his acknowledgements that he is not providing any set answers for the living. He believes, rather, ‘It’s for each of us to work out. And for each of us to help others work it out.’ As a work of fiction The Son is flawed, the plot largely overshadowed by its themes. Nevertheless, it generously offers a window into grief and the painstaking journey to the other side of it. Emily Laidlaw is a freelance reviewer SISTERLAND Curtis Sittenfeld Doubleday. PB. Was $32.95 Special price $27.95 Identical twins Kate and Violet share a hidden gift – a special kind of intuition that allows them to see things yet to come. Yet when Kate inadvertently reveals their secret at 13, both are set on diverging paths. Twenty years later, Kate is a suburban housewife, while Violet works as a psychic medium. Then, one day, Violet ignites a media storm by predicting a major earthquake in the St Louis area where they live and the sisters are left grappling with the legacy of the past, as well as the unsettling glimpses they both have of the future. One wet Friday evening, Professor Andrew Martin solves the world’s greatest mathematical riddle. Then he disappears. When he is found walking naked along the motorway, Professor Martin seems … different. Besides the lack of clothes, he hates everyone on the planet. Except Newton. And he’s a dog. THE YONAHLOSSEE RIDING CAMP FOR GIRLS Anton DiSclafani Headline. PB. $29.99 In 1930s America, 15-year-old Thea Atwell is exiled from her wealthy family following a scandal and sent to a debutante boarding school in North Carolina. As Thea grapples with the truth about her role in the tragic events, she finds herself enmeshed in the world of the Yonahlossee Riding Camp, with its complex social strata of money and beauty. Brief Loves That Live Forever Andreï Makine (translated by Geoffrey Strachan) MacLehose Press. HB. $29.95 Now entering middle age, an orphan recalls the fleeting moments that have never left him from Soviet Russia – a scorching day in a blossoming orchard with a woman who loves another, and a desperate affair in a Black Sea resort. It is an era in which the desire for freedom is also the desire for the Can a bit of Debussy and Emily Dickinson keep him from murder? Can the species which invented cheap white wine and peanut butter sandwiches be all that bad? And what is the warm feeling he gets when he looks into his wife’s eyes? 7 8 R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 freedom to love. And, as the dreary Brezhnev era gives way to Perestroika, the orphan finds himself discovering the truth about another memory – the life of Dmitri Ress, and his tragic fate. exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, as well as specially commissioned drawings and illustrations. A TREACHEROUS PARADISE EVERY PROMISE Andrea Bajani (translated by Alastair McEwen) Henning Mankell Harvill Secker. PB. Was $32.95 MacLehose Press. PB. $24.99 Special price $27.95 When Sarah leaves – heartbroken by their inability to conceive – Pietro reverts to a younger self, leaving the dishes unwashed, his bed unmade and the post unopened. Soon afterwards, Sarah confesses that she is pregnant, but from a casual encounter. She comes to rely on Pietro’s mother for support, leaving all three in a painful limbo. Into this void falls Olmo, an old man haunted by memories of war. At first he provides a distraction, but when he asks Pietro to travel to Russia on his behalf, he offers the chance for a new beginning. In 1904, Hanna Lundmark escapes the brutal poverty of rural Sweden for a job as a cook on board a steamship headed for Australia. But disaster strikes on the East African coast, and Hanna jumps ship and decides to begin her life anew. Stumbling across a down-at-heel hotel, she somehow ends up inheriting the most successful brothel in town. Hanna tries to make changes for the better, but the distrust between blacks and whites, and the shadow of colonialism, lead to tragedy and murder. MY NOTORIOUS LIFE BY MADAME X MEMORY PALACE Hari Kunzru Kate Manning Bloomsbury. HB. $27.99 Bloomsbury. PB. $27.99 Memory Palace is an innovative new work of fiction and collaboration by Hari Kunzru, the bestselling author of Gods Without Men. In a dark future, books, as well as the act of remembering itself, is banned. A small group of renegade memorialists is all that stands in the way of total oblivion. One of their members lies incarcerated in a cell, clinging to the belief that a civilisation without memory is a world doomed. The book includes an essay by the curators of a supporting This is the testament of Axie Muldoon: female physician, distributor of ‘obscene’ materials and the most scandalous woman in all of New York. As Axie goes from impoverished beggar to local midwife, she soon discovers that the right way is not always the way of God or the law, and that you should never trust a man who says ‘trust me’. But her downfall might yet surface in the form of the irresistible Charlie G. Jones, a fellow orphan and poetical Irish soul. Science Fiction The Ocean at the End of the Lane Neil Gaiman Headline. PB. $27.99 An unnamed man and narrator returns to his Sussex roots to attend a funeral and, before long, memories begin to flow. His mind is cast back to 40 years ago, when a South African lodger stole the family car and committed suicide in it, stirring up ancient powers best left undisturbed. Dark creatures from beyond the world are on the loose, and it will take everything he has just to stay alive. The man’s only defence is three women on a farm at the end of the lane. The youngest claims that her duck pond is ocean. The oldest can remember the Big Bang. Graphic Novels Batman: Death By Design Chip Kidd Random. PB. $22.95 An original graphic novel from superstar writer-designer Chip Kidd and artist Dave Taylor. Gotham City is undergoing one of the most expansive construction booms in its history, with the most prestigious architects from across the globe completing buildings all over town. And then the explosions begin. There are faulty crane calculations, software glitches, walkways giving way and much more. This bizarre string of seemingly random catastrophes threatens to bring the whole construction industry down. Batman must somehow solve the problem and find whoever is behind it all. My Dirty Dumb Eyes Lisa Hanawalt Drawn & Quarterly. PB. $32.95 My Dirty Dumb Eyes is the debut collection from awardwinning cartoonist Lisa Hanawalt, whose satirical, wild sense of humour has won her acclaim in publications such as The New York Times, The Believer, Lucky Peach and at VanityFair.com. Combining drawings and single-panel jokes, My Dirty Dumb Eyes is a startlingly observant commentary on pop culture and contemporary society, from the secret lives of celebrity chefs to our animal friends and their tennis-ball brides. The Playboy Chester Brown Drawn & Quarterly. PB. $23.95 A blazingly honest memoir about adolescence, sexuality and shame, The Playboy chronicles a teenager’s obsession with the magazine of the same name. Fifteen-year-old Chester is visited by a time-travelling adult Chester, who narrates his younger self’s compulsion to purchase each issue of Playboy as it appears on newsstands. Even more fascinating is Brown’s need to keep this habit secret, and the great lengths he goes to in an effort to avoid detection by his family, and then, later, by girlfriends. Originally published in 1992, The Playboy was ahead of its time. This expanded reissue includes all-new appendices and notes from the author. OUT NOW A nne Summers makes the case that Australia, the land of the fair go, still hasn’t figured out how ‘I thoroughly loved this book. Melbourne looks great as a ruined tropical mega shanty town – I can’t wait. Film-like, dream-like, life-like. Funny and charming.’ Dave Graney ‘A free-range and funny apocalyptic time-space road trip with James M. Cain, J.G. Ballard, and Tom Robbins all fighting for the wheel.’ Steven Amsterdam to make equality between men and women work. She shows how uncomfortable we are with the idea of women with political and financial power, let alone the reality. Summers dismisses the idea that we should celebrate progress for women as opposed to outright success. She shows what success will look like. w w w . n e w s o u t h b o o k s . c o m . a u R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 New Crime Little Green Dead Write with Fiona Hardy The Heist heart of the organisation that really runs this troubled city: the Catholic Church. Headline. PB. Was $33 The Crocodile Janet Evanovich & Lee Goldberg Special price $24.95 Janet Evanovich’s new series with Lee Goldberg stars FBI Special Agent Kate O’Hare and notorious con artist Nicholas Fox. O’Hare has been in pursuit of Fox for five years and then there he is: caught. But Fox is never one to let an opportunity pass, and instead of jail time the dashing criminal wrangles a job with the FBI. He’s put to work with the determined agent and they travel to Indonesia to find a corrupt banker, but the new team end up causing some turbulence of their own. Holy Orders Benjamin Black Mantle. PB. $29.99 Benjamin Black (aka Man Booker Prize-winning author John Banville) puts another body in front of the everinquisitive pathologist Quirke. It’s 1950s Dublin and the city is collapsing under the pressure of its own strict rules. The body in question belongs to a friend of Quirke’s daughter Phoebe and, with Phoebe’s own safety compromised, Quirke and Inspector Hackett set out to rail against the oppressive system in place. It’s an investigation that will lead them into the dark Maurizio de Giovanni Abacus. PB. Was $33 Special price $24.95 Sent to Naples for a Mafia-related debacle that was not his fault, Detective Inspector Giuseppe Lojacono is supposed to keep quiet in his new little police station. One night, however, he’s called to a murder, where it’s revealed that his skills are far beyond those of the other officers. Asked to join the investigative team, Lojacono is on the hunt for a vengeful killer, someone much more dangerous than the Mafia – The Crocodile. Someone To Watch Over Me Yrsa Sigurdardottir H&S. PB. $29.99 Lawyer Thora Gudmundsdottir is working on the case of Jakob, a man with an intellectual disability who has been accused of burning down his shelter home and killing five people. She’s been hired by another inmate at Jakob’s current home, who believes that he is innocent. But the killer, and the connection to a hit and run accident, are still a mystery. book of the month Walter Mosley W&N. PB. $29.99 Recovering slowly from a coma after his car flew off a cliff, hardboiled detective Easy Rawlins returns to life in the new, psychedelic world of the 1960s. Ignoring instructions to rest, he goes on the search for Evander ‘Little Green’ Noon at the request of his oldest, most loyal and generally most dangerous friend, Mouse. Gritty, rollicking and sharp, Mosley’s latest venture through a Los Angeles both bright and dark is an indication of his bestselling status. A Bitter Taste Annie Hauxwell Penguin. PB. Was $29.99 Special price $24.95 Review: Elly Cartwright writes software manuals for Soft Serve. On returning home one evening after having a meeting with Carlos, the company’s brilliant and reclusive programmer, her Brunswick neighbour is shot and killed by a mysterious assassin. A second shot grazes her arm. Her neighbour is an elderly woman and there is no motive for the murder. The next day, Elly discovers Carlos brutally murdered in his backyard – is there a connection between the drive-by shooting and Carlos’ death? The question leads Elly and her colleagues at Soft Serve on a suspenseful quest to track down the culprits using all their hacking skills. Jenny Spence has introduced a clever, feisty character and created a gripping urban thriller set in inner Melbourne and Sydney. Review: In crime fiction, the downtrodden are frequently used as asides – bribed for information or killed off with little remorse. Annie Hauxwell’s A Bitter Taste takes us into their world, one that not every crime reader might be prepared for. Catherine Berlin is a 56-year-old mostly highfunctioning heroin addict. She’s trying to get clean with methadone to heal her physical and internal scarring, and working with little money after her career as a private investigator was ruined. Now unhappy enough to accept crappy jobs and be paid in booze, she carries on through the heat of a blistering summer until an old acquaintance turns up with a request that Berlin cannot bring herself to refuse: a missing daughter. A Bitter Taste is yet another example of how excellently painted characters and thrilling action that doesn’t resort to cheap tricks can plunge