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Books

Book review: The Sudden Appearance of Hope by Claire North

Posted on September 6, 2016January 19, 2020 by aussiemoose

You’ve met Hope Arden a thousand times before. You simply don’t remember. Examining themes of identity, memory, self-awareness and the commodification of humanity, The Sudden Appearance of Hope by British writer Claire North (a pseudonym for Catherine Webb) goes to the very heart of what it means to be a person. Continue Reading

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Book review: The End of All Things by John Scalzi

Posted on September 4, 2016October 7, 2025 by aussiemoose

  Ending up smack bang in the middle of a book series when all you thought you were doing was buying a standalone volume can be disconcerting. But now when it’s John Scalzi and not when you’ve picked volume 6 in the Old Man’s War series, a space opera that spans Continue Reading

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Book review: Resistance is Futile by Jenny T. Colgan

Posted on August 24, 2016February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  Love can find you in the most unexpected of places. Even so, if you’re Connie MacAdair, a mathematics prodigy who has spent her entire life in love with numbers and theorems, and reviled in certain quarters as a hopeless nerd as a result, it’s a fair bet you’re not even Continue Reading

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Book review: South by Frank Owen

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

  There is no such thing as half an apocalypse. But what if, as South by Frank Owen (a pseudonym for two authors, Diane Awerbuck and Alex Latimer) postulates, you lived in a USA divided between a prosperous, healthy North with all the mod cons of life and an impoverished, Continue Reading

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The closest of friends find each other in The Littlest Bigfoot (book trailer)

Posted on August 14, 2016October 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT The Littlest Bigfoot follows lonely Alice Mayfair, who is neglected by her parents and sent to a string of boarding schools. She’s self conscious about her body and frizzy hair and wants to find a friend. She does so in kindred spirit, Millie Maximus, a Bigfoot, and fights Continue Reading

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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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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Movie review: Bon Voyage, Marie (On Ira) AFFFF26
    (courtesy IMDb) Saying a final goodbye to anyone you love who is dying is one of the hardest things you can do in life. But it becomes even more devastating when it arrives out of nowhere, which is precisely what happens in Bon Voyage, Marie (On Ira) when a lovingly Continue Reading
  • Book review: Star Trek: Strange New Worlds: Toward the Night by James Swallow
    (courtesy Simon & Schuster) Novels based on the characters in TV shows or movies either go one of two ways – they absolutely nail the characters and evoke a perfect sense of time and place that makes the story feel like a televisual sprung to life on the page or Continue Reading
  • “The most important thing is to be yourself.” The endearing trailer for The Other Bennet Sister
    (courtesy YouTube (c) BBC) SNAPSHOTThe first part of the series follows the events from Pride and Prejudice from Mary Bennet’s point of view, before the story departs to follow Mary as she travels to London & the Lake District. The overlooked sister from the big Bennet family has a romantic Continue Reading
  • Movie review: The Pout-Pout Fish
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Based on the book of the same name by Deborah Diesen with art by Dan Hanna, The Pout-Pout Fish is of those films that comes with a fairly simple premise but which becomes so much more thanks to clever writing and some mischievously inventive animation. Adapted from Continue Reading
  • Book review: Lie With Me by Philippe Besson
    (courtesy Penguin Books Australia) While it’s an immutable fact that we exist in the here and now, for better or worse, we are always living in the past to some extent. It’s impossible not in many ways since who we were and what we did are intrinsically woven into the Continue Reading
  • It’s time to move on … Thoughts on Shrinking S3, E1-6
    (courtesy IMP Awards) I am lucky to have a wonderful family. Well, “Congratulations you!” might well be the response from most people but what on earth does this have to do with a review of the first six episodes of Shrinking third season? As it turns out, quite a lot Continue Reading
  • Why is he in space? Behind-the-scene sneak peek of Project Hail Mary
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOTAstronaut Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) awakens with no memory of himself or his mission. He deduces he is the sole survivor of a crew sent to the Tau Ceti solar system in search of a solution to a catastrophic event on Earth. In his search for answers, Continue Reading
  • Book review: Escape to Seahaven Bay by Nicola May
    Recovering from great trauma is never easy. It’s there in the word really; “trauma” even sounds hard and brutal, and so it stands to reason, that moving on for it will not be quick, easy or trouble-free. For a book devoted to the wondrous idea of second chances, Escape to Continue Reading
  • The short and the short of it: What is life without social media? Quiet Life asks the question
    (courtesy IMDb) SNAPSHOTA social media meltdown forces Geoffrey to reassess his life and values. Quiet Life was awarded the BAFTA for Short Form at the BAFTA Television Awards 2025. (courtesy BBC YouTube) You’re barely into the approximately 11-minute delight that is Quiet Life, directed by Rith Pickette to a screenplay Continue Reading
  • Movie review: She’s the He! #MGFF26
    (courtesy IMDb) Identity cuts to the core of who we are as people. But for something so intrinsic to our sense of self and expression, identity is often twisted into all sorts of unrecognisable shapes by societal pressure, familial expectations, bullying and bigotry and even our personal journeys to figuring Continue Reading
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