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Books

Book review: Uprooted by Naomi Novik

Posted on June 13, 2017October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  There is something deliciously subversive about Noami Novik’s Uprooted, an epic fantasy novel that seems to promise something sweetly benign in the first few chapters, before giddily defying expectations every step of its uniformly excellent way. The book starts out innocently enough with the protagonist and narrator Agnieszka, a 17 Continue Reading

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Book review: The Museum of You by Carys Bray

Posted on June 7, 2017August 11, 2019 by aussiemoose

  Facing up to grief and the many ways it ripples into your life is never an easy thing. The challenge to move on from a tragic event though grows exponentially more difficult when you’re a new dad left alone to raise your unexpected six week old daughter who, like all Continue Reading

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Book review: The Hot Guy by Mel Campbell and Anthony Morris

Posted on June 2, 2017October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  It hasn’t been easy being a romantic comedy fan of late. Ever since Meg Ryan, and later Sandra Bullock shuffled off their mortal rom-com coil, and to be honest not always even then, has this genre ever matched the giddy heights of the golden age of Hollywood when Gregory Continue Reading

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Book review: The End of the Day by Claire North

Posted on May 24, 2017October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  Let’s face it – Death does not have the best reputation around. It is seen, at least in much of Western secular thought, as the end of things, the loss of everything we know and love and hold dear, a terrifying journey into a dark unknown from which there Continue Reading

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Book review: The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet by Becky Chambers (Wayfarers #1)

Posted on May 20, 2017April 12, 2021 by aussiemoose

  It would be hard to argue with the fact that humanity has, over the countless eons of its existence, provided a plethora of reasons why its future shouldn’t be every bit as fractious and be devilled as its past. And yet, for all the evidence stacked high to the Continue Reading

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Book review: A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian by Marina Lewycka #Eurovision2017

Posted on May 14, 2017October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  It’s often not until something traumatic or highly unusual happens in a family that you discover how well you do or don’t know these people with whom you have spent all or much of your life. And that many of the assumptions you have made about them come unravelling Continue Reading

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Book review: The Boy on the Bridge by M. R. Carey

Posted on May 10, 2017October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  A curious thing has happened in the realm of apocalyptic fiction of late – the arrival of hope. Previously hope was nowhere to be seen, an unimaginable luxury in a darkly dystopian world where civilisation had collapsed, humanity had surrendered to its basest instincts and Darwinism was having an Continue Reading

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Book review: Gizelle’s Bucket List by Lauren Fern Walt

Posted on May 6, 2017October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  It’s only after you’ve had an extraordinary pet in your life, an animal that was far more than just a companion and came to define your life in ways you never expected, that you can understand why a book like Gizelle’s Bucket List is so immensely affecting. It’s a Continue Reading

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Book review: Jean Harley Was Here by Heather Taylor Johnson

Posted on April 25, 2017October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  It’s often not until someone dies that you truly come to understand how deeply connected they were to a whole host of people, all of whom deal with the grief of their loss in their own unique ways. It happened to me last year when my dad died from Continue Reading

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Book review: The Tourist by Robert Dickinson

Posted on April 19, 2017October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  The great Arthur C Clarke once sagely remarked, in what has become known as one of his three laws, that “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic”. In Robert Dickinson’s The Tourist, that threshold has long since been transgressed with the people of 24th century earth routinely back and forwards Continue Reading

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Recent Posts

  • Easter is fun! Mini-reviews of Banjo the Hot Cross Bun, Pink Easter + Never Touch a Grumpy Bunny
  • Easter has a soundtrack just like Christmas, so why do we never hear it? (curated article)
  • Easter book review: Easter Bunny Murder by Leslie Meier
  • Rabbits and chicks and glittery carrots oh my! I decorated my Easter tree with 5 pop culture ornaments
  • Songs, songs and more songs #135: girli, Em Beihold, Alex Warren, TOMORA + Jessie Ware … extra! RAYE live at Abbey Road

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Easter is fun! Mini-reviews of Banjo the Hot Cross Bun, Pink Easter + Never Touch a Grumpy Bunny
    (via Shutterstock) I adore kids’ books. Sure they were once upon just books to read to my nieces and nephews, but they’ve grown past books like these now, and yet, in reading them to my favourite little people, it hit me that here are some fun stories worth reading just Continue Reading
  • Easter has a soundtrack just like Christmas, so why do we never hear it? (curated article)
    (via Shutterstock) This article by by Wendy Hargreaves, academic in the School of Education and Creative Arts, University of Southern Queensland, was first published in The Conversation Australia. You can’t visit the shops around Christmas time without hearing “Feliz Navidad”, “Silent Night”, or Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas Continue Reading
  • Easter book review: Easter Bunny Murder by Leslie Meier
    (courtesy Penguin Random House) It would be tempting to take in the title to this book by Leslie Meier and assume that the much-loved iconic Easter Bunny has had a brain snap, a breakdown and a loss of inhibition all in one and got on an uncharacteristically bloody killing spree. Continue Reading
  • Rabbits and chicks and glittery carrots oh my! I decorated my Easter tree with 5 pop culture ornaments
    (via Shutterstock) Are Easter trees really a thing?! It’s a common reaction when I tell people I have one, and that I decorate it every year, and I have to explain that yes, they exist – mine was bought at Bed, Bath and Table at post-Easter sales many years ago Continue Reading
  • Songs, songs and more songs #135: girli, Em Beihold, Alex Warren, TOMORA + Jessie Ware … extra! RAYE live at Abbey Road
    (via Shutterstock) We all need music. It soundtracks the good, the bad and the ugly – this reference makes way further down this pot – and it gives up hope and a sense of direction when all around us life feels like it’s sinking beneath the waves. These five featured Continue Reading
  • Movie review: The Magic Faraway Tree
    (courtesy IMP Awards) It’s a tale as old as, well, not time exactly, but certainly since the day movies arrived just over a century ago and began adapting books into films, setting in train a titanic battle between those who believe solely in the purity of the written word and Continue Reading
  • An unwelcome visitor … or the start of healing? Thoughts on Homebodies
    (courtesy Random Management Instagram) So much is left unsaid when you’re a queer person coming out to your parents. You may have rehearsed the conversations a thousand times in your head, imagined how the discussion might go, good or bad and hoped that everything you authentically are will be far Continue Reading
  • Book review: That Island Feeling by Karina May
    (courtesy Pan Macmillan Australia) Heading off on holidays, all we really want is to get away from the insistent stresses and strains of everyday life. Hand us a cocktail, sit us by the pool or in a bush cabin somewhere, banish the internet to a simpler, more analogue time and Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Project Hail Mary
    (courtesy IMP Awards) At the heart of every great and enduring sci-fi story, sits an impressive amount of evocative humanity. It’s easy just to see the spaceships and the planetary expanses and aliens and wars and epic space opera sprawling across millennia and impossibly far light years of stars and Continue Reading
  • “Oh my God, run!!” The End of Oak Street releases a prehistorically intriguing trailer
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOT“Our house, our neighborhood, our whole street has moved.” Filmed for IMAX. After a mysterious cosmic event rips Oak Street from suburbia and transports their neighborhood to someplace unknown, the Platt family soon discovers that their very survival depends on them sticking together as they navigate their Continue Reading
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