you directly into a world. I hated putting this one down, often saying ‘just another chapter’ before bed and then secretly reading eight more. London’s grime is on show and Berlin is often more at home bunking down with the homeless than in the bright and untrustworthy world of the authorities. This book has enough to differentiate Mark Rubbo is Readings’ managing director itself to make it a stand-out in the genre. No Safe Place Jenny Spence A&U. PB. $29.99 State Library of Victoria Full program on sale now Paul Kara, mentalist, c. 1921, gelatin silver photograph, WG Alma conjuring collection Join us for a day of curious delights from across time! Marvel at stilt walkers and magicians, march alongside an old-time brass band, enjoy tours, talks and performances. Whether you’re 1 or 101, there will be surprises galore for all. www.byronbaywritersfestival.com or phone 02 6685 5115. Sponsor of the Dome Centenary Sunday 7 July Free! FH 9 10 R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 I N N O VAT I V E YA F I C T I O N from JUNE RELEASES AUSTRALIA'S SMALL PUBLISHER OF THE YEAR, 2012 NEW IN JUNE NEW TEXT CLASSICS STILL ‘The loss of ALP voters to the Greens is, in the long term, potentially as damaging as earlier splits of the ALP’ An election is looming, and the future of progressive politics nationwide seems deeply uncertain. In this timely and visionary book, Brad Orgill argues that progressive voters, and Australia as a whole, deserves an aligned ALP-Greens platform. See books for kids, junior and middle readers on page 15. book of the month Wildlife Fiona Wood Pan Mac. PB. $16.99 Review: It’s the term of all terms for the year tens at Crowthorne Grammar as they embark on their school’s annual outdoor education camp, tucked away in the Victorian bush. As if it’s not enough to be surrounded by your classmates 24/7 and made to tackle the wilderness, Sibylla is also getting used to her newfound fame that stemmed from a perfume ad that she modelled for over the school holidays. Plus, there’s Ben Capaldi, and the kiss. Really, everything should be perfect, but as the term progresses and friendships and morals are questioned, Sibylla has to think about what and who is really important in her life. Watching all this is Sibylla’s roommate Lou (from Fiona Wood’s first novel, Six Impossible Things). Lou is dealing with a death that has torn her apart, and she has decided to move to Crowthorne Grammar instead of going on exchange to France. Reserved and hiding in her own world, Lou finds herself slowly becoming more intrigued at the drama that is Sibylla’s life. Wildlife is wonderful. Fiona Wood has once again created a quirky and intelligent novel for young adults, with characters that question friendships, learn that fitting in isn’t everything and tackle that scary thing called first love. Highly recommended for ages 14 and up. Katherine Dretzke is from Readings Hawthorn $12.95 NAN CHAUNCY introduced by John Marsden JOAN PHIPSON introduced by Margo Lanagan IVAN SOUTHALL introduced by James Moloney PATRICIA WRIGHTSON introduced by Kate Constable TEXTPUBLISHING.COM . AU TALKIN’ GRAPHIC NOVELS Available in English for the first time, here is David Vogel’s previously unknown novel that had literary New Young Adult Fiction THURSDAY 20 JUNE 6:30PM READINGS CARLTON Israel abuzz when it was published in 2012, almost one hundred years after the author started working The Bone Dragon Alexia Casale Faber. PB. $19.99 Review: I wanted to read this story as soon as I saw the beautiful cover and read the single line hook: a teenage girl, Evie, carves a tiny dragon from a piece of her rib that has been removed after an operation, and it becomes a powerful symbol of her road to recovery from an abusive past. Evie’s voice convincingly navigates us through both her wisdom and her anguish. At 14, she’s suffered more pain than many of us will in a lifetime, but this is no misery memoir. Through her dreamlike visions and the difficult conversations she has with those trying to help her adjust, we learn just enough of her past to understand what she’s up against. However, the focus is on dealing with the present. Evie can’t be generous with the specific details of her trauma, but she is with her fluctuating emotions, torn between the courageous drive to move on and a deep desire to avenge her lost innocence. While the dragon is a regular fixture, overall the story is fairly light on the magic realism elements, leaving just enough room for the reader to interpret what is happening. Recommended for ages 12 and up. Emily Gale is from Readings Carlton on it. A compelling portrait of a decadent society, it also lays bare the obsessive–destructive nature of love. The Whole of My World Nicole Hayes Woolshed Press. PB. $18.95 Viennese Romance is the first in a series — scan here for more information on these stunning books JOIN BERNARD CALEO, DR ELIZABETH MACFARLANE AND GRAPHIC NOVELIST NICKI GREENBERG AS THEY DISCUSS THE POWER OF THE UNWRITTEN WORD, AND THE NEXT WAVE IN COMICS. Review: AFL has always been a huge part of Shelley’s life, from going to local games to analysing every part of the Glenthorn Football Club’s performance, the team she is passionate about. But then the accident happens and everything changes. With a father who’s just barely functioning and a secret that’s breaking her heart, Shelley throws herself even further into the game she loves. Leaving behind the awkwardness of her old school and beginning afresh at St Mary’s Catholic Ladies College, Shelley meets Tara, a fellow Glenthorn fan, who introduces Shelley to the world of fanatics. Shelley starts watching the players train and joins a cheer squad to help rally them on the weekend. And when a friendship blossoms with one of the club’s new stars, Shelley begins to feel like life is getting back on track, just as long as Glenthorn can keep winning. This is a brilliant coming-of-age story about family, tragedy and the power of AFL. I’m beyond thrilled that someone has finally given us a well-written, fun yet serious novel about girls who love our great game. I loved it. Recommended for ages 13 and up. Katherine Dretzke is from Readings Hawthorn Fairytales for Wilde Girls Allyse Near Random. PB. $19.95 Review: Isola Wilde sees ghosts, is obsessed with fairytales and has no less than six brother-princes to protect her. She lives so much in the world of the unseen that she seems not quite of this world to those around her, including her friend James, whom she’s known forever, and the new boy next door, Edgar. When Isola spies a dead girl in a birdcage in the woods, the ghost of the girl starts haunting her and terrible things begin to happen. Her tenuous relations with her real friends start to fail and her brother-princes disappear one by one. This fascinating story is interspersed with beautiful illustrations, quotes from Edgar Allen Poe and metaphorical fairytales. It’s beautifully written and utterly unique. Allyse Near lives near Melbourne and is only 23. She’s already quite a talent and definitely one to watch. Angela Crocombe is from Readings St Kilda Through My Eyes: Shahana Rosanne Hawke A&U. PB. $15.99 The first title in a new Australian series that focuses on children living in conflict zones around the world. Shahana lives alone with her young brother in the shadow of the Line of Control, the border between the Pakistani and Indian-controlled parts of Kashmir. One day, she finds a boy lying unconscious near the border. Zahid is from the other side, but how can she give Zahid up to the authorities when she knows he'll be imprisoned – or worse? R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 New Non-Fiction Australian Non-Fiction THE MISOGYNY FACTOR Anne Summers New South. PB. $19.99 Review: In August 2012, Anne Summers delivered a speech at the University of Newcastle titled ‘Her Rights at Work: The Political Persecution of Australia’s First Female Prime Minister’. The speech detailed the sexist treatment that Julia Gillard has received in the media, in parliament and more widely on the internet. A little over one month later, the Prime Minister gave her now legendary ‘misogyny speech’ in which she urged Tony Abbott to ‘think seriously about the role of women in public life and in Australian society, because we are entitled to a better standard than this’. The Misogyny Factor is an extension of Summers’ original speech and a deeper analysis of the status of women in Australia today. In it, Summers defines the ‘misogyny factor’ as entrenched attitudes within major institutions that ‘stand in the way of women being included, treated equally and accorded respect’. I was dismayed to read that in Canada 80.2 per cent of women aged 25 to 54 are in full-time work, but in Australia the figure is 66.2 per cent. Summers contends that we still have a culture that disapproves of working mothers and, despite progress made by the women’s movement, an increasingly large number of educated women are choosing motherhood and domesticity over a career. I personally don’t agree with Summers’ criticism of stay-at-home mothers. Until full-time parenthood is respected as much as a career (coupled with a transformation of our economic system that presently only unevenly rewards certain types of ‘work’), women will continue to do the lion’s share of child care, and gender inequality will persist. However, I’m thankful for Summers’ book, because although the internet and social media helped Julia Gillard’s speech reach a wide audience, there’s something comforting about an analysis of its context and impact being preserved here in book form, ensuring the issue remains one to debate well into the future. Kara Nicholson is from Readings Carlton Out of Shape Mel Campbell Affirm. PB. $24.95 Review: Mel Campbell has a brilliant eye for popular culture, as anyone who’s followed her blog, A Wild Young UnderWhimsy, or her other writing will know. Her first book, Out of Shape, tackles the fashion industry on the issues of sizing, fit and feel, and is a smart, sharp mix of cultural anthropology, first-person journalism and online trawling. Out of Shape isn’t a fashion glossy or a confessional. Rather, it’s a look at how the industry works on a social level: how what we’re offered influences what we wear, how what we wear makes us feel about ourselves and others, and what this signals to the broader social strata in return. It’s about bodies and ideals, reflections and distortions, gazes and doubts. Most of all, it’s a fascinating examination of what popular culture and fashion actually are – a manifestation of both the lowbrow and the high. Campbell travels easily from dreamscapes of couture to Target’s latest 3D body scanning booth. She explores the evolution of standardised sizing, as well as fashion’s many waves, from Regency-era dandies to the queens of French gamine. From there, Out of Shape goes deep into the arteries of media storms and gossip rags – wardrobe malfunctions, slut shaming and plus-size modelling. There is as well a genuine love of materials and clothes, with savouring descriptions of garments and styles, films and fantasy: lowretro, mid-century glam, 1950s crinoline petticoats, rolled fringes and 80s excesses. Throughout, Campbell is also savvy to the ironies and inequalities of where research can lead. The antique garments often housed and treasured in museums, for instance, will only ever represent the lives of a select privileged few, and not that of ethnic minorities or the working class. Stores often don’t stock larger sizes not because they aren’t aware that the majority of women aren’t a size 8, but because they deliberately want to restrict their clientele. This is exactly the type of writing that I love – intellectually charged, feminist and smart. Jessica Au is editor of the Readings Monthly Life in Ten Houses: Penguin Specials Sonya Hartnett Penguin. PB. $9.99 Review: Coming in at just over 70 pages, this latest addition to the Penguin Specials range is an evocative glimpse into a writer’s life. Sonya Hartnett’s has been a rather peripatetic one, having lived in ten houses over the last ten or so years. As I’m someone who’s only lived in three over the last 40 years, Hartnett’s quest for the place that she’ll live in forever struck me as bold and a little bit unsettling. When Hartnett makes a mistake in her choice of abode, she moves on and thinks hang the consequences. It goes without saying that she’s become somewhat of a real estate expert. Hartnett also recounts how each house, except for one, has been the place in which she has produced one of her works, and how the area or residence provided certain touchstones. The house in Of a Boy – one of my favourite