Review: Inferno is Brown's Fifty Shades of Iconography
One of the first characters to appear in "Inferno" is a spike-haired, malevolent biker chick dressed in black leather. She looks like trouble in more ways than one.
Sad Liz railroaded into making a grand escape
REVIEW BY DAPHNE GUINNESS Alan Bennett imagined the Queen as an avid book lover in The Uncommon Reader.
A bit sick, but chick lit and melodrama make it a winner
REVIEW BY PETER CRAVEN Every so often a book comes along that has every kind of reader gasping with pleasure at its style and the anticipation of what's coming next.
Inspiration of life on the ocean wave
MARC MCEVOY Years at sea gave Hugh Howey all the background he needed to concoct a self-contained subterranean world.
Headed for golden glory
REVIEW BY BETHANY TAYLOR Goldie Roth has felt punished her entire life, until one day changes everything.
Minimalist but magical tale of a life stripped bare
REVIEW BY THORNTON MCCAMISH It's the long, inward ordeal of enduring the past that Train Dreams is interested in.
Feisty flapper packs a plot punch but slips on lexicon
REVIEWED BY CHRISTINE CREMEN If you've decided to read Unnatural Habits, the latest instalment in the Phryne Fisher historical mystery series, and all you know of these stories is the recent ABC TV show based on them, you're in...
Final footsteps of POWs
REVIEW BY ROSS SOUTHERNWOOD Sandakan revisits one of the worst Japanese atrocities committed against Allied POWs during the war.
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