COURTNEY COLLINS Bird. Reviewed by Emma Foster

COURTNEY COLLINS Bird. Reviewed by Emma Foster

The lyrical second novel from the author of The Burial criss-crosses through time following one girl’s parallel lives. Bird is the pensive, defiant 14-year-old protagonist of Courtney Collins’ new novel. In the opening chapter, she’s living with her family in a...
KIRSTY ILTNERS Depth of Field. Reviewed by Ann Skea

KIRSTY ILTNERS Depth of Field. Reviewed by Ann Skea

Winner of the 2023 Dorothy Hewett Award, photographer Kirsty Iltners’ first novel explores both darkness and light. If you want to freeze something fast, you increase the shutter speed – but it makes the image darker. Tom’s memories of his first encounter with Adeline...
JESSIE TU The Honeyeater. Reviewed by Ann Skea

JESSIE TU The Honeyeater. Reviewed by Ann Skea

The second novel from the author of A Lonely Girl is a Dangerous Thing unpeels secrets in the life of a young Taiwanese translator. Fay’s widowed Taiwanese mother brought her to Australia when she was still a baby. Now, Fay is a well-qualified translator, teaching at...
KATE KRUIMINK. Heartsease. Reviewed by Sally Nimon

KATE KRUIMINK. Heartsease. Reviewed by Sally Nimon

Set in an old house in the Tasmanian countryside, nothing is quite as expected in this second novel from Vogel-winner Kate Kruimink. The first thing to say about Heartsease is that – despite its title – it is not a comforting read. This is a story about loss...
MAX EASTON Paradise Estate. Reviewed by Paul Anderson

MAX EASTON Paradise Estate. Reviewed by Paul Anderson

The disparate residents of the sharehouse at the heart of Max Easton’s second novel reveal a microcosm of Australia’s housing crisis. New Year’s Eve 2022 bookends this social novel set in Sydney, in which good nature and resilience are demonstrated in the face of what...
MIRANDA DARLING Thunderhead. Reviewed by Ann Skea

MIRANDA DARLING Thunderhead. Reviewed by Ann Skea

Miranda Darling deploys all the voices in her protagonist’s head to reveal a fraught relationship in this allusive novella. Winona Dalloway, like Mrs Dalloway in Virginia Woolf’s novel of that name, often finds herself ‘lilting between observing life from the outside...
ROBYN BISHOP The Rust Red Land. Reviewed by Ann Skea

ROBYN BISHOP The Rust Red Land. Reviewed by Ann Skea

Through the story of Matilda, Robyn Bishop’s novel reveals the constrained lives of women in rural New South Wales in the late 1800s. It is July 1892 and Matilda is just old enough to help Clara out of her cot, change her nappy and dress her, but not old enough to...