works of hers – for instance, was in Box Hill (I don’t know why but I always thought it was in Adelaide). It won’t take you long to read this short, engrossing memoir, but I can assure you that it will give you a lot of pleasure. Mark Rubbo is Readings’ managing director The Year it All Fell Down Bob Ellis Viking. PB. $29.99 The year 2011 was portentously charged, from the Arab Spring to the London riots and Occupy Wall Street, from the Christchurch earthquake and the Fukushima meltdown to the possible discovery of the Higgs-Boson ‘God’ particle. Together with collaborators Damian Spruce and Stephen Ramsey, Bob Ellis reviews these events and more, and charts the powerful echoes of their influences. Project Republic Benjamin T. Jones & Mark McKenna (eds.) Black Inc. PB. $29.99 Featuring forewords by Malcolm Turnbull and Wayne Swan, Project Republic unites a range of passionate Australian voices to argue why Australia must become a republic. It explores how such a change could be viewed as a chance for national renewal, as well as how we get there from here. Contributors include Thomas Keneally, Larissa Behrendt, Julian Morrow, Anthony Dillon, Helen Irving, Joy McCann and more. Why Labor Should Savour Its Greens Brad Orgill I Take You BY Nikki Gemmel 9780732297787 | RRP $27.99 Scribe. PB. $24.95 Australia is suffering from a crisis of confidence. Now, with an upcoming election, the Australian Labor Party and the Greens are splitting the left-of-centre vote, leaving the future of progressive politics deeply uncertain. Former investment banker and economist Brad Orgill reviews the Greens’ major economic, social and environmental policies, and argues that progressive voters are due an aligned ALP–Greens platform incorporating the best elements of each. Nikki Gemmell concludes the loose trilogy started with international bestsellers The Bride Stripped Bare and With my Body with this astonishing new tour de force. A Savage History: Whaling in the Pacific and Southern Oceans John Newton New South. HB. $49.99 Hunted, studied and revered, whales have always held a particular allure for humans. In A Savage History, John Newton explores our complex and bloody relationship with these magnificent creatures, following whalers from the eighteenth century who stalked their prey along the coasts of Australia and New Zealand, across the Pacific and into the Southern Ocean. Newton’s overview exposes the truth that while the modern era has seen the end of industrial whaling, whales are not yet protected. The Shining Girls BY laureN BeukeS 9780732295530 | RRP $29.99 The girl who wouldn’t die ... hunting a killer who shouldn’t exist. Anthology Just Between Us Maya Linden (ed.) Pan Mac. PB. Was $33 Special price $27.95 Review: Female friendships are often stereotyped. There’s the saccharine BFF (Best Friends Forever) types, the pathological ‘Single White Female’ or the dysfunctional pull/push of the bully/doormat (think Rosalind Wiseman’s Queen Bees and Wannabes). However, this wonderful collection takes the time and emotional energy to really explore individual friendships and examine the grey areas in between. Just Between Us contains 12 works of non-fiction, which I generally enjoyed more than the six fiction pieces. The standout for me was ‘In Broad Daylight’ by Julienne van Loon, which describes her long-term friendship with Jo, a university friend. The story is punctuated with letters between the two that demonstrate their closeness and their understanding of Atomic City BY SallY BreeN 9780732293017 | RRP $24.99 Set in the dark shadows of the Gold Coast’s glittering high-rise strip, atomic City is a wild rollercoaster ride of a story — a neo-noir tale of identity theft, subterfuge and new beginnings. 11 12 R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 Jawbreakers for your eyes Ronnie Scott tells us why art comics are the true radicals of the graphic novels world, from Paper Rad to Kramers Ergot. It’s been a long time since the 80s and getting longer every day, but looking at headlines about comic books you wouldn’t really know it. It all started with three books that changed the game forever: two apocalyptic reimaginings of the superhero origins-story, Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’s Watchmen and Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns, and Art Spiegelman’s Maus, a Holocaust memoir in which mice menaced by cats stood in for the Jews and Nazis. ‘BANG! POW! ZAP! Comics aren’t just for kids anymore!’ And so they weren’t. Comics was suddenly recognised as a medium as unique as text or art or film, which led to a general explosion of cultural weirdness as the world tried to separate the medium’s most likely content – tights, capes and funnies – from its potential, which was largely untapped. This is roughly the time we got the term ‘graphic novel’. At best, it’s a descriptive term, like hardcover or paperback, for a booklength work of comics that’s bound into a codex. At worst, it’s a class category – a way for publishers to indicate that their readers should expect serious stuff. The problem is that there’s always more than one way to be serious. Because while the headlines have stayed pretty much unchanged since the 80s, comics has expanded in directions nobody back then could have foreseen. A side effect of comics’ ongoing quest for legitimacy is that the ones that tend to get the most cultural space are, well, literary. And by literary, I don’t mean complex and thrilling and boundarypushing and smart and fun (although frequently, they are). I mean they tend to be the comics that have a whole lot of text – the comics that are most like written books. But when the space devoted to discussing comics in newspapers and magazines is so limited, this means a whole slew of terrific work gets swept under the rug. Much of it belongs to the non-genre you can loosely group as ‘art’. It’s the medium being pushed and squeezed and distorted by fine artists, installation artists, architects, programmers … the list goes on and on. By far the best and most consistent publisher of art comics is PictureBox, a Brooklynbased outfit fronted by Dan Nadel, who also co-edits The Comics Journal (the best online venue to keep up with this stuff). One collective of artists producing great work through them is Paper Rad. One member, Ben Jones, makes hallucinatory animations for the Cartoon Network. To give you an aesthetic idea: it’s absurdist, retro and wild. A world apart, there’s Renée French, also publishing through PictureBox, who has more in common with H.R. Giger, designer of the monster from the Alien movies, than with psychedelic cartoons. We can part-claim French as Australian, since she’s sometimes based in Sydney, but her work belongs to a beautiful and terrifying dreamscape that’s often purposebuilt for rendering her chronic migraines. Her pages dizzy you. For my money, the most interesting artist working in comics today is C.F., the alias of Rhode Island-based artist Chris Forgues. He’s highly memeable, having spawned even Melbourne-based copycats, and one look at his pages shows you why. They’re deceptively simple, with wan, lanky, malleable characters interacting in a world of quick, clean lines. In his ongoing series, Powr Mastrs, they’re all coalescing into a scifi-inflected fantasy universe that will eventually – you imagine – make sense. But maybe it won’t, because Forgues’s bright, shocking characters might just be tools for him to exhibit his ingenious grasp of form. A page might be devoted to showing a drop of liquid falling (I won’t say what kind of liquid; his comics are very adult). But the same drop of liquid is shown almost identically across 12 panels, which confuses the very dimensions of comics. Which panels are meant to show space? Which are meant to show time? In the hands of Forgues, basic sensemaking questions like ‘how long?’ and ‘how far?’ become ontological exercises. If you let them. Unlike dense, difficult prose, they’re also stunning visual documents, which means you’re entirely welcome to dissemble them – or just drink them up. C.F., Renée French and Paper Rad suggest alternate futures for comics. They’re equally radical departures from the sophisticated narratives towards which the 80s forefathers directed the form. For anyone who loves books, they’re also just the start. Mould Map is a gorgeous, tabloid-sized publication from UK set-up Landfill Editions. It defines its content as ‘narrative art’, lets artists run wild and prints on sumptuous paper. Kramers Ergot, edited by also-sometimes-Australian Sammy Harkham, unearths fascinating artists and puts them in contrast and context with Chris Ware, Adrian Tomine and Daniel Clowes (Time magazine called one issue ‘a jawbreaker for your eye’). Dig deep on blogs and you’ll find more. Comics is attracting more types of readers, thinkers and practitioners than ever before, and nobody knows what the medium will look like in ten years’ time. As artists continue their excursions beyond the realm of the book – into online platforms, mobile devices and even 3D media, such as sculpture – we’ll be seeing work that demands fresh answers to the question ‘what is a comic?’ for longer than any of us will be alive. For now, comic-makers are taking the question of what books are to deep places, and since they’re artists, they know how to make experiments look nice. For the lazy home decorator, I’d even suggest them as a lowinvestment alternative to succulents. By Ronnie Scott Ronnie Scott is a contributor to The Believer, The Australian and Meanjin, and is the comics and graphic novels critic for ABC Radio National. In 2007, he founded The Lifted Brow, a freeform culture and fiction magazine; nowadays, he's the art editor. www.ronalddavidscott.com. each other’s attempt to find a place in the world. The relationship is complicated by Jo’s schizophrenia and her battle to stay well. Nikki Gemmell confronts women’s goading of each other, quoting emails sent in response to her newspaper column and describing these vicious put-downs as ‘voices of the dark heart of the female psyche’. She then turns to examine her five-year-old daughter’s friendship with another girl, whose desire seems to be to make Gemmell’s normally vivid and vibrant child self-conscious and unsure. Some close bonds in the book simply ‘seep away’ with changing times or circumstances. Some writers lament this, while others recognise that the friendships cannot continue. A frequent question arises: could/should I have done more? Another extremely honest exposition is Liz Byrski’s ‘Friendship – In Several Painful Lessons’. Byrski details three friendships, the earliest at age five, and examines the role she has played in maintaining less than ideal connections. Byrski describes the process of discovering what she requires in a friend as ‘protracted and painful’, and quotes author Alice Walker: ‘No person is your friend who demands your silence, or denies your right to grow.’ Annie Condon is from Readings Hawthorn Cultural Studies CONFESSIONS OF A SOCIOPATH M.E. Thomas Pan Mac. PB. $29.99 M.E. Thomas is a highfunctioning non-criminal sociopath. In this compelling memoir, she writes honestly about her life, from the confusion of trying to fit in as a child to her growing need for power over others, and her motivations for controlling her behaviour – most of the time. Drawing on the latest research, Thomas explains why at least one in 25 of us are sociopaths and gives a gripping insight into the mind of a social predator. Philosophy PSYCHOANALYSIS IS AN ANTIPHILOSOPHY Justin Clemens Edinburgh University Press. PB. $44.99 Psychoanalysis was the most important intellectual development of the twentieth century. It left no practice, from psychiatry to philosophy to politics, untouched. Drawing on the work of Freud, Lacan, Badiou and others, Justin Clemens re-examines a series of psychoanalytical themes – addiction, fanaticism, love, slavery and torture – and offers a radical reconstruction for thinkers today. History Money Felix Martin Random. PB. $34.95 Review: Felix Martin’s Money: The Unauthorised Biography is more than just an attempt to chart the history of money from its ambiguous origins to the elaborate world of finance today. Motivated by the great calamities that have bedevilled the global economy in recent years, Martin endeavours to recreate the way we perceive money through both a historical narrative and contemporary analysis. The book begins with the fascinating case of Yap, a remote island in Micronesia that managed to construct a highly developed system of debt and credit that mirrors our own. Underlying Yap is Martin’s central argument that money should be viewed not as a ‘thing’ or a mere medium of exchange, but as a social technology. From Yap, Martin meanders back and forth throughout history. He describes the origins of numeracy and literacy in Ancient Mesopotamia, explores merchant banking in sixteenth-century Lyons, and examines both the Soviet Union’s and the Spartans’ attempts to fundamentally reshape the idea of money. What makes this book so compelling is the author’s ability to draw upon a variety of seemingly unrelated theorists and historical events. In doing so, he demonstrates how the financial world of today came to be, and how that world has become crippled by debt and uncertainty. Of course, Money culminates in the current global crisis, where Martin makes his most pertinent contributions to the discourse of our wounded financial system. He challenges flawed assumptions underpinning our system and describes alternatives. But, ultimately, Martin’s greatest observation echoes that of Larry Summers and an emerging group of prominent economists and academics. Much can be learnt about our present crisis by examining the past. Martin’s work is considerably complex yet undeniably provocative. But then again, any attempt to redefine the concept of money needs to be. Dexter Gillman is a freelance reviewer CARELESS PEOPLE Sarah Churchwell Little, Brown. PB. $29.99 Careless People is a fascinating reconstruction of the crucial months during which F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda returned to New York in the autumn of 1922, and when the seeds for The Great Gatsby were sown. Sarah Churchwell tells the surprising story behind the novel, exploring in detail the relationship between Fitzgerald’s masterpiece and the chaotic world in which he lived – a world of high society, organised crime and celebrity culture. Travel Writing Italian Ways: On and Off the Rails from Milan to Palermo Tim Parks Random. HB. Was $35 Special price $29.95 Review: There is often a level of trepidation when approaching a travel memoir – what new truth or epiphany is going to be revealed this time? Happily, in the hands of Tim Parks, Italian Ways doesn’t rely on the quest for personal growth that has lately become the norm for so many books of this genre. Parks’s reflections on his journeys as a passenger onboard the trains of Italy are not just mere travel adventures. Rather, they delve into Italy’s past, and not only observe the cultural identity of the country as a whole, but also consider where this might be heading in the future. Having lived in Italy for 30 years, Parks is a refreshingly legitimate voice, but in true Italian style he’ll never be considered a local. Thus, we get to enjoy his perspective as R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 our connected but far from constricted guide. Parks relays hilarious accounts of the charms and eccentricities of fellow passengers during his daily commutes from Verona to Milan, or jaunts to Florence, Rome, Naples and Sicily as well as other less familiar destinations. At the same time, his travels often reveal the links between the rail system and the political and social aspects of the Italian way of life, both then and now. For those of us who have been charmed by Italy, or who have dreams of visiting, Italian Ways is an utterly enjoyable and unpredictable journey. Danielle Mirabella is from Readings Hawthorn Biography SANE NEW WORLD Ruby Wax H&S. PB. $32.99 Ruby Wax – comedian, writer and mental health campaigner – shows us how our minds can jeopardise our sanity. With her own periods of depression and a Masters in Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy from Oxford to draw from, she explains how our busy, chattering, self-critical thoughts drive us to anxiety and stress. If we are to break the cycle, we need to understand how our brains work and find calm in a frenetic world. NIJINSKY Lucy Moore Profile. HB. $49.99 Immersed in the world of dance from his childhood, Nijinksy found his home in the Imperial Theatre and the Ballet Russes, acclaimed for his extraordinary grace and elevation. Then, a dramatic and public failure ended his career and set him on a route to madness. In this landmark biography, Lucy Moore examines a career defined by two forces – inspired performance and a talent for controversy. Popular Science Art & Design with Kate O’Mara, Readings at the Brain Centre with Margaret Snowdon, Readings Carlton Food & Gardening Cracked Australian Impressionists in France The Set Table James Davies Icon. PB. $24.99 One in four people will develop a mental disorder in any given year. That’s what psychiatry tells us. But many – even most – will not actually be mentally ill. The everyday sufferings and setbacks of life are now ‘medicalised’ into illnesses that require treatment – usually with highly profitable drugs. In Cracked, psychological therapist James Davies uses his insider knowledge to show how psychiatry has put riches and medical status above patients’ wellbeing. He reveals for the first time the true human cost of an industry that, in the name of helping others, has actually been helping itself. Chaotic Fishponds and Mirror Universes Richard Elwes Quercus. PB. $19.99 What can we learn from fish in a pond? How do social networks connect the world? How can artificial intelligences learn? Why would life be different in a mirror universe? Mathematics is everywhere, whether we’re aware of it or not. This book provides an insight into the ‘hidden wiring’ that governs our world. From the astonishing theorems that control computers to the formulae behind stocks and shares, Chaotic Fishponds and Mirror Universes explains how mathematics determines every aspect of our lives – right down to the foundations of our bodies. SCATTER, ADAPT AND REMEMBER Annalee Newitz Black Inc. PB. $29.99 The Astronaut Wives Club Lily Koppel Headline. PB. $32.99 As American astronauts were launched on death-defying missions, television cameras focused on the brave smiles of their wives. Overnight, these women were transformed from shy military spouses to American royalty. Here, Lily Koppel tells the true story of the wives behind the American Space Race, chronicling their romantic, domestic and public dramas, the challenges they faced and the 40-year friendship that bound them together. The Trip to Echo Spring: Why Writers Drink Olivia Laing A&U. HB. $35 Why is it that some of the greatest works of literature have been produced by writers who are in the grip of alcoholism? Here, Olivia Laing examines the link between creativity and drinking through the lives of six extraordinary minds. As she travels from John Cheever’s New York to Ernest Hemingway’s Key West to Raymond Carver’s Port Angeles, she pieces together a topographical map of alcoholism, from the horrors of addiction to the miraculous possibilities of recovery. 13 Climate change. Pandemics. Catastrophic volcanoes. Should we just give up and accept our doom? Annalee Newitz’s speculative and hopeful work of popular science focuses our attention on humanity’s long history of dodging the bullet of extinction – and suggests practical ways to keep doing it. From bacteria labs in St Louis to ancient underground cities in Turkey, we discover the keys to long-term survival. Scatter, Adapt and Remember leads us away from apocalyptic thinking into a future where we live to build a better world. Mad Science 2 Theodore Gray Black Dog & Leventhal. PB. $29.99 For nearly a decade, Theodore Gray has been demonstrating the basic principles of chemistry and physics through exciting and sometimes daredevil experiments for his popular science column, Gray Matter. This second volume includes a host of even more dramatic, enlightening and daring demonstrations. Gray dips his hand into molten lead to illustrate the Leidenfrost effect, crushes a tomato between two small magnets to explain their power, and creates trinkets out of solid mercury to show how the state of matter depends very much on the temperature at which it exists. Elena Taylor National Galley of Victoria. PB. $39.95 Australian Impressionists in France explores an overlooked period in our art history. Many Australian artists spent time in France during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, yet this era is often bypassed in favour of examining the work of well-known impressionist landscape painters, such as Tom Roberts and Frederick McCubbin, and their role in developing our national identity. Beautifully illustrated with more than 130 paintings, prints and drawings, this catalogue is a comprehensive and welcome look at a vibrant and fascinating time of artistic exchange. It includes a series of informative essays looking at different groups of artists and collaborators, and it is divided into two timeblocks: 1885-1900 and 1900-1915. Australian Impressionists in France uncovers a period of artistic creativity and diversity that many will not be aware of, and will be pleasantly surprised by. Vitamin D2 Phaidon. HB. $79.95 The sequel to Vitamin D is an up-to-the-minute survey of international contemporary drawing, featuring 115 artists nominated by respected critics and curators from around the world. Drawing has resumed its importance in artistic practice, and all the artists featured here are pushing the boundaries of the medium. This is both an inspiring reference book for the practitioner and an accessible introduction for newcomers, with the same lovely production values as the first volume. Genesis Sebastião Salgado Taschen. HB. $100 I suspect many readers would have been introduced to Sebastião Salgado’s photographs by his extraordinary images of massive gold mines from his 1993 book, Workers, where human beings toil like ants in a scene from purgatory. Genesis, his new opus, is a beautiful publication. It is the result of an epic eight-year expedition to rediscover the mountains, deserts and oceans, as well as the animals and peoples that have thus far escaped the imprint of modern society. Taxidermy Alexis Turner T&H. HB. $39.95 From icky and dusty to the height of cool, taxidermy has staged an extraordinary comeback. No longer confined to stately homes, stuffed animals are appearing everywhere, from modern apartments to luxury department stores. High-profile artists have rejuvenated the medium and museums have dusted down their historic collections and put them back on display. With stunning photography that explores this rich art form, past and present, this title is the most comprehensive and beautiful survey of taxidermy ever produced. with Christine Gordon, Readings Carlton Hannah Shuckburgh T&H. HB. $35 Of course this is a beautiful book. The author, Hannah Shuckburgh, is the lifestyle editor for Condé Naste’s Easy Living magazine. Here, she takes you through the basics of how to set a lovely and imaginative table from scant resources, from linens to glasses, flowers and serving platters. It’s full of sweet pictures: brown paper twisted around bread, tables laden with vibrant colours. My daughter has created some masterful arrangements with ideas picked from the great glossary of ideas – one ho-hum Wednesday eve we even served our pizza on some coloured tiles. Eye-catching and inspiring. A Cook’s Tour of France Gabriel Gaté Hardie Grant. HB. $34.95 We are nearly at that time of the year again, when that great road race is about to begin: the Tour de France. This is when Australian-based French chef Gabriel Gaté talks up the very best of French food as cyclists head for the hills and we head for our couches. Obviously the gastronomy of the country is quite simply superb, and here Gaté pulls together a collection of easy-to-follow traditional recipes. There’s the popular Chicken Casserole Vallée d’Auge from Normandy, the vibrant Ratatouille with Lemon and Olive Chantilly from Provence, and, of course, divine desserts, as only the French can do, like the luscious Strawberry Tart from the Loire Valley. Why not use this book throughout the race – it will give you the energy you need to stay awake in the wee hours. Rick Stein’s India Rick Stein Random. HB. $49.95 I reckon Rick Stein is the type of bloke that always wants answers. He might ask himself, what makes a good curry? It’s not good enough to follow a few recipes or visit a few restaurants. Rather, Rick wants to immerse himself in the answer, and so he journeys to India to eat every curry he can. Is it sensual spicy aromas or thick, creamy sauces that makes the dish? Rich, dark dhals or crispy fried street snacks? As Rick travels through this colourful, chaotic nation, he encounters fragrant kormas, delicate spiced fish and slow-cooked biryanis, all the while gathering ideas, for what will be the perfect curry. Not Quite Nigella Lorraine Elliott Penguin. PB. $29.99 Lorraine Elliot is Australia’s Julie Powell (of Julie & Julia novelturned-film fame). Her popular blog Not Quite Nigella was so successful that she was able to leave her corporate life and write about food full-time. This book is the story behind the story and the hard yards she did before her blog took off. In each chapter, there’s a recipe, along with recollections of the good times and the downright disasters. 