Book Reviews
Graft by Maggie MacKellar
Maggie MacKellar’s third memoir explores the beauty and terror of motherhood, and a year on the land.
Little Plum by Laura McPhee-Browne
Electric, dark and obsessive, Mcphee-Browne’s second novel explores motherhood and psychosis.
The Matchmaker by Saman Shad
An engaging and refreshing debut rom-com that ticks all the boxes.
The Lonely Stories ed. by Natalie Eve Garrett
22 celebrated writers – from Jhumpa Lahiri to Lena Dunham – explore the joys and struggles of loneliness in the 21st century.
Friends & Dark Shapes by Kavita Bedford
A subtle and tender read delving into the limbo of late-twenty-somethings trying to make it all work.
Some Days the Bird by Heather Bourbeau and Anne Casey
Two poets. One year. 52 poems. This collection is an ode to a sense of survival and the discovery of the things that fuel us when the world goes dark.
Now Is Not the Time to Panic by Kevin Wilson
A coming of age story for two teenagers over a fateful summer, set against a backdrop of secrecy and a national pop culture moment.
Everyone Is Everyone Except You by Jordan Hamel
Hamel’s debut poetry collection revels in hilarity, awkwardness and contradictions.
The Younger Wife by Sally Hepworth
Pacy and thrilling, Hepworth’s new novel leads the reader through the twists and turns of complicated family relationships.
This Devastating Fever by Sophie Cunningham
A struggling author is haunted by Leonard and Virginia Woolf as the 20th and 21st centuries collide.
Bliss Montage by Ling Ma
Ma’s short story collection ventures into the surreal, the unknown and the unexpected.
An Ordinary Ecstasy by Luke Carman
Exaltation and banality are at the core of this short story collection, where ‘ordinary’ Australians experience life’s raptures and ruptures.
Resilience ed. by Michelle Cahill, Monique Nail and Anthea Yang
Mascara Literary Review’s first print anthology brings together a collection of rich and varied writing that offers a complex portrait of what it means to be resilient.
Party Legend by Sam Duckor-Jones
With an inherent fearlessness, Duckor-Jones explores existentialism in both its largest and smallest forms.
Red Low Fog / Transcript [Documentary in Poems] by Melissa E. Jordan
Telling the story of a ski lodge bombing in upstate New York, Jordan weaves an intricate tale of love, gossip, urban myth and story-telling.
Limberlost by Robbie Arnott
Arnott’s third novel delves into the small but honest ways in which we fall captive to nature, love and responsibility.
Where The Light Gets In by Zoë Coyle
Love and grief are intrinsically intertwined in this debut novel that deals with family, death and forgiveness.
Chouette by Claire Oshetsky
This wild and tender feminist fairytale dives into mother-daughter relationships and what it means to be ‘normal.’
Dirtbag, Massachusetts: A Confessional by Isaac Fitzgerald
This collection of confessional stories explore the many facets of one man’s identity with warmth and honesty.
No Longer At Ease by Chinua Achebe
Achebe’s second novel shows Nigeria at a point of transition and the complexities of colonialism.