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Book review: Love, Lies and Linguine by Hilary Spiers

Posted on February 18, 2017October 6, 2019 by aussiemoose

  There is something inordinately comforting about rejoining the company of book characters you have grown to know and love. If an author is doing their job properly, and Hilary Spiers mostly certainly is, it is akin to meeting up again with old friends, people you wish you could have Continue Reading

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Book review: Mosquitoland by David Arnold

Posted on February 11, 2017October 6, 2019 by aussiemoose

  When we’re growing up, time and and distance can seem like the greatest of tyrannies. Neither seems particularly predisposed to granting us any favours, and any sense that they might eventually give us perspective or understanding can feel as fanciful as the idea that there are problems in life Continue Reading

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Book review: Who’s Afraid Too? by Maria Lewis

Posted on February 4, 2017February 19, 2021 by aussiemoose

*SOME MINOR SPOILERS AHEAD* In general, sequels do not get much loving, be they movies, TV shows or books. It makes sense – the novelty has worn off, it’s been there, done that and gone and got the whole T-shirt factory, the very idea of the world has lost its initial Continue Reading

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Book review: Caliban’s War (The Expanse #2) by James S. A. Corey

Posted on January 27, 2017November 13, 2023 by aussiemoose

There’s an admirable Utopian tendency among some science fiction to advance the idea that once humanity takes to the stars that all its problems will be solved, that we will join together in a spirit of selfless sacrifice and devotion to noble ideals, not only among ourselves but with many Continue Reading

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Book review: Night Without Stars by Peter F Hamilton

Posted on January 21, 2017January 4, 2019 by aussiemoose

[caption id= (image courtesy Pan Macmillan Australia) One of the delights of diving deeply into a Peter F Hamilton novel – and dive deeply you will with many of his expansive efforts reaching the 700-plus page mark with ease – is being reminded once again that pretty much anything is Continue Reading

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The Boy on the Bridge: M. R. Carey’s sequel to The Girl With All the Gifts

Posted on January 17, 2017October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT “Once upon a time, in a land blighted by terror, there was a very clever boy. The people thought the boy could save them, so they opened their gates and sent him out into the world. To where the monsters lived.” (source: Sci-Fi Now) You could be forgiven Continue Reading

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Book review: Orphans of the Carnival by Carol Birch

Posted on January 13, 2017December 11, 2020 by aussiemoose

  Humanity is, in many ways, an army of conformist clones. Look the right way, talk the right way, act the right the way and acceptance as a fully-fledged member of the human race will be conferred upon you, no questions asked. But dare to look even a skerrick different Continue Reading

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Book review: Sirius by Jonathan Crown

Posted on January 6, 2017February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  Writing a tragi-comic novel centred on a dog of Lassie-like abilities, that is onw who is deeply loveable, prodigious and fantastical, may seem like a highly perilous undertaking. After all, how do you make one of the darkest periods in human history when fascist tyranny became horrifically commonplace and Continue Reading

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Turn over another page. My favourite books of 2016

Posted on December 29, 2016January 13, 2019 by aussiemoose

  I have loved reading books since before I can remember. Whenever it started, and I suspect it was on the many nights when my mum or dad would read to me when I was toddler, I fell in love with the written word, loving the way words sounded, the Continue Reading

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Book review: The Comet Seekers by Helen Sedgwick

Posted on December 23, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  For a novel that quietly and poetically reflects on the nature of human existence, and the way in which we are either adventurous wanderers or quietly domiciled, The Comet Seekers pulses with a relentless energy, a ceaseless push-and-pull quest for belonging and relevance. That energy largely comes from the Continue Reading

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Recent Posts

  • Movie review: Pillion
  • Graphic novel review: Assorted Crisis Events Vol. 1 by Deniz Camp (writer) and Eric Zawadzki (artist)
  • Book review: Here and Beyond by Hal LaCroix
  • The short and the short of it: Grief and letting go in the digital spotlight in Light Hearted
  • Book review: Margo’s Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Graphic novel review: Assorted Crisis Events Vol. 1 by Deniz Camp (writer) and Eric Zawadzki (artist)
    (courtesy Image Comics) God bless humanity – for a complicated, contrary and multifaceted species, we sure do like to keep things simple. A clear example of our preference for everything being deliciously binary or linear is the way we view time which, depending on who you ask is multiversal in Continue Reading
  • Book review: Here and Beyond by Hal LaCroix
    (courtesy Bloomsbury Publishing) We live in troubling times. Hardly a news flash there; one glance at the nightly news is enough to traumatise you with updates on the creeping annihilation of climate change, the democracy-decimating horrors of fascism and the possibilities of new pandemics, fresh wars and death and violence Continue Reading
  • The short and the short of it: Grief and letting go in the digital spotlight in Light Hearted
    (courtesy Little Black Book Online (c) Sye Allen) SNAPSHOTLight Hearted, a new short film from director Sye Allen, is a poignant look at what happens to life once it has been touched by grief. Joy, a widow, has her own routine in place. It’s a quiet life with the absence Continue Reading
  • Book review: Margo’s Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe
    (courtesy Hachette Australia) Before her life gets massively and royally upended, Margo Millet’s life is not an easy one. Caught between a narcissistic mother who does love daughter but only on very conditional grounds and an absent ex-pro wrestler father who is loving but only in her life when he Continue Reading
  • Nature’s greatest empire … witness the rise and fall of The Dinosaurs
    (courtesy First Showing (c) Netflix) SNAPSHOTWelcome to The Dinosaurs – an epic journey into a lost world. From executive producer Steven Spielberg, Amblin Documentaries, and the award‑winning team behind Life on Our Planet, this groundbreaking doc series follows the rise and fall of the dinosaurs across hundreds of millions of Continue Reading
  • Valentine’s Day movie review redux: You’ve Got Mail
    (courtesy IMP Awards) They were heady days back in the late ’90s. Back before there were omnipresent online ads enticing you impulsively and immediately purchase you didn’t know you wanted, or Twitter became a bonfire of shouted opinions or inboxes became a stressful hallmark of cubicle serfdom, receiving an email Continue Reading
  • Valentine’s Day book review: Better Than the Real Thing by Brooke Crawford
    This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2026 “Life,” declares the front cover tagline of Brooke Crawford’s debut novel, Better Than the Real Thing, “is messy.” The central character of this rawly emotionally honest romcom, which serves up a potential fairytale ending but not Continue Reading
  • Songs, songs and more Valentine’s Day songs #133: MIKA, Go-Jo, Harry Styles, St. Lucia + Maisie Peters
    (via Shutterstock) Ain’t love grand? It is, it absolutely is, but it’s also confusing and complex and hard and wondrous and alive and dying and full of hope and crushed by loss. It’s so many things, and while it’s ultimately a good and powerful thing, it needs songs that speak Continue Reading
  • Valentine’s Day book review: Swept Away by Beth O’Leary
    (courtesy Hachette Australia) As premises go, the one what washes through Swept Away by Beth O’Leary is a doozy. We are meant to believe, and honestly you will trust us, that two people can retire to a houseboat for a one-night stand and find themselves, the next day, floating to Continue Reading
  • Joy to what’s left of the world … Thoughts on Fallout S2
    (courtesy IMP Awards) The end of the world is generally considered to be a fairly awful, lawless, dark and terrible place where civility has died and base humanity rules in all its terrible glory. You know it, I know it and Lucy MacLean (Ella Purnell), ex-Vault 33 Dweller and unexpected Continue Reading
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