14 R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 Miles Franklin & Anti-Romance Picture Books Mel Campbell writes on why My Brilliant Career is modern, feminist, funny and brilliantly anti-romantic, still. She’s now lent her name to two literary prizes, but until recently I’d never read Stella Maria Sarah Miles Franklin’s famous novel My Brilliant Career. The reason I’d avoided it for so long was that its worthiness made it seem leaden. I expected it to be long-winded, boring, full of clichéd outback colonialism. Instead I found it astonishingly fresh, funny and modern, and its protagonist, Sybylla Melvyn, uncompromisingly feminist. I especially enjoyed Franklin’s ear for the Aussie vernacular, now sadly lost to our globalised tongues. As the Melvyns’ disgruntled servant Jane says: ‘A girl could have a fly round and a lark or two there I tell you; but here … there ain’t one bloomin’ feller to do a mash with. I’m full of the place.’ The novel got me actively interrogating why I hate books set in the Australian bush. It’s not that I dislike the outdoors; rather, I’m a Romantic by disposition. I love the capacity of wild landscapes to inspire feelings of sublime awe and admiration. And I’ll happily read about remote places in other countries. Literary depictions of wilderness reflect local ideologies. For instance, books by Mark Twain, Jack London and Henry David Thoreau echo the American doctrine of ‘manifest destiny’. In these works the vast sprawl of the North American continent symbolises freedom and redemption though adventure. Meanwhile, in the European literary imagination, the wilderness is a space of magic and myth. A mystical, allegorical atmosphere also leaks into European colonial narratives, from Rudyard Kipling’s whimsical The Jungle Book to the Congolese nightmare of Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness. My Brilliant Career was published in 1901, at the height of the chauvinistic Australian nationalist movement championed by The Bulletin magazine. This was the heyday of the idealised Aussie bushman of Banjo Paterson, Norman Lindsay and Henry Lawson. To give these stoic, sardonic heroes a struggle by which to define themselves, their bush surroundings are described as inhospitably harsh and arid. It’s a tradition I find deeply dreary, not to mention repellently racist and sexist. Franklin rapturously praises the struggling rural peasant in her closing pages: ‘Ah, my sunburnt brothers! – sons of toil and of Australia! I love and respect you well, for you are brave and good and true … I love you, I love you … but I cannot help you. My ineffective life will be trod out in the same round of toil – I am only one of yourselves, I am only an unnecessary, little, bush commoner, I am only a – woman!’ Henry Lawson endorsed Franklin’s novel in a preface whose casual sexism annoys me: ‘I don’t know about the girlishly emotional parts of the book – I leave that to girl readers to judge; but the descriptions of bush life and scenery came startlingly, painfully real to me … the truest I ever read.’ Yet Sybylla’s struggle is clearly also a woman’s demand for self-determination. It’s strikingly similar to the speech Charlotte Brontë gives to her sensitive, suffering heroine Jane Eyre: ‘Do you think, because I am poor, obscure, plain, and little, I am soulless and heartless? You think wrong!’ Like Jane Eyre, My Brilliant Career is a powerfully interior coming-of-age novel, driven by Sybylla’s inner desires and torments. Her capacity for emotion makes her an appealing heroine, but she’s doomed to be misinterpreted by others as cynical, uncaring and ungrateful: ‘Did my mother understand me, she would know that I am capable of more depths of agony and more exquisite heights of joy in one day than Gertie will experience in her whole life.’ Jeffrey Eugenides’ recent novel The Marriage Plot has been hailed as a clever deconstruction of the romantic narratives of the nineteenth century. These literary conventions guide not only Eugenides’ protagonist Madeleine, but also the reader. We expect Madeleine to find happiness with one of several potential suitors, but neither she nor we find such simple, familiar comfort. My Brilliant Career similarly subverts the reader’s expectations … more than a century earlier! It surprised me that it seemed to satirise a Jane Austen comedy of manners. Caddagat, the gorgeous rural property where Sybylla stays with her grandmother, plays the same pivotal role in this novel as the country houses in Austen’s fiction. Franklin sets up several potential love interests for Sybylla: honest jackaroo Frank Hawden, sophisticated urbanite Everard Grey, and smouldering local squattocrat Harold Beecham. Each pair gets a meet-cute, zingy dialogue and emotionally charged encounters. They circle one another at dinners and parties, and pay and return visits in elegant formal attire and in charmingly unguarded dishevelment. The scene in which Sybylla finally provokes Harold into displaying his notorious temper is genuinely steamy in a way today’s pallid erotica can only hope to imitate. He seizes her arm in a bruising grip, brutishly ignoring her cries of ‘Unhand me!’ ‘He drew me so closely to him that, through his thin shirt – the only garment on the upper part of his figure – I could feel the heat of his body, and his big heart beating wildly. “I’ll do what I like with you. I’ll touch you as much as I think fit.”’ Eat your heart out, Christian Grey! But Franklin has her reject him and her other suitors, for the sake of her immutable moral principles! That Sybylla values intellectual and creative freedom over love and financial security makes My Brilliant Career resolutely feminist. The passionate Harold seems like an ideal match – he begs to marry Sybylla and even pledges to support her authorial ambitions. But she knows that eventually Harold will want a ‘normal’ wife – which she can never be. Of course, as Sybylla pens her autobiography, she’s still a teenager driven by immature impulses and smarting from fresh wounds. Franklin’s literary conceit is that Sybylla’s story has taken just one month, March 1899, to write. This lends hope to what is otherwise a total downer of an ending. The ‘brilliant career’ Sybylla ironises so bitterly could still be hers. By Mel Campbell Mel Campbell is a Melbourne freelance journalist and cultural critic. Out of Shape, her non-fiction investigation of clothing size and fit, is published by Affirm Press. Yoo Hoo, Ladybird! Mem Fox & Laura Ljungkvist (illus.) Viking. HB. $19.99 Did you know... ... that Pippi Longstocking started out as a bedtime story? Astrid Lindgren made up the character of the beloved redhead (who was strong enough to lift a horse and was proud of her freckles) for her daughter, Karin, who was ill with pneumonia at the time. Review: There is a giraffe in the bath and is that really a car in there too? But where is the ladybird? As we hunt for the elusive little bug, we are introduced to an array of creatures and objects that surreally populate the pages from start to finish. Mem Fox’s ear for rhythmic rhyme is flawless and guarantees a fun, must-join-in read aloud, and the colourful, playful illustrations are perfect for the intended audience. Young children (and not so young adults!) will delight in looking for the cheeky red bug, but there are plenty of other things to keep an eye out for too, including the busy, dizzy endpapers. This is Mem Fox at her best, and Laura Ljungkvist’s capricious artwork has ensured a perfect picture book that is sure to become a classic. For ages 12 months and up. Alexa Dretzke is from Readings Hawthorn On the Day You Were Born Margaret Wild & Ron Brooks (illus.) A&U. HB. $24.99 Review: This sweet and gentle book will give you both goosebumps and a warm glow in your stomach. It will sing to you of a father’s love, and the wonder and elation that the birth of a child can bring. It will carry you through nature’s wonderland and paint images of a busy, radiant world, before lulling you with serene skies or a tranquil, moonlit night. On the Day You Were Born is a celebration of life and a beautiful introduction to our magnificent world by two of our most esteemed picture-book makers. This is the perfect gift to welcome a new baby, and for children ages 2 and up. AD Scarlett and the Scratchy Moon Chris McKimmie A&U. HB. $29.99 Review: Scarlett can’t sleep again. The moon is scratching the sky, and she’s counting sheep called Daddy Neema, Mummy Neema and Baby Neema. Scarlett is also sad because her pet dogs, Holly and Sparky, have died. But then a surprise comes to the door and the world seems new again. Chris McKimmie is well known for his strange, metaphoric and utterly beautiful picture books, and this is no exception. There’s something new to discover upon each reading and a four-yearold will have an entirely different perspective on the story to an adult, which makes for an enjoyable experience for all. Angela Crocombe is from Readings St Kilda Ballet Cat Fiona Ross Walker. HB. $27.95 The Crazy Cat Crew love to dance – they groove and bop, they move and hop, all night long. Then, one night, Arthur slinks off and discovers something really special: a pair of ballet shoes. He puts them on and goes back to show the gang his new style. But the other cats don’t like ballet and laugh Arthur out of town, only to realise that all dancing is cool and that they really miss their friend. The Circus and Other Stories Samuil Marshak & Vladimir Lebedev Tate Gallery. HB. $35 These four books, published in the Soviet Union between 1925 and 1927, were a collaboration between poet Samuil Marshak and painter Vladimir Lebedev. Based on the idea that children’s literature is an important cultural object in its own right, they linked painting, poetry and typography, creating the timeless precursor to the modern picture book. R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 15 Book of the Month The Apprentices Maile Meloy Charlie Joe Jackson’s Guide to Not Reading Text. PB. Was $19.99 Special price $16.99 Review: This is an utterly delicious read in so many ways. On one level, it’s rich in everyday realism. On another, it’s full of impossible, thrilling but always believable happenings. Janie is a clever girl at a privileged American school. One day, her science experiment, a simple way to desalinate water, is stolen, and she believes that the culprit is one of the parents – the blustery mining tycoon Mr Magnusson. To get it back, Janie contacts friends she has not seen for two years: Benjamin and his father, and Pip and Jin Lo, all of whom were party to Janie’s adventures in Maile Meloy’s previous novel, The Apothecary. Benjamin, who has never stopped thinking of Janie, has been working on a sort of telepathic powder that allows a person to see through another’s eyes for a brief period, even on the other side of the world. He and Jin Lo also know the powers of the Avian Elixir, which facilitates transformation into a bird but is uncomfortably unstable. Mr Magnusson is mining an island in the Pacific but that’s just the half of it, and The Apprentices moves from the US through to England through to war-torn Vietnam, as well as the idyllic but ravaged Pacific Islands themselves. The story is compelling and culturally rich, and, above all, the young characters are courageous, resourceful and fiercely loyal to each other. The Apprentices stands on its own and you don’t need to have read The Apothecary, the first book in this series, to enjoy this one (although of course both are well worth reading). Recommended for imaginative readers aged 11 to adult. Personally, I can’t wait for the next one. Kathy Kozlowski is from Readings Carlton Exclamation Mark Amy Krouse Rosenthal & Tom Lichtenheld (illus.) Scholastic. HB. $24.99 From the bestselling creators of Duck! Rabbit! comes an exciting tale of selfdiscovery. It’s not easy being seen, especially when you’re not like everyone else. Especially when what sets you apart is you. Sometimes we squish ourselves to fit in. We shrink, twist and bend. Until, that is, a friend shows us other possibilities. In this bold and highly visual book, an emphatic but misplaced exclamation mark learns that being different can be very exciting! Period. New Kids’ Books