Number 3 chiller
The result is more bibliophilia than bibliotherapy; an exuberant pageant of literary fiction and a celebration of the possibilities of the novel. The Guardian recommends The Novel Cure to relieve emotional and physical pain.
Each character is beautifully drawn, with a rich interior life, starkly different from one another in their experiences, yet each with a curious ache in their hearts. What emerges is a delicate, complex, moving novel, one to withstand—demand even—an instant second reading.
‘Well worth reading’: Sumner Locke Elliott’s coming-out novel, Fairyland, ‘provides a vivid picture of “camp life” in Sydney in the 1930s and 40s, when homosexuality was illegal and therefore necessarily covert.’
James Patterson is giving $1 million to independent bookshops.
David Levithan’s Two Boys Kissing is on the longlist for the 2013 National Book Awards in the Young People’s Literature category.
I don’t feel like myself if I don’t write. It’s my way of thinking, of making sense of the world. An interview with Man Booker Prize–shortlisted author Ruth Ozeki.
A response to Jennifer Weiner and a celebration of ‘Holy Crap’ novels.
24 photos that prove that cats take better bookshelfies than you.
Here lies Hannah Montana. Here lies a partier in the USA. Here lies “My girl, Miley.” Cormac McCarthy describes the music video for ‘Wrecking Ball’.
Niccolò Ammaniti’s latest novel to be translated into English, Let the Games Begin, is ‘a wonderfully ironic and entertaining book’, says the Independent.
Including the word ‘land’ in a book title seems to be the latest publishing fad.
The Novel Cure is an A-Z of literary remedies that offers a cure in the form of a novel for all kinds of ailments of the mind and body, and life’s general ups and downs.
Read an interview with the authors and practicing bibliotherapists, Ella Berthoud and Susan Elderkin, on Read more
Today’s big news is that Ruth Ozeki’s A Tale for the Time Being has been shortlisted for the 2013 Man Booker Prize. Gaby Wood says it is ‘the best shortlist in living memory’.
The rad new words added to the dictionary in the 90s: where are they now?
Toni Jordan’s Nine Days and Brenda Niall’s True North: The Story of Mary and Elizabeth Durack have been shortlisted for the 2013 Colin Roderick Award.
This award, valued at $10,000, is given to the best book published on an aspect of Australian life.