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Book review: The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery

Posted on July 30, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  Shakespeare may have been the one to remark on it in his play As You Like It, but the truth is all of us, at least the self-aware among us, have wondered at one time or another if we are merely playing the parts assigned to us and if Continue Reading

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Book review: Fellside by M. R. Carey

Posted on July 9, 2016October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  There are many things that define us as human – the need for belonging and connection, a craving for justice, a fear of the unknown, violence, tenderness, love, the need for redemption and forgiveness, and a curiosity about happens when we shuffle off this mortal coil. All of these Continue Reading

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Book review: The Mirror World of Melody Black by Gavin Extence

Posted on July 1, 2016February 7, 2021 by aussiemoose

  If you’ve ever had the feeling that your life isn’t your own, that the life you’re living is just a little bit off-kilter, than you’ll find a lot to identify with in Gavin Extence’s second novel, The Mirror World of Melody Black. Creatively-titled since the titular character isn’t the Continue Reading

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Book review: Barney by Guy Sigley

Posted on April 22, 2016January 13, 2019 by aussiemoose

  Barney is a loser. Shhhh that’s OK, he won’t mind me saying that – after all it’s not like it isn’t something that Barney Conroy, protagonist in Guy Sigley’s hilariously all-too-relatable novel Barney (A novel about a guy called Barney) hasn’t told himself every day of his miserable, unfulfilling Continue Reading

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Book review: The Gracekeepers by Kirsty Logan

Posted on April 2, 2016October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  If you’ever wondered what might happen when climate change has run its inevitable course and the seas have risen and the land has not, then look no further than Kirsty Logan’s luminously poetic take on the apocalypse, The Gracekeepers. Taking place in a world flooded to the point where Continue Reading

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Book review: The Dog Stars by Peter Heller

Posted on March 25, 2016October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  The apocalypse ain’t what it used to be. That’s not to say it’s dropped all its end-of-the-world, doom-and-gloom garb in favour of bright summery colours and a jaunty gait, but an increasing number of writers are beginning to ask themselves, in ways usually poetic and insightful – once the Continue Reading

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Book review: Who’s Afraid? by Maria Lewis

Posted on January 30, 2016December 5, 2019 by aussiemoose

  There is already a distinct of otherness about Tommi Grayson, way before the transformative (literal and otherwise) experiences of Who’s Afraid?, the impressive debut novel by Maria Lewis, take hold. Hers is clearly an identity forged in the fires of exclusion, of not quite fitting in growing up, of Continue Reading

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Book review: The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra by Vaseem Khan

Posted on December 13, 2015April 14, 2023 by aussiemoose

  Retirement is supposed to be a golden age. A chance to read your newspaper, watch some cricket (if you’re so inclined), ponder life, and engage in long fattening lunches and idle conversation. And of course, tend to your newly-delivered baby elephant Ganesha left to you by your quirky uncle Bansi. Continue Reading

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On 5th day of Christmas … I read The Peanuts Guide to Christmas

Posted on December 13, 2015January 11, 2020 by aussiemoose

  When I think of all the people (and one dog) I would like to spend Christmas with, Charles M. Schulz’s endearingly insightful band of characters from Peanuts comes fairly close to the top of the list. (Dear family and close friends, please rest assured you are at the top Continue Reading

Posted In Books, ComicsTagged In Christmas 2015, Peanuts

Book review: A Robot in the Garden by Deborah Install

Posted on August 14, 2015February 28, 2020 by aussiemoose

  Like cat videos and the word “Like”, memes, the perfect joining together of picture and word, find their natural home on the internet. One in particular, “I Can’t Adult Today. Please Don’t Make me Adult”, is especially popular with grown-ups everywhere, an exquisite summation of the exhaustion that comes Continue Reading