Junior Fiction Australia. What a rich and inspiring background Murrell had at her fingertips. Readers of the Our Australian Girl series who are looking for something more detailed, or fans of Jackie French, will enjoy this. Lulu Bell and the Birthday Unicorn Emily Gale is from Readings Carlton Random. PB. $9.95 Rob Lloyd Jones Belinda Murrell & Serena Geddes (illus.) Meet Lulu Bell. Where there’s Lulu, there’s family, friends, animals and adventures galore. It’s almost time for Lulu’s little sister’s birthday party. But there’s a problem – a pony is running loose and Lulu and her dad, the local vet, have to rescue it. Can they find the runaway in time? And what will happen if the naughty pony gets into more mischief at the party? It’s lucky that Lulu has a plan! Middle Fiction The River Charm Belinda Murrell Random. PB. $15.95 Review: I can’t resist a time-slip novel and Belinda Murrell has already established herself as a contender in this genre with The Ivory Rose and The Forgotten Pearl. Her stories are a wonderful way to access Australia’s past; this one draws on Murrell’s own family history, dating back to the 1840s. Sensitive Millie is living on an old estate in the bush with her mother and sister when, with the help of an old charm, she gains access to the past. There we meet Charlotte Atkinson, whose family is in danger of losing their beloved home, as well as their lives, due to marauding convicts, bushrangers and an abusive stepfather who threatens them. The law is against Charlotte and her mother, but they’re determined to survive and seek refuge in a stockman’s hut in the wilderness. I was fascinated to learn that Charlotte Atkinson had gone on to write the very first children’s book published in Wild Boy Walker. HB. $19.95 Review: In 1840s London, the star attraction of a travelling freak show is Wild Boy, whose unfortunate appearance has condemned him to a miserable life of rejection and ridicule. As Wild Boy plots his escape from this intolerable existence, he sharpens his Sherlock Holmes-like talent for observation and deduction. And when he’s wrongfully accused of murder and forced into a reluctant alliance with Clarissa, the feisty acrobat, his talent for reason becomes invaluable. While these two misfits attempt to clear their names by finding the murderer, they also discover friendship and acceptance. This incredibly compelling mystery culminates in a dramatic and surprising twist that readers will love. This wonderful story will appeal to readers aged 9 and up and I suspect (and hope) that there will be further adventures involving Wild Boy and Clarissa. Highly recommended. Athina Clarke is from Readings Malvern The Cat, The Rat And The Baseball Bat Andy Griffiths & Terry Denton (illus.) Pan Mac. PB. $6.99 The title story from Andy Griffiths’ popular and hilarious The Cat on the Mat is Flat is now published as a stand-alone book for middle readers. Cats and rats are natural-born enemies – but throw a baseball bat into the mix and the situation is sure to explode. Warning – this book may cause a laugh attack! Tommy Greenwald & J.P. Coovert (illus.) St Martin’s Press. PB. $9.99 Charlie Joe Jackson may be the most reluctant reader ever born. So far, he’s managed to get through life without ever reading an entire book from cover to cover. But now that he’s in middle school, avoiding reading isn’t as easy as it used to be. Then his friend Timmy McGibney decides that he’s tired of covering for him, and Charlie Joe finds himself resorting to desperate measures to keep his perfect record intact. Non-Fiction Australians All Nadia Wheatley & Ken Searle (illus.) A&U. HB. $49.99 This is the history of our continent from the Ice Age to the Apology, from the arrival of the First Fleet to Mabo. The book is made up of brief accounts of the lives of real young Australians – some are famous, while others were legends within their own families and communities. Meticulously researched and highly readable, Australians All helps us understand who we are and how we belong to the land we share. Reaching Out: Messages of Hope Mariah Kennedy (ed.) HarperCollins. PB. $19.99 Heartfelt and inspiring, Reaching Out contains stories, poems and illustrations that have been donated by world-renowned authors and illustrators, including Graeme Base, Jackie French, Michael Leunig, Bruce Whatley, Michael Morpurgo, Andy Griffiths, Anna Perera, Libby Gleeson, Melina Marchetta, Alison Lester, Morris Gleitzman and many more. UNICEF Australia Young Ambassador Mariah Kennedy created the book as a fundraising project, and all royalties will be donated to UNICEF. Classic of the Month Comet in Moominland Tove Jansson Puffin. PB. $12.95 Review: How I wish I had been introduced to these stories as a child, but unfortunately for me, they were not widely known in Australia in the 90s. The Moomins are a lovely, whimsical family created by Tove Jansson (1914-2001), a Finnish author and illustrator of the country’s Swedish-speaking minority who produced numerous works for children and adults. Comet in Moominland is actually her second book about the Moomins, her first being The Moomins and the Great Flood, which was the last to be translated into English. Comet in Moominland serves well as the introductory book to these characters, however, as it presents the family and their friends afresh. The story does, I suppose, deal with some darker issues, such as the comet that is fast approaching (and will destroy) the idyllic Moominvalley, where these happy creatures live. Rather than being bleak or depressing, though, these themes are handled with joviality and sweetness. The creativity of these books is brilliant. They are as thrilling to me as an adult as I know they are to seven to 11-year-olds. I have even tried and tested them on a group of eight-year-olds while working as a counsellor at a summer camp in Canada. My campers would beg me every night to read them another chapter about Moomintroll and his family. George Munn is from Readings Hawthorn 16 R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 Planet Word Vanished Kingdoms A Hologram for the King J.P. Davidson (with a forward by Stephen Fry) Norman Davies David Eggers HB. Was $45 HB. Was $59.95 PB. Was $29.95 NOW $16.95 NOW $17.95 NOW $12 Planet Word uncovers everything you didn’t know you needed to know about how language evolves. Learn the tricks to political propaganda and why we can talk but animals can’t. Meet the 105-year-old man who invented modern-day Chinese and find out why language caused the go-light in Japan to be blue. Europe’s history is littered with vanished realms. There’s the Empire of Aragon, which once dominated the western Mediterranean, and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, which was, for a time, the largest country in Europe. Much of this is now halfremembered at best, but here, Norman Davies takes the reader through the cracks of history to listen to the echoes of lost worlds across the centuries. Power Systems Noam Chomsky PB. Was $29.99 In a rising Saudi Arabian city, a struggling businessman pursues a last-ditch attempt to stave off foreclosure, pay his daughter’s college tuition and finally do something great. In A Hologram For the King, Dave Eggers shows us one man’s fight to hold himself, and his splintering family, together in the face of the global economy’s gale-force winds. A powerful evocation of the contemporary moment, and a moving story of how we got here. Literary Melbourne: A Celebration of Writing and Ideas Toby’s Room NOW $12 In this collection of conversations, conducted from 2010 to 2012, Noam Chomsky explores a diverse range of concerns: the future of democracy in the Arab world, the implications of the Fukushima nuclear disaster, the ‘class war’ fought by US business interests against the working poor, the breakdown of mainstream political institutions and the rise of the far right. Pat Barker PB. Was $29.95 NOW $12 Toby and Elinor, brother and sister, closest friends and confidants, are sharers of a dark secret, carried from the sweltering summer of 1912 into the battlefields of France and wartime London. When Toby is reported ‘Missing, Believed Killed’, another secret casts a lengthening shadow over Elinor’s world: how exactly did Toby die – and why? Steve Grimwade (ed.) HB. Was $24.95 NOW $12 Created to mark the celebration of Melbourne becoming a UNESCO City of Literature, this anthology draws together a selection of the best local writing. Extracts from 80 writers across different genres – crime, literary fiction, poetry, Indigenous stories, migrant tales, theatre, children’s fiction and more – provide a colourful and insightful snapshot of the city’s rich literary heritage. Readings Short Walks from Bogotá Tom Feiling HB. Was $40 NOW $12 For decades, Colombia was the ‘narcostate’. Now, it’s seen as one of the rising stars of the global economy. Where does the truth lie? Writer and journalist Tom Feiling has journeyed throughout Colombia, down roads that were until recently too dangerous to travel, to paint a fresh picture of one of the world’s most notorious and least-understood countries. Underground David Bownes, Oliver Green & Sam Mullins HB. Was $49.95 NOW $14.95 A lavishly illustrated book with a cast of characters encompassing entrepreneurs, architects, politicians and passengers, Underground is a must for every urbanite. Authors David Bownes, Oliver Green and Sam Mullins draw on previously unused sources and images to produce a new history that celebrates the crucial role of the Underground in modern London. While Mortals Sleep Kurt Vonnegut HB. Was $37.95 NOW $13.95 The 16 previously unpublished short stories of this collection are taken from the beginning of Kurt Vonnegut’s career, and show a young author already grappling with themes and ideas that would define his work for decades to come. Vonnegut’s acute moral sense and knack for compelling prose are very much on display. Higher Gossip John Updike Bargain Table A Book of Secrets Michael Holroyd HB. Was $36.95 NOW $13.95 A Book of Secrets is a treasure-trove of hidden lives and family mysteries. With grace and tender imagination, Michael Holroyd brings a company of unknown women into light, from Alice Keppel, the mistress of both the second Lord Grimthorpe and the Prince of Wales, to Eve Fairfax, a muse of Auguste Rodin, and the novelist Violet Trefusis. Future Perfect Steven Johnson HB. Was $33 NOW $12 What connects the ‘miracle on the Hudson’ to the French railway system? Or the mysterious outbreak of strange smells in downtown Manhattan to the invention of the internet? With his characteristic flair for multidisciplinary storytelling, Steven Johnson shows what lies behind these and many other fascinating human stories – namely the concept of networked thinking. No Regrets: The Life of Edith Piaf Carolyn Burke PB. Was $39.95 HB. Was $40 NOW $16.95 NOW $13.95 John Updike began compiling Higher Gossip shortly before his death in 2009. Displaying characteristic humour and insight on subjects as varied as ageing, golf, dinosaurs and make-up as well as his own fiction, this delightful collection is a wonderful legacy for fans of art and criticism alike. In No Regrets, Carolyn Burke offers an eloquent embrace of the famed French singer-songwriter. Tracing her rise to international fame, Burke details her tragedies and her triumphs, her marriages and her music, as well as her conquest of America from Carnegie Hall to The Ed Sullivan Show. A Classical Education Caroline Taggart inside the perplexing world of cosmology. Beginning with relativity theory and the Big Bang, Greene introduces us to the world of parallel universes. With his inspired analogies starring everyone from South Park’s Eric Cartman to Ms Pac-Man, Greene presents a lucid, intriguing and triumphantly understandable look at the universe. The Better Angels of Our Nature Steven Pinker PB. Was $32.95 NOW $13.95 Given the images of conflict we see daily on our screens, can violence really have declined? And wasn’t the twentieth century the most devastatingly brutal in history? Extraordinarily, however, Steven Pinker shows that humankind really has become progressively less violent over millennia and decades. Debunking both the idea of the ‘noble savage’ and a Hobbesian notion of a ‘nasty, brutish and short’ life, he argues that modernity and its cultural institutions are in fact making us better people. 