• Home
  • About NRB
    • Who we are
    • What we do
    • Get the books
    • Quoting from NRB
    • Contribute
    • Get reviewed
    • Support the NRB
  • Fiction
  • Non-fiction
  • Crime Scene
  • SFF
  • Giveaways
  • Extracts
  • Flashback Friday
  • The Godfather
  • Contact
BEN MACINTYRE A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and the great betrayal. Reviewed by Peter Corris

BEN MACINTYRE A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and the great betrayal. Reviewed by Peter Corris

by NRB | 24 Apr 2014 | Non-fiction | 0 comments

The English class system helped Cold War spy Kim Philby, who used his friendships with other agents to thwart their operations. Back when I was working at the National Times, I had the good fortune to meet two men – David Leitch and Phillip Knightley – who’d written...
GABRIELLE CAREY Moving Among Strangers: Randolph Stow and my family. Reviewed by Lou Murphy

GABRIELLE CAREY Moving Among Strangers: Randolph Stow and my family. Reviewed by Lou Murphy

by NRB | 17 Apr 2014 | Non-fiction | 1 comment

Gabrielle Carey searches for clues to the life of Randolph Stow in this treasure hunt of family memoir and literary history. In her determination to ‘know’ Julian Randolph Stow – ‘Mick’ to his family and friends – Carey journeys through both...
MARION MADDOX Taking God to School: The end of Australia’s egalitarian education? Reviewed by Yvonne Perkins

MARION MADDOX Taking God to School: The end of Australia’s egalitarian education? Reviewed by Yvonne Perkins

by NRB | 15 Apr 2014 | Non-fiction | 0 comments

Should religion be part of children’s education? And what kinds of religion are being taught in schools? Marion Maddox makes her case for a more secular system. Australians have never been satisfied with the way religion has been handled in education, but we have...
DAVID ASTLE Puzzled: Secrets and clues from a life lost in words. Reviewed by Jean Bedford

DAVID ASTLE Puzzled: Secrets and clues from a life lost in words. Reviewed by Jean Bedford

by NRB | 27 Mar 2014 | Non-fiction | 0 comments

‘Fantastic nude profile plastered in central Tassie’: (13 letters)* – if you don’t know where to start, or even if you do, this is the book for you. David Astle – better known perhaps as the Sydney Morning Herald’s cryptic crossword devil-incarnate ‘DA’ – has been...
ROBERT WAINWRIGHT Sheila: The Australian beauty who bewitched British society. Reviewed by Kylie Mason

ROBERT WAINWRIGHT Sheila: The Australian beauty who bewitched British society. Reviewed by Kylie Mason

by NRB | 13 Mar 2014 | Non-fiction | 0 comments

More social history than biography, this fascinating book brings to life the glamorous years between the world wars. Born in 1895 on a property near Goulburn, New South Wales, Sheila Chisholm spent her childhood like most other Australians: cavorting outdoors, getting...
LUKE HARDING The Snowden Files: The inside story of the world’s most wanted man. Reviewed by Michael Richardson

LUKE HARDING The Snowden Files: The inside story of the world’s most wanted man. Reviewed by Michael Richardson

by NRB | 11 Mar 2014 | Non-fiction | 0 comments

The full significance of the security documents Edward Snowden leaked has yet to emerge; this fast-paced account tells the story so far. No one knew who Edward Snowden was in May 2013 when he scraped 1.7 million classified documents from the National Security Agency...
DAVID MALOUF A First Place. Reviewed by Kathy Gollan

DAVID MALOUF A First Place. Reviewed by Kathy Gollan

by NRB | 4 Mar 2014 | Non-fiction | 0 comments

David Malouf’s absorbing essays, full of erudition and with his trademark lucid prose, engage with the troubled issue of Australian identity. In this fascinating collection of essays, written between 1984 and 2010, David Malouf circles around that Australian...
KRISTINA OLSSON Boy, Lost: A Family Memoir. Reviewed by Paula Grunseit