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Recent Posts

  • Finishing up a season … and starting the next: Review of Poker Face S1 E6-10 + S2: E1-6
  • Comic strip review: Crabgrass Comic Adventures Vol. 1 by Tauhid Bondia
  • Book review: How to Read a Book by Monica Wood
  • #SydFilmFest movie review: The Ballad of Wallis Island
  • Bring on the snarky giraffe! Full trailer releases for the animated fun of In Your Dreams

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Finishing up a season … and starting the next: Review of Poker Face S1 E6-10 + S2: E1-6
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Season 2, E 1-5 review One of Poker Face‘s great strengths in its first season was that even thought it never trivialised murder, which was always seen as an evil act in need of some form or redemptive justice – handed out, of course, by protagonist Charlie Continue Reading
  • Comic strip review: Crabgrass Comic Adventures Vol. 1 by Tauhid Bondia
    (courtesy Andrews McMeel Publishing) We’ve all been there – innocently browsing through an online store when suddenly, or not so suddenly since they are stalking us every step of our impulsive shopping ways, the resident algorithm decides you MUST have a certain title. These sorts of insistent suggestions can be Continue Reading
  • Book review: How to Read a Book by Monica Wood
    (courtesy Harper Collins Publishers) The power of books to shape and mend peoples’ lives for the better is well and often remarked upon. Reading is seen, and quite rightly too, as a way of engendering wonder, curiosity and empathy, of opening the minds of those who lose themselves in books Continue Reading
  • #SydFilmFest movie review: The Ballad of Wallis Island
    (courtesy IMP awards) A mistake often made is that for something to have real emotional power, an impact that rends the heart and sears the soul, that it must be big, bombastic and loud. But while there are more than enough movies that mistakes neon sign-cloaked, well-telegraphed emotional touchpoints, clumsily Continue Reading
  • Bring on the snarky giraffe! Full trailer releases for the animated fun of In Your Dreams
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOTSearching for a family adventure that won’t break the bank? Coming to Netflix this fall, In Your Dreams takes you on a fantastical journey from the comfort of your own home. In this enchanting tale, Stevie (voiced by Jolie Hoang-Rappaport) and her brother, Elliot (voiced by Elias Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Show Woman by Emma Cowing
    (courtesy Hachette Australia) When you think of hopes and dreams, those alluring baubles of possibility and fulfillment that dangle prettily far above the grungily depressing landscape of life, you never really think in terms of how much it takes to make them happen (assuming they happen at all but who Continue Reading
  • “This is where everything is headed” … Foundation S3’s awe-inspiring trailer
    (courtesy First Showing) SNAPSHOTBased on the award-winning sci-fi novels by Isaac Asimov, Foundation chronicles a band of exiles on their monumental journey to save humanity and rebuild civilization amid the fall of the Galactic Empire. The premise of the stories is that, in the waning days of a future Galactic Continue Reading
  • Book review: Dancing With Bees by Anna Maynard
    (courtesy Allen & Unwin Book Publishers) Love is way more weighty and muscular and substantial than many people give it credit for. There is a prevailing idea that romantic love is wispy and wafty, all red roses and swoons and sighs and dreamy looks at your beloved, and while yes, Continue Reading
  • PAF! BAM! TCHAC! Thoughts on Asterix and Obelix: The Big Fight (Astérix et Obélix : Le Combat des chefs)
    (courtesy IMP Awards) One thing that struck me, even as a kid when I first came across the Asterix (Astérix or Astérix le Gaulois) series of stories courtesy of my very progressive, globally conscious local country town library, was how fun the creators writer René Goscinny (1959–1977)/Albert Uderzo (1980–2009) and Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Empress Murders by Toby Schmitz
    (courtesy Allen & Unwin Book Publishers) Ladies and gentlemen and ill-advised members of the ocean liner-going public – this novel is not your grandmother’s Agatha Christie. The Empress Murders by Toby Schmitz, which first moves at a liner-appropriate pace before hitting the narrative pedal-to-the-metal and gloriously defying all expectations, may Continue Reading
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