1001 Paintings You Must See Before You Die Stephen Farthing (ed.) PB. Was $49.95 NOW $16.95 1001 Paintings You Must See Before You Die brings you right up to date with an incisive look at the world’s best artwork, from Ancient Egyptian wall paintings to contemporary Western canvases. Within its pages you will see displayed 1001 of the most memorable, important, controversial and visually arresting paintings that have ever been created. Each image is accompanied by text discussing both the work and the artist. HB. Was $17.95 Shakespeare’s Restless World NOW $12 How many times have you wished that you’d been taught Latin at school? Or that your history stretched all the way back to Greek and Roman myths and legends? Or perhaps you wished you knew all about the great inventions and medical developments that have made our world what it is today? A Classical Education provides all of these facts and more, filling the gaps that modern schooling leaves out. Art + Soul Hetti Perkins HB. Was $89.99 NOW $20 This lavishly illustrated book captures the remarkable energy and diversity of Aboriginal art, from the Papunya Tula Artists to Rover Thomas and his heirs’ phenomenal achievements in the East Kimberley. It features the work of contemporary artists Destiny Deacon, Brenda L. Croft and Michael Riley, as well as that of the celebrated Emily Kam Ngwarray, whose paintings revolutionised Australian art. The Hidden Reality Brian Greene HB. Was $39.95 NOW $15.95 Theoretical physicist and celebrated author Brian Greene offers intrepid readers another in-depth yet accessible look Neil MacGregor HB. Was $40 NOW $13.95 Shakespeare’s Restless World uncovers the fascinating stories behind 20 objects from the Bard’s life and times. The items range from the rich, such as the hoard of gold coins that make up the Salcombe treasure, to the very humble, like the battered trunk and worn garments of an unknown pedlar. Through each, Neil MacGregor explores the defining themes of the Shakespearean age – globalisation, reformation, piracy, Islam, magic and more. The Man Without a Face Masha Gessen HB. Was $39.95 NOW $15.95 Handpicked as a successor by the ‘family’ surrounding an ailing and increasingly unpopular Boris Yeltsin, Vladimir Putin seemed like a perfect choice for the Russian oligarchy. His popularity soared as the country and an infatuated West were determined to see the progressive leader of their dreams, even as he seized control of media, sent political rivals and critics into exile or to the grave, and smashed the country’s fragile electoral system. New books are regularly added to our website – visit the bargains page at www.readings.com.au for more. R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 DVD of the month LINCOLN $39.95 Released 13 June A revealing drama that focuses on America’s sixteenth President and his tumultuous final months in office. In a nation divided, Abraham Lincoln pursues a course of action designed to end the Civil War, unite the country and abolish slavery. With moral courage and a fierce determination to succeed, his choices will change the fate of generations to come. Daniel Day-Lewis stars in his Academy Award-winning role, supported by a great cast that includes Sally Field and Tommy Lee Jones. DJANGO UNCHAINED $39.95 Released 6 June Written and directed by Quentin Tarantino and featuring an award-winning cast, Django Unchained is the tale of Django (Jamie Foxx), a slave who teams up with bounty hunter Dr King Schultz (Christoph Waltz) to seek out the South’s most wanted criminals. As he hones his vital hunting skills, his one goal is to find and rescue the wife he lost to the slave trade long ago. When their search ultimately leads to the infamous and brutal Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio), they arouse the suspicion of Stephen (Samuel L. Jackson), Candie’s trusted house slave. Now their moves are marked and Candie’s treacherous organisation closes in on them. THE IMPOSSIBLE $39.95 The Impossible is the story of a family caught in the mayhem of one of the worst natural catastrophes of our time – the destructive tsunami that hit Asia on Boxing Day 2004. Maria (Naomi Watts), Henry (Ewan McGregor) and their three sons begin their vacation in Thailand, looking forward to a few days in tropical paradise. But on the morning of 26 December, a terrifying roar rises up from the centre of the earth, and the family face their darkest hours. with Lou Fulco The NEWSROOM: SEASON 1 $39.95 This brilliant new Aaron Sorkin-created series centres on a cable news anchor (Jeff Daniels) who returns to work from a forced vacation to find his staff have jumped ship. His boss (Sam Waterston) has hired a new crew in his absence, but the problem is they don’t all see eye to eye. Despite this, they set out together on a patriotic and idealistic mission to do the news well in the face of corporate and commercial obstacles, and their own personal entanglements. LILYHAMMER: SEASON 1 $39.95 Released 6 June Frank Tagliano (Steven Van Zandt) is a former New York mobster who, after testifying in a trial, joins the witness protection program. Intrigued by the place after watching the Winter Olympics in 1994, he is relocated to Lillehammer in Norway. Yet the transition from being a feared and respected gangster in the US to becoming an unemployed immigrant in another country is far from simple. Frank soon discovers that in order to succeed in this rural Norwegian society, he must resort to his old ways. MIRANDA: SEASON 3 $34.95 Released 5 June UK comedienne Miranda Hart returns for a third season of her much-loved series. It doesn’t matter what Miranda attempts in life, whether it is dating or simply dealing with her overbearing mother, she always seems to fall flat, quite literally. Miranda is over six feet tall and gets called ‘Sir’ all too often. She has never fitted in with her old boarding school friends and finds social situations awkward, especially around men. And she is a constant disappointment to her mother, who is desperate for her to get a proper job and a husband. THE THICK OF IT: SEASON 4 17 SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK Was $39.95 Special price $34.95 $29.95 Released 5 June Released 5 June After spending eight months in a state institution on a plea bargain, former teacher Pat Solitano (Bradley Cooper) moves back in with his parents (Robert De Niro and Jacki Weaver) and tries to reconcile with his ex-wife. Diagnosed with bipolar disorder, Pat refuses to take his medication, feeling that he can manage solely through healthy living and looking for the ‘silver linings’ in his life. Things get more challenging when he meets Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence), a mysterious girl with problems of her own. Tiffany offers to help Pat reconnect with his wife, but only if he’ll help her out in return. As their deal plays out, an unexpected bond begins to surface, adding what might just be a silver lining to their troubled lives. Government embarrassment, ministerial cock-ups, coalition rows, backroom deals, policy U-turns, spin-doctoring, political backstabbing and wild media speculation. This can only be the eagerly anticipated return of Armando Iannucci’s Westminster political comedy, The Thick of It. In the seven-part fourth season, Nicola Murray and Malcolm Tucker are now consigned to the opposition benches, but still desperate for power. Meanwhile, Peter Mannion is the new Secretary of State for Social Affairs, and finds himself supported by his team of special advisors and thwarted by his new coalition partners in turn. GALÁPAGOS with David Attenborough $29.95 Released 5 June Explore a world full of mystery and wonder. Filmed in one of the most fascinating locations on earth, this multi-awardwinning documentary is an exploration of the environments and species of the Galápagos Islands. It was here, amongst the flora and fauna of these enchanted volcanic lands, that Charles Darwin formulated his groundbreaking theories on evolution. Now, David Attenborough explores how life there has continued to evolve in biological isolation, and how the ever-changing landscape has given birth to species and sub-species that exist nowhere else in the world. Also Available Hitchcock, $39.95 Hemingway & Gelhorn, $29.95 True Blood: Season 5, $59.95 Disney’s Peter Pan, $39.95, 5 June My Left Foot, $12.95, 5 June Breaking Bad: Season 5, $39.95, 13 June The Sweeney, $39.95, 13 June West of Memphis, $29.95, 13 June Flight, $39.95, 19 June Amour, $39.95, 19 June Dexter: Season 7, $59.95, 19 June House of Cards: Season 1, $49.95, 20 June Cloud Atlas, $39.95, 26 June Beautiful Creatures, $39.95, 26 June The Paperboy, $39.95, 28 June 3 FOR 2: BUY ANY TWO NAXOS AUDIOBOOKS FROM OUR FEATURED RANGE AND RECEIVE A THIRD FREE*. NAXOS AUDIOBOOK SALE From Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights to Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, we have hours of wonderful stories to choose from. *MUST BE OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE. Offer available at our Carlton, Hawthorn and St Kilda shops. If you’re a lover of the classics, then you’ll be glad to hear that we’re running our annual Naxos AudioBooks sale again in June. 18 R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 cd of the month Once I was an Eagle Laura Marling Was $26.95 Special price $21.95 Review: Twenty-three years old. I say again, Laura Marling is 23 years old. I don’t know why this surprises me, but it does – in a positive way. I guess it’s just that what I hear come out of the speakers sounds like something from a soul who has been around the block once or twice. This is Marling’s fourth album in five years, and her folk sensibilities gather a deeper and more intriguing sense of wordplay with every new release. Once I Was an Eagle is arguably her finest album to date. Its 16 tracks explore the ups and downs, the give and take, and, finally, the prize that comes with new love. It is her most coherent group of songs, seamlessly flowing from one to the next. Highlights are ‘Where Can I Go?’ and ‘Master Hunter’. Marling is a refreshing albeit old-soul talent. Lou Fulco is from Readings Hawthorn Pop/Rock American Kid Patty Griffin $21.95 Review: Patty Griffin is an artist I have been following (obsessing about, really) ever since I heard her debut Living With Ghosts in 1996. She is quite simply one of my favourite singer-songwriters; her lyrics and voice speak to me like very few others. American Kid is Griffin’s first album of original songs in six years, and it’s reminiscent of her earlier work. That is, it’s acoustic in nature, with stripped back instrumentation that allows her incredibly powerful voice to shine. An extra treat for fans is the presence of her beau (some say husband) Robert Plant, with whom she records as The Band of Joy. Their duet ‘Ohio’ is a beautiful thing. Welcome back, Patty. Now how about another tour? Dave Clarke is from Readings Carlton Departures Bernard Fanning Released 7 June Was $26.95 Special price $21.95 Review: Powderfinger fans beware! You should expect the unexpected. The grunge guitars are gone, as is the melancholy of Tea & Sympathy. Departures is just that – a departure from all expectation and a freedom to express the joys and sorrows and fears and hopes of life’s journey. In this case, life took Bernard Fanning to Madrid, where he lived for a couple of years and wrote this album. Synth sounds wash over songs of rhythm and blues and soul. Of course, with a voice as distinctive as Fanning’s the journey may not seem as far from one release to another but, as a Powderfinger fan, I’m just happy to hear it again. Lou Fulco is from Readings Hawthorn Modern Vampires of the City Vampire Weekend $21.95 Vinyl $29.95 Review: Vampire Weekend are known for their infectious staccato rock, and this album takes some risks. It’s liberally sprinkled with production effects and is musically diverse from start to finish. But it all pays off, saturating you with energetic guitar and keyboards. Joyous track ‘Diane Young’ makes for a choppy play on the words ‘dying young’, while squeaking backing vocals on ‘Ya Hey’ provide the anthem to your next break-up. ‘Steps’ even dips a toe in the world of alternative classical music. Fiona Hardy is from Readings Carlton Trouble Will Find Me The National $21.95 Review: Trouble Will Find Me is the highly anticipated sixth album from Ohio-byway-of-Brooklyn band The National. After topping many critics’ best-of lists for 2010 and finally achieving relative commercial success with the stunning High Violet, one would think the pressure would be on to repeat the trick, but in fact the reverse is true. A grueling 22-month tour followed High Violet – after all, this is a band who forged their reputation not overnight but over the course of a decade, through sheer grit and increasingly strong records. Having reached this point, they return seemingly reinvigorated, confident, almost relaxed and decidedly