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Australian book reviews

Weekly reviews of new Australian books from Guardian Australia

  • Jordan Prosser and the Big Time book cover

    Big Time by Jordan Prosser review – a lush, drug-fuelled adventure in a future Australia

    Blending dystopic soothsaying and raucous imagination, Prosser’s debut novel is a bit Philip K Dick, a bit Jennifer Egan and a bit entirely unique
  • Louise Wolhuter and the book cover

    Shadows of Winter Robins by Louise Wolhuter review – a masterful mystery that keeps you guessing

    This writer’s tantalising second novel is packed with marvellous characters, whose unfurling stories examine generational secrets
  • Kate Forsyth and the Psykhe cover

    Psykhe by Kate Forsyth review – a cosy escape into Greek myth

    This novel, by an assured writer known for her female-led stories, succeeds in its ambition to entice and delight
  • Bruce Pascoe and the book cover

    Imperial Harvest by Bruce Pascoe review – an epic tale of humanity, horror and hope

    Set in 13th century Mongolia, this novel articulates a quiet, pragmatic optimism about the ways we can heal each other amid war and trauma
  • Jenny Ackland book review

    Hurdy Gurdy by Jenny Ackland review – a toothless abortion tale

    If novels like this one are feminist – and that’s a slippery question – then it feels like a masochistic kind of empowerment
  • In Everything is Water, Simon Cleary asks whether our urges to categorise and organise might be ‘unhelpful’

    Everything is Water by Simon Cleary review – one man’s pilgrimage along Brisbane River

    Navigating on foot, Cleary is guided by histories, traditional owners and some unexpected weather, resulting in a rich account of the natural world
  • Author Siang Lu for our culture department ahead of his new book Ghost Cities

    Ghost Cities by Siang Lu review – a funny, fascinating critique of modern China

    This novel is both biting satire and love story, unfolding in a surprising melange of wonder and intelligence
  • Cher Tan and book Peripathetic composite

    Peripathetic by Cher Tan review – essays on punk, work and the internet are incredibly good fun

    Tan’s fast-paced, acidic essays are guided by big ideas, drawing on her personal story to speak to the invisible, powerful forces that shape us all
  • Ceridwen Dovey and her book

    Only the Astronauts by Ceridwen Dovey review – playful and deeply moving close encounters

    Metal objects launched into space observe perplexing humanity in this wildly inventive novel from the author of Only the Animals
  • Safe Haven by Shankari Chandran

    Safe Haven by Shankari Chandran review – a damning indictment of Australia’s refugee policy

    The Miles Franklin winner has somehow created a novel that feels warm and generous even when provoking feelings of discomfort and shame
  • Excitable Boy cover and author Dominic Gordon

    Excitable Boy by Dominic Gordon review – punchy tales of masculinity, sex and violence

    These stylish autobiographical essays take the reader into backstreets rarely traversed in Australian literature – sex clubs, street fights and emergency rooms
  • Composite for The Pyramid of Needs by Ernest Price

    The Pyramid of Needs by Ernest Price review – a wickedly funny take on wellness

    This excellent debut novel follows a weary son who clashes over his gender transition with his elderly mother, a supplement devotee hellbent on becoming an influencer
  • Composite of Author Miranda Darling and her book Thunderhead

    Thunderhead by Miranda Darling review – pacy Sydney thriller hits a superficial note

    This tightly plotted story shows a woman on the brink, and doesn’t make much room for anything else
  • Author Bri Lee and the cover of her debut novel The Work

    The Work by Bri Lee review – satirical art world romp tries to tick too many boxes

    A novel that’s torn between two books – one is a half-hearted skewering of money and power, the other a modern romance
  • Composite image featuring Australian author Anna Jacobson alongside the cover for How to Knit a Human

    How to Knit a Human by Anna Jacobson review – a remarkable memoir of psychosis

    After undergoing electroconvulsive treatment, the author powerfully documents how art helped her recover her memory, autonomy and sense of self
  • Composite of Kate Mildenhall and her book, the Hummingbird Effect

    The Hummingbird Effect by Kate Mildenhall review – a genre-defying epic

    Spanning 1933 to 2181, this ambitious novel explores the future of humanity through the lives of a few women, zeroing in on capitalism, AI and violence
  • Composite of author Laura Elizabeth Woollett and her book, West Girls.

    West Girls by Laura Elizabeth Woollett review – sexism, schoolgirls and supermodels

    These cleverly interconnected stories explore the power and price of beauty, following an ethnically ambiguous girl who pretends to be part-Asian to become a model
  • Gretchen Shirm, author of The Crying Room

    The Crying Room by Gretchen Shirm review – a beautiful study of mothers and daughters

    Often unsettling and sensitive novel follows a thread of emotional repression through three generations of women
  • Composite featuring JM Coetzee and his new book

    The Pole and Other Stories by JM Coetzee review – if this is his final book, it is a great one

    The Nobel laureate’s new collection of stories is concerned with death, desire and old age, glinting with flashes of humour and grand, existential strangeness
  • Composite image featuring Australian author Zeynab Gamieldien alongside the cover for new book The Scope of Permissibility out via Ultimo Press

    The Scope of Permissibility by Zeynab Gamieldien review – a Muslim take on the Australian campus novel

    Gamieldien’s debut adds refreshing complexity to the familiar narratives of politics, power and taboo love, in a novel that occasionally fails to feel real
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