(courtesy Harper Collins Australia) It has oft been noted that there is nothing new under the sun, and while the Bible got the ball rolling on that one, plenty of others have taken up the cry that try as we might to be creatively original or to dream up a Continue Reading
Old friends. New Roommates. Thoughts on Mid-Century Modern
(courtesy IMP Awards) It’s all too easy form some people to dismiss sitcoms as disposable TV, something you watch for an escapist laugh and nothing more. And while there’s nothing wrong with losing yourself in quick gags and sparkling quips that punctuate storylines that only run to 22 minutes or Continue Reading
Movie review: Bob Trevino Likes It
(courtesy IMP Awards) People need people. No, that is not inspired by the 1964 Barbra Streisand track of almost the same name but by the simple recognition of the innate sociability of the human species. We need to belong. We need to matter, and at a profound level, and when Continue Reading
Book review: My Hot Housemate by Susannah Hardy
(courtesy Hawkeye Publishing) Let’s get one thing clear right from the start – we love literary romantic comedies because, and yes, there will be a lot of this particular word, we love LOVE. Who doesn’t want to read about someone battling insurmountable, wretched circumstances, crash ‘n’ burn existential hell and Continue Reading
Chef. Spy. Lover. Carême tells the story of arguably the world’s first celebrity chef
(courtesy First Showing) SNAPSHOTCarême follows the thrilling story of the world’s first celebrity chef, Antonin Carême (starring Benjamin Voisin), who rose from humble beginnings in poverty in Paris right up to the height of culinary stardom in Napoleon’s Europe. While he dreams only of becoming the most famous chef in Continue Reading
Book review: The Lamplighter’s Bookshop by Sophie Austin
(courtesy Harper Collins Publishers Australia) Challenging the status quo is never an easy task. Especially when it’s 19th century England, where Victorian propriety of the most suffocating kind rules, at least for those in the upper classes, and where one small step, however intentional or unintentional, can mean social death Continue Reading
The short and the short of it: Overcoming fear to help others movingly infuses the delightful The Robot and the Whale
(courtesy IMDb (c) Premium Films) SNAPSHOTA long time ago humans left the planet Earth. Lobo, a cheerful robot who loves animals and plants one day meets a stranded whale on the beach. Lobo will have to overcome his fear of water in order to save her, but it’s not easy Continue Reading
Book review: Space Brooms! by A. G. Rodriguez
(courtesy Penguin Books Australia) A digital preview copy of Space Brooms! provided by Angry Robot Books in return for an honest and objective review; the novel releases 29 April 2025. When I switched on the phone to read the graciously suppled preview pdf of Space Brooms! by A. G. Rodriguez, Continue Reading
“What if the thing you were searching for… found you first?” Elio debuts first full trailer
(courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOTEleven-year-old dreamer Elio (voiced by Yonas Kibreab) is artistic, creative, and an avid indoorsman who finds it hard to fit in. Meanwhile, Mom Olga, who runs a top-secret military project, is working to decode a strange alien signal from outer space. But it’s Elio who makes contact, Continue Reading
Graphic novel review: Geiger by Geoff Johns | Gary Frank | Brad Anderson
(courtesy Image Comics) We are more than a little focused on the end of the world at the moment. Not that anyone actually wants it – far from it; a world of chocolate, great friends and wonderful animated films is something I love and would very much like to continue Continue Reading