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Books

Book review: Scrappy Little Nobody by Anna Kendrick

Posted on December 16, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  We’ve all heard a celebrity say at one time or another that they are just like us – they have to pay bills, look after the kids, run errands, and deal with getting stuck in traffic. But, of course we all know that their lives are nothing like ours, buffered Continue Reading

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On 3rd day of Christmas … I read The Green Road by Anne Enright

Posted on December 10, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  Christmas is a strange time of year for many families. By turns wondrous, magical and one-of-a-kind, a chance for far-flung and emotionally disparate members to come together in some form of togetherness, it can also feel like an endurance test, a trial of of sorts that begins at the Continue Reading

Posted In BooksTagged In Christmas 2016

Book review: A Very Special Year by Thomas Montasser

Posted on December 7, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  You would be hard pressed to find an avid reader anywhere who doesn’t possess an enduring love affair with bookshops. They are a magical place, full of ripe possibility, opportunities without number to pursue lives wholly different from your own, to become a pirate, a 18th century tycoon of Continue Reading

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Book review: Don’t Let Him Know by Sandip Roy

Posted on December 4, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  No matter how open someone may appear on the surface, the odds are that somewhere with them lurks secrets unspoken, some possibly even unacknowledged, that may never see the light of day, regardless of how close they may be to their loved ones. This idea, that we never truly know Continue Reading

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Weekend pop art: Deliciously twisted kids books covers

Posted on December 3, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT Many of these original books focus on life’s lessons, joys, and curiosities. Gackley cleverly takes the books’ classic covers and turns them into unforgettable, edgy, politicaly incorrect parodies that speak to the bad little kid in all of us. With a catalog of children’s book titles like Peeping Continue Reading

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Birthday book review: Alberto’s Lost Birthday by Diana Rosie

Posted on November 25, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

(image courtesy Pan MacMillan)   What must it be like to lose your birthday? For the aged titular protagonist in Diana Rosie’s debut novel, Alberto’s Lost Birthday, it has never really been an issue. As a young boy orphaned in the midst of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), his life has been one of survival, Continue Reading

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Book review: The Heart of Henry Quantum by Pepper Harding

Posted on November 20, 2016October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  It has been said, quite possibly once too often, that all good things must come to an end. But what if, wonders the titular protagonist in The Heart of Henry Quantum, if they were never all that good to begin with? Of course Henry has always told himself that Continue Reading

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Book review: Peggy & Me by Miranda Hart

Posted on November 9, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  It’s tempting to look at celebrities, even those from what Miranda Hart refers to as the “pretty earthy, budget-constrained variety of show business” (BBC sitcoms), and assume their lives unfold in some sort of gilt-edged ivory tower untroubled by the cares and concerns of our everyday world. But as Continue Reading

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Book review: The Forgetting Time by Sharon Guskin

Posted on November 6, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  In the West, where sensitivity to free flowing spirituality often finds itself subsumed to logic and consumerism more often than not, the idea of reincarnation is often treated with outright scepticism and ridicule, or at the very least, benign neglect. For some reason, the idea that we are not wholly Continue Reading

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Halloween book review: Stallo by Stefan Spjut

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

  “If you go down to the woods today, You’re sure of a big surprise.” The opening lyrics to the “Teddy Bears’ Picnic” suggest that the worst thing you’ll encounter when you enter woodland are children’s much-loved playthings having a little too much tea and frivolity. But in Stefan Spjut’s Stallo Continue Reading

Posted In BooksTagged In Halloween 2016

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Movie review: Train Dreams
    (courtesy IMP Awards) OOOO OOOO OOOO
  • It’s time to raise the curtain again … trailer lands for The Muppet Show 2026 special
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOTIt’s time to raise the curtain on The Muppet Show, a highly-anticipated special event with a special guest star and Executive Producer and guest star Seth Rogen. Kermit, Miss Piggy and the beloved Muppet gang are back with a brand-new special event. Music, comedy, and a whole Continue Reading
  • Book review: Café Puccini by Tony Matthews
    This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2026. If we’re honest, most of us live in fairly ordinary, decidedly unexciting cities or towns where everyone is as reasonably straight down the line as you can expect the contrarily idiosyncratic human race to be. They Continue Reading
  • Step into your future: Thoughts on Star Trek: Starfleet Academy S1, E1-3
    (courtesy IMP Awards) There’s a peculiar thing that happens to some people when they love something for a long time. It doesn’t matter if it’s a religion, a food or, as is pertinent here, a TV franchise, what was once fresh, exciting and new for them, a place to explore Continue Reading
  • Book review: Outlaw Planet by M. R. Carey
    What an extraordinary story. As you reach the end of Outlaw Planet by M. R. Carey, one of the finest contemporary voices working in science fiction and fantasy, you will be consumed by the idea that here is one of the very best and most human stories you have ever Continue Reading
  • Songs, songs and more songs #131: A Thousand Mad Things, Haute & Freddy, The Anahit, Robyn and Hatchie
    (via Shutterstock) I love disappearing down rabbit holes. Not actual rabbit holes, of course; that’s best left to the family Laporidae I think; rather, the digital version where one discovery leads to another leads to another, usually on YouTube for me where so many songs and trailers and clips await. Continue Reading
  • Book review: Run for the Hills by Kevin Wilson
    This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2026. At first glance, a novel premised on the idea that one man, moving across America over some decades, managed to start, and crucially, abandon, four families, who then seek to unite many years later via a Continue Reading
  • Comic strip review: Unsupervised: A Crabgrass Comics Adventure by Tauhid Bondia
    This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2026. Ah, the carefree joys and fun of childhood. As adults, we all look back to that time of our life, or we are supposed, with a wistful, sigh-laced nostalgia, having lost all of the playfulness and Continue Reading
  • Journey to Laika’s Wildwood where magic takes flight
    (courtesy Laika Studios) SNAPSHOTStep inside Laika’s Wildwood, where a powerful golden eagle commands the skies and magic takes flight. Wildwood – based on Colin Meloy’s illustrated book series – will see Prue McKeel leave behind her home of Portland, Oregon, venturing into Wildwood on a dark quest to save her Continue Reading
  • Book review: Bookish by Matthew Sweet
    This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2026. In the usual course of pop culture back and forth, a TV or streaming show would be watched in that medium, and then, the eager viewer would turn, if they were so inclined, to the book Continue Reading
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