(courtesy Hachette Australia) Jumping without looking into a reasonably long-running series of books does not always end well. If the author is skilled and accomplished, they will do a marvellously good job of folding you into an already established world, getting you up to speed with who the main character/s Continue Reading
Mini-mass of movie trailers: Everything’s Going to Be Great, The Travellers + Magnetosphere
(via Shutterstock) My happy place, well one of them anyway, is a cinema where for anyone between 1.5 hours and god knows how long – overlong blockbusters I am looking at you – I can forget the world outside and lose myself in some cinematic magic. It’s a bliss and Continue Reading
Book review: The Mimicking of Known Successes (Mossa & Pleiti book #1) by Malka Older
(courtesy Pan Macmillan Australia) While doomscrolling through social media is generally a compulsive activity with few, if any, productive outcomes, it can sometimes, algorithms be damned, offer up some real gems. Such as coming across a fellow book lover on Bluesky who is waxing lyrical about the books of Malka Continue Reading
Movie review: Jurassic World: Rebirth
(courtesy IMP Awards) It will come as exactly no surprise to anyone that life is hard. Very hard, in fact. Oh, we dress it up in all sorts of diversionary bells and whistles, and even manage to have some fun along the way but enjoyable though it is to be Continue Reading
Book review: Ancestral Night by Elizabeth Bear
(courtesy Hachette Australia) Any good book worth its narrative, world-building salt should be able to hold immersively entranced through every page and exciting twist-and-turn. But some books are created more equal than others in this regard, and Ancestral Night by Elizabeth Bear, the first book in her White Space series, Continue Reading
Movie review: The Quiet Maid (Calladita)
(courtesy IMDb) This may be news to the producers of many a Hollywood blockbuster – this reviewer loves many of them but subtle they are not – but there is real power in telling an emotionally impactful story quietly. While the temptation, especially in our cliffhanger-addicted, streaming algorithm modern digital Continue Reading
Book review: The Dead Friend Project by Joanna Wallace
(courtesy Allen & Unwin Book Publishers) Books that subvert expectations are quite possibly the very best kind. When you first pick up The Dead Friend Project by Joanna Wallace, you might be struck by the quirkiness of the titlenand even the taglines on the front cover and atop the back Continue Reading
Why are the aliens here? Teaser trailer for Invasion S3 suggests someone has figured it out
(courtesy YouTube (c) AppleTV+) SNAPSHOTInvasion follows an alien invasion through different perspectives around the world. In Season 3, those perspectives collide for the first time, as all the main characters are brought together to work as a team on a critical mission to infiltrate the alien mothership. The ultimate apex aliens have Continue Reading
During Christmas in July, I decorated my tree with 5 new pop culture ornaments
(via Shutterstock) Somewhere around five years ago, with Christmas in July gathering in popularity all the time, I decided that I would use the white tree originally bought to display Easter ornaments, to display some Christmas ornaments during the cold winter months in Australia. The wins were many – we Continue Reading
This Christmas in July … I read Confessions of a Christmasaholic by Joss Wood
(courtesy Harper Collins Publishers Australia) Christmas romantic comedies aren’t generally the time of stories to break the genre mold. And that’s perfectly okay because what you want, I would in fact argue, you need, from these types of tales is that everything that is broken can be fixed, that the Continue Reading