KRISTINA OLSSON Boy, Lost: A Family Memoir. Reviewed by Paula Grunseit

by NRB | 10 Feb 2014 | Non-fiction | 1 comment

This ‘shatteringly beautiful’ memoir of a mother forcibly separated from her baby son won the Non-Fiction prize at the 2013 Queensland Literary Awards. It is the summer of 1950. On a railway station in Cairns, in broad daylight, an infant is snatched from...
PAUL HAM 1914: The Year the War Ended. Reviewed by Rod Madgwick

PAUL HAM 1914: The Year the War Ended. Reviewed by Rod Madgwick

by NRB | 6 Feb 2014 | Non-fiction | 1 comment

Paul Ham provides a readable and fair-minded corrective to the history wars being waged in the centenary of the outbreak of World War I. If you have ever stood by the grave of an Australian, or any other soldier, who died in the First World War and wondered at the...
MANDY SAYER The Poet’s Wife. Reviewed by Kylie Mason

MANDY SAYER The Poet’s Wife. Reviewed by Kylie Mason

by NRB | 4 Feb 2014 | Non-fiction | 1 comment

The award-winning author of Velocity and Dreamtime Alice returns with the searing, soul-baring memoir of her marriage to Pulitzer-Prize-winning poet Yusef Komunyakaa. Mandy Sayer is 22 and still tap-dancing on street corners when she meets Yusef Komunyakaa during...
VANESSA BERRY Ninety9. Reviewed by Walter Mason

VANESSA BERRY Ninety9. Reviewed by Walter Mason

by NRB | 21 Jan 2014 | Non-fiction | 3 comments

Goths, zines and inner-city life: this memoir of 1990s Sydney is nostalgic and multi-layered – and fun. One of the ways I love to torture myself is by reading about people who are immensely more creative, daring and productive than me. Writerly envy can be...

JANE MCCREDIE and NATASHA MITCHELL (Eds) The Best Australian Science Writing 2013. Reviewed by Jean Bedford

by NRB | 3 Dec 2013 | Non-fiction | 0 comments

In its pursuit of cool ideas, this diverse anthology – from essays to poetry to memoir – gives a fresh window into what’s happening in the world of science. This collection of essays, by scientists and non-scientists, is a joy for lay-people like me, those of...
Page 35 of 39« First«...102030...3334353637...»Last »
             

Subscribe

Add your email address and we'll be in touch when new reviews are published.


Support NRB

Help us keep the Newtown Review of Books a free and independent site for book reviews.
Click to Donate

Abbey's Bookstore

Sister Kate by Jean Bedford.

Recent Posts

  • Image of cover of book The Barn: The Murder of Emmett Till and the cradle of American racism by Wright Thompson, reviewed by Braham Dabscheck in the Newtown Review of Books.WRIGHT THOMPSON The Barn: The murder of Emmett Till and the cradle of American racism. Reviewed by Braham Dabscheck
    10 February 2026
    Wright Thompson’s account of the 1950s murder of a Black teenager in [ … ]
  • Image of cover of book The Language-Lover’s Lexipedia by Joshua Blackburn, reviewed by Ann Skea in the Newtown Review of Books.JOSHUA BLACKBURN The Language-Lover’s Lexipedia. Reviewed by Ann Skea
    5 February 2026
    Joshua Blackburn has compiled a treasure-trove of the humorous, the obscure, [ … ]
  • Image of cover of book Woodside vs The Planet: How a company captured a country by Marian Wilkinson, reviewed by Braham Dabscheck in the Newtown Review of Books.MARIAN WILKINSON Woodside vs The Planet: How a company captured a country. Reviewed by Braham Dabscheck
    3 February 2026
    Australian governments are addicted to fossil-fuel exports that harm the [ … ]
  • Image of cover of book Rock Art and its Legacy in Myth and Art by Christoph Baumer and Therese Weber reviewed by Ann Skea in the Newtown Review of Books.CHRISTOPH BAUMER and THERESE WEBER Rock Art and its Legacy in Myth and Art. Reviewed by Ann Skea
    29 January 2026
    This account of ancient rock art in Eurasia, Arabia and the Sahara attempts to [ … ]

  • NRB Home
  • About the NRB
  • Support the NRB
  • Contribute
  • Get Reviewed
  • A-Z
  • Contact
© 2012 - 2024 Newtown Review of Books / ABN 99 488 002 007 / Manage / Site by Leumesin Design
Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behaviour or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}