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Book review: Saturdays at Noon by Rachel Marks

Posted on June 22, 2020June 22, 2020 by aussiemoose

Finding a place to call home is all any of us really want. We may talk about a thousand and one other needs and wants but if really pressed, and everything else is taken away from us, all that matters is that we have people to whom we are connected Continue Reading

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Book review: Kokomo by Victoria Hannan

Posted on June 20, 2020July 14, 2020 by aussiemoose

ARC courtesy Hachette Australia – release date 28 July 2020. We are a people who exist uneasily between expectation and consequence. In our heady younger days particularly, but even as we get older, especially if we are optimistically inclined, we can’t help but approach a given situation with the fixed Continue Reading

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Book review: Chilling Effect by Valerie Valdes

Posted on June 17, 2020June 17, 2020 by aussiemoose

If there’s one thing a space opera worth its galactic salt needs as much as a rip-roaring endlessly expansive narrative, it’s a larger-than-life protagonist as its core. You know the kind – a take-no-prisoners, swashbuckling soul who dares to challenge the orthodoxies and powers that be of the day and Continue Reading

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Book review: Agency by William Gibson

Posted on June 14, 2020June 15, 2020 by aussiemoose

One of the inestimable joys of well-written speculative fiction, which encompasses a broad range of genres including fittingly for this review, futuristic, is how it turns an engaging premise into a story so believably and immersively well-executed that it feels as real as the seat you are reading the book Continue Reading

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Book review: Away With the Penguins by Hazel Prior

Posted on June 11, 2020June 11, 2020 by aussiemoose

Is it ever too late to change your life? If you were to ask Veronica McCreedy at the start of Hazel Prior’s (Ellie and the Harp Maker) charmingly redemptive novel Away With the Penguins, you would likely receive a snappy, tart reply that “Of course it is! How could you Continue Reading

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Book review: Small Mercies by Richard Anderson

Posted on June 8, 2020June 8, 2020 by aussiemoose

Tenacity is an amazing thing. It speaks of the ability to face up to the very worst of things, to know how terrible and existentially exhausting they are, to know you could run away and leave an intolerable situation far behind … and yet NOT. What propels you to hang Continue Reading

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Book review: Revenger by Alastair Reynolds

Posted on June 6, 2020June 6, 2020 by aussiemoose

At the heart of every space epic, the really good ones anyway, there has to be a thread of vibrant, affecting humanity. Being taken to strange and exotic worlds in the midst of enticing galaxies far beyond the banality of 21st century day-to-day life is a compelling reason to read Continue Reading

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Book review: The Eye of the Sheep by Sofie Laguna

Posted on June 3, 2020June 3, 2020 by aussiemoose

There are books you read and appreciate, ones that draw you in and compel you to finish them but which for all their narrative appeal and readability, don’t really grab a hold off your heart in ways so profound you are thinking about them long after you have finished them. Continue Reading

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Book review: The Last Smile in Sunder City by Luke Arnold

Posted on June 2, 2020June 2, 2020 by aussiemoose

Coming up with an approach to fantasy storytelling that is so compellingly fresh that you spend much of a story excited about where it’s all going to lead is a very rare thing indeed, especially given the explosion in popularity of the genre over recent years. Actor (Black Sails, Never Continue Reading

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Book review: Mammoth by Chris Flynn

Posted on May 30, 2020May 30, 2020 by aussiemoose

Humanity, you have been judged and found wanting. By a 13,000-year-old extinct mammoth fossil no less. While that revelation may be sobering, the good news is that the judgement is delivered by the extraordinarily imaginative novel, Mammoth by Chris Flynn, a book which takes the traditional anthropocentric view of the Continue Reading

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  • Playtime has a new look as Toy Story 5 drops its first technologically menacing trailer
  • Book review: Engaged, Apparently by Amy Andrews
  • Dark, dangerous and hilarious … Thoughts on How to Get to Heaven From Belfast
  • Book review: The Distinctly Competent District Councillor by Jonas Jonasson
  • Movie review: Pillion #MGFF26

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Playtime has a new look as Toy Story 5 drops its first technologically menacing trailer
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOTIn Toy Story 5, we’re introduced to a new character Lilypad, a high-tech frog-shaped smart tablet voiced by Greta Lee that makes Buzz, Woody, Jessie and the rest of the gang’s jobs exponentially harder when they have to go head to head with the all-new threat to Continue Reading
  • Book review: Engaged, Apparently by Amy Andrews
    (courtesy Harper Collins Publishers Australia) Is it possible, we muse wonderingly at the start of this review, to reinvent a trope? Or, at the very least, and trust us, it’s a very good “very least” indeed, to put a shiny new sheen on it and present it to an enraptured Continue Reading
  • Dark, dangerous and hilarious … Thoughts on How to Get to Heaven From Belfast
    (courtesy First Showing (c) Netflix) Think tightrope walkers have a challenge on their hands? Surely a greater feat is balancing comedy and drama in a show like How to Get to Heaven From Belfast – the title alone is redolent with quirky humour and melancholic longing, all in perfect unison Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Distinctly Competent District Councillor by Jonas Jonasson
    (courtesy Harpers Collins Publishers Australia) There is something so heartwarming about looking at life in a whimsical way. In an age when everything is so full on and so serious and unrelentingly intense – this can be both a good and a bad thing but either way, it exacts a Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Pillion #MGFF26
    (courtesy IMDb) How do you define romance? The odds, whether you are straight or gay, or some other gloriously diverse point outside of that binary, is that you will think of tender touches, of deep friendship and shared values, of physical love and whispered words of love; you know, the Continue Reading
  • 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
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