self-assured. The mood suits them too. They’ve produced another glorious piece of work. Declan Murphy is from Readings St Kilda ... Like Clockwork Queens of the Stone Age $21.95 Review: What have we done without Queens of the Stone Age over the past five years to rock our little socks off? The answer, for my money, is filled the void with much lamer comparison bands, Nickelback and Creed aside! There is, however, a striking change of direction on ... Like Clockwork. While still brimming with all the muscle and thunder you’d expect from this band, it also features rather fine balladry and some of the greatest guitar work Josh Homme has ever produced. Old boys Nick Oliveri, Dave Grohl and Mark Lanegan are back on board, as are guest luminaries Elton John and Scissor Sisters’ Jake Shears. Pretenders beware. DM disappear as quickly as they arrived. Amidon himself describes the album as a journey, a winding path that comes from a darker, more internal place. Well, it is dark and edgy, but nonetheless compelling. LF Monomania Deerhunter $21.95 Vinyl $24.95 Review: Deerhunter have been throwing around attitude and alt-sometimesgarage tunes for over a decade now. Here, title track ‘Monomania’ showcases their noise-rock history, with a fuzzed-out chorus that bleeds into a thrashing finale. Opener ‘Neon Junkyard’ plays to their more indie-rock side with a swinging (left) hook to get you in the mood, while straight and mellow track ‘The Missing’ feels quite beautiful in its clarity. It’s all a bit unexpected, but if you embrace the low-key distortion you will be richly rewarded with an (occasionally) out-of-focus masterpiece. FH Random Access Memories Daft Punk $21.95 Vinyl $34.95 Review: French music duo Daft Punk have long been purveyors of exquisite house music. Their debut Homework (1997) and follow-up Discovery (2001) are considered classics of the genre. Their latest release, Random Access Memories, features collaborations with Pharrell Williams (The Neptunes and N.E.R.D) and Nile Rodgers (Chic), among others. This highly anticipated release will not disappoint, appealing to the Daft Punk faithful and new converts alike. It is a funk, soul and house musical celebration that serves as a testament to the genre. Michael Awosoga-Samuel is from Readings Carlton Love Has Come For You Steve Martin & Edie Brickell $21.95 Review: There has long been a tradition of actorsturned-singers and vice versa, and actor, comedian, novelist and expert banjo player Steve Martin is no stranger to swapping genres. On his third album, Love Has Come For You, he teams up with Edie Brickell of New Bohemians fame (who you may remember found success with the song ‘What I Am’ in 1988). Martin’s deft accompaniments blend well with Brickell’s lyrics, creating an exquisite record and a real treat. MAS Bright Sunny South Soundtrack $19.95 The Great Gatsby Sam Amidon Review: Singer and multi-instrumentalist Sam Amidon steers away from his usual folk roots and throws up jazz-tinged, quirky sounds on an experimental album that juxtaposes with his deadpan vocals. Sounds come and go, at times rushing like a bull at the gate only to Various $21.95 Review: The soundtrack to Baz Luhrmann’s 3D film adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s classic novel, The Great Gatsby, is a theatrical compilation of originals and covers from a range of contemporary artists. Jay-Z, Lana Del Rey, will.i.am, Florence + the Machine, Gotye and Sia all make an appearance, as do The xx, who recorded a song especially for the film, ‘Together’. Other highlights include Jack White’s cover of U2’s ‘Love is Blindness’, and The Bryan Ferry Orchestra’s reinterpretation of Roxy Music’s 1975 hit ‘Love is the Drug’ and cover of Beyoncé’s ‘Crazy in Love’. Miranda La Fleur is from Readings St Kilda Jazz Somewhere Keith Jarrett Trio $24.95 Review: This is the first release in a while for the Keith Jarrett Trio, which includes Jarrett, Gary Peacock and Jack DeJohnette. At 67, Jarrett retains the energy and ambition of a young man, and Somewhere has the group in a joyous, playful mood. All three turn on a dime in ‘Solar’, and then there’s the fantastically Thelonious Monk-esque stop-start feel of ‘Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea’. However, the highlight is the trance-like ‘Somewhere/Everywhere’, nearly 20 minutes of undulating, gospel-drenched groove that stands up on its own in comparison to epics such as part two of The Köln Concert. Richard Mohr is from Readings Carlton Nola’s Ark Monique diMattina $24.95 Singer-songwriter, boogiewoogie barrelhouse basher, composer, radio personality and pianist – Monique diMattina’s cred as a mature and versatile artist is well deserved. Her new album, Nola’s Ark, was recorded in New Orleans at the famed Piety Studios with an all-star line-up of musicians, including trumpeter Leroy Jones (Harry Connick Jr.’s band) and bass/sousaphone player Matt Perrine (Dr John, Jon Cleary). The album features original songs written on Monique’s 3RRR segment Shaken Not Rehearsed, alongside well-loved standards such as ‘Young at Heart’ and Fats Waller’s ‘Numb Fumblin’. World/Folk Beyond the Ragasphere Debashish Bhattacharya & Friends $24.95 Review: Kolkata-based guitarist Debashish Bhattacharya has already made several very fine albums of Indian ragas. His guitar is a highly modified one, with extra strings capable of producing all the nuances of traditional instruments. Beyond the Ragasphere is a breakthrough album and features leading musicians from several traditions, including Indo Jazz pioneer John McLaughlin (Shakti and Remember Shakti), flamenco player Adam del Monte, dobro player Jerry Douglas and nylon-string guitarist Nishad Pandey. Other more mellow tracks show off the considerable vocal talents of Bhattacharya’s daughter, Anandi. This is an adventurous step from one of the world’s great guitar players that takes him well out of the strictly raga-based themes of earlier albums. Paul Barr is from Readings Carlton R e a d i n g s M O N T H LY JUNE 2 0 1 3 Special of the month Nicola Benedetti plays Vaughan Williams & Tavener Nicola Benedetti, London Philharmonic Orchestra & Andrew Litton DG. 4766198. Was $26.95 Special price $14.95 (for a limited time only) The sound of English composer Sir John Tavener is often described as ‘ethereal’, possessing an otherworldly, spiritual quality that strikes deep in the soul. Meanwhile, Ralph Vaughan Williams’s The Lark Ascending has regularly been voted as one of the most popular classical pieces in history. Now, classical violinist Nicola Benedetti takes on both in this stunning album. Dvorák & Smetana Tokyo String Quartet Harmonia Mundi. HMU807429. $29.95 Review: In anticipation of their forthcoming disbandment in late 2013, the Tokyo String Quartet have released a new recording that pays tribute to two famed Czech composers: Antonín Dvorák and Bedřich Smetana. Despite often being regarded as polar opposites in their homeland, together Dvorák and Smetana came to represent the quintessential sound of nineteenth-century Czech music. Interestingly, Smetana’s Quartet No. 1: From My Life, featured here, was written as the composer began to lose his hearing. An amazing album. Plácido Domingo: Verdi Plácido Domingo Decca. 4791168. 2CDs. $29.95 Review: This remarkable celebration of Verdi’s music is presented over two discs and features performances from tenor Plácido Domingo over the years, from 1972 to 2001. One listen and you’ll truly understand why Domingo’s name is known across the globe. KR Percy Grainger: Works for Large Chorus and Orchestra Melbourne Symphony Orchestra & Sir Andrew Davis Chandos. CHSA5121. $24.95 Review: I’m glad Percy Grainger has been coming back into vogue recently. His innovative pieces blend contemporary twentiethcentury musical ideas with those rooted in the traditions of Bach and Beethoven. What’s more, the use of evocative poetry within his orchestration is truly exciting. KR Bach Re-invented Kristjan Järvi, Simone Dinnerstein & Absolute Ensemble Sony. 88691941682. $22.95 Spheres Review: In their latest album, Kristjan Järvi and the Absolute Ensemble rework Bach into a strange but exciting version of a piano concerto. While Bach is ever present, this kaleidoscope of music is interwoven with ideas from Klezmer, jazz, hip-hop and more. There is some terrific playing on show here with each musician given moments to shine. KR DG. 4790571. Was $26.95 Chopin: The Nocturnes Kate Rockstrom is from Readings Carlton Daniel Hope Special price $21.95 (for a limited time only) Maria João Pires Review: I got very excited when I saw the selection of composers included on Daniel Hope’s new album, from Einaudi to Faure, Prokofiev, Jenkins and beyond. What is particularly sumptuous about these arrangements is the magical way Hope weaves in and out of each work, demonstrating exactly why he’s famous. I’m hooked on Spheres and often have it on repeat as I travel to and from work each day. KR DG. 4779568. 2CDs. Was $24.95 Special price $14.95 (for a limited time only) Review: These performances from 1995 and 1996 are some of the finest examples of Chopin’s Nocturnes ever recorded. Maria João Pires seems to have that unique ability to always give the listener something different, even if they have heard the work many times before. Phil Richards is from Readings Carlton You can also browse and buy at our secure website: www.readings.com.au 19 classical cd of the month Learning to Howl: Music by Andrew Ford Jane Sheldon, Sydney Chamber Choir, Daryl Pratt & Marshall McGuire Mediterraneo Christina Pluhar & L’Arpeggiata Virgin Classics. 4645472. $29.95 ABC Classics. 4810188. $24.95 Review: Jane Sheldon’s pure, graceful voice will capture your ear in Learning to Howl, from the ethereal ‘Snatches of Old Lauds’ for bass clarinet and drone to ‘Elegy in a Country Graveyard’, a special piece of music that deserves a good, quiet listen. If you know someone who’s in need of a good dose of Australian voices and stories, then this album would make the perfect gift. KR David Garrett: 14 Review: I’m already a big fan of Christina Pluhar and L’Arpeggiata and I was not disappointed when I heard Mediterraneo. Their effortless virtuosity breathes life into this latest release, which features mainly Greek and Turkish traditional tunes. The engaging vocals will draw you into a world of ancient gods and enchanting music. If you’re a fan of Jordi Savall, then it’s likely Mediterraneo will rarely leave your CD player. Kate Rockstrom is from Readings Carlton group of five friends or family members gathering together to play them. KR David Garrett DG. 4790933. Was $26.95 Special price $21.95 (for a limited time only) Review: These recordings are from a very young David Garrett, when he was just 14 years old. His surety of technique is incredible for someone of his age, and there is an obvious joy underlining his playing of these gorgeous violin songs. KR Mozart: Overtures La Cetra & Andrea Marcon DG. 4779445. Was $26.95 Special price $14.95 (for a limited time only) Review: I wasn’t familiar with all the works on this disc but I certainly wasn’t disappointed. The playing from La Cetra under the astute direction of Andrea Marcon is energetic and concise, while an added attraction is the memorable sound of the period instruments. PR Eduard Franck: String Quintets Pieter Wispelwey: J.S. Bach: 6 Suites for Cello Solo Pieter Wispelwey Evil Penguin. EPRC012. CD/DVD. $39.95 Review: Creating a recording like this is the work of a lifetime and I love that Pieter Wispelwey has included a DVD where he talks about the scholarly ideas associated with the project. It doesn’t matter if you already have a recording of Bach’s Cello Suites, or indeed six different recordings. This is one worth having on the shelf simply because Wispelwey is such an accomplished musician. KR The Australian Chamber Orchestra presents The Reef Richard Tognetti, Jon Frank, Mick Sowry & Iain Grandage ABC Classics. 0762850. $26.95 Edinger Quintet Audite. AUD92578. $24.95 Review: Back when chamber music was in high demand, Eduard Franck was the king of the musical world, composing as well as working as a concert pianist. Here, his string quintets are gathered together – Op. 15 and Op. 51 are both grand in musical ideas yet have an intimate feel. You can easily imagine a Review: If you’re a fan of films such as the seminal Baraka, then you will be transfixed by The Reef. Richard Tognetti teamed up with directors, photographers, musicians and locals to explore how sound and nature intersect. The music was originally presented at a woolshed in Western Australia and was later performed at the Sydney Opera House. 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