Australian fiction

Firelight: Stories by John Morrissey

Reviewed by Ellie Dean

John Morrissey’s debut collection of short stories is a beguiling, evocative delight. In it, he presents a series of visions that meld the absurd and mundane: a mysterious commonwealth celebrating their colonisation of the moon, the fraught efforts of a…

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Restless Dolly Maunder by Kate Grenville

Reviewed by Chris Gordon

We know Kate Grenville is one of Australia’s most acclaimed authors, and that she is an astute researcher. She is a writer who can fill in the gaps. If she has the facts, then she will shape them into something…

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The Scope of Permissibility by Zeynab Gamieldien

Reviewed by Jamisyn Gleeson

In her debut novel, Zeynab Gamieldien’s characters navigate exams, friendships, families and religion within the Muslim Students’ Association (MSA) at their Sydney university. Sara is an honest (albeit blunt) friend who is tired of explaining her religion and South African…

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On a Bright Hillside in Paradise by Annette Higgs

Reviewed by Elke Power

In her Penguin Literary Prize- winning debut novel, Annette Higgs does not shy away from the shameful colonial history of atrocities perpetrated against the First Nations peoples of lutruwita (Tasmania/Van Diemen’s Land). However, the tightly circumscribed focus of her novel…

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The Art of Breaking Ice by Rachael Mead

Reviewed by Joe Murray

Nel Law is many things: an ageing menopausal woman, a lonely homemaker, an artist – but what she always finds herself reduced to is the wife of famed polar explorer Phil Law, whose role as the director of Australia’s Antarctic…

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Why We Are Here by Briohny Doyle

Reviewed by Aurelia Orr

From the author of the Miles Franklin Award-longlisted Echolalia comes a brilliant new novel about grief, life during lockdown, and the overwhelming love of a dog.

Why We Are Here follows the story of BB as she moves to Balboa…

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Southern Aurora by Mark Brandi

Reviewed by Mark Rubbo

Jimmy likes to take his little brother Sam down to the railway cutting to watch the trains. If the time is right, they’ll see the silver cars of the Southern Aurora flash by; they’ll both get a thrill.

Sam goes…

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Exquisite Corpse by Marija Peričić

Reviewed by Pilgrim Hodgson

When poverty-stricken cigar-factory worker Lina Dahlstrom is diagnosed with tuberculosis, the charming American doctor Carl Dance seems to go above and beyond in his efforts to cure her. Dazzled by his cutting edge treatments and commitment to her cure, her…

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Blackwater by Jacqueline Ross

Reviewed by Lian Hingee

Less than two years after meeting and falling in love with a mysterious and much-older man, a young bride is brought home to his huge and isolated manor…

Set in the wilds of Tasmania, Jacqueline Ross’s Blackwater has obvious shades…

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The Terrible Event by David Cohen

Reviewed by Roland Bisshop

The title story of David Cohen’s new collection chronicles the administrative preparation for the launch of a memorial – to what we are not informed, but the inference is a catastrophic incident involving the deaths of many. The launch would…

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