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  • av Ezekiel Kwaymullina
    180,-

    Written by a mother and son duo, this brightly illustrated picture book is a jubilant journey through a child's home country that celebrates the joys of nature and emphasizes forming a connection with place. In simple and lyrical prose, this narrative offers an indigenous Australian perspective of life as it connects traditional and contemporary experiences in ways that children can understand.

  • av Molly Schmidt
    320,-

    In the aftermath of their mother''s untimely death, the Tetley family must navigate life alone. As they grapple with grief and the challenges of moving forward, they are forced to confront the deeply entrenched racism of their community and its attitudes towards the Noongar custodians of the Great Southern. But amid the turmoil, the family finds hope in the power of relationships and the strength of their community. This is a poignant and powerful exploration of healing and resilience, a must-read for fans of literary fiction

  • av Helen Milroy
    266,-

    A long, long time ago, there was a time that was unpredictable and unique, a time when anything was possible. This was when Crow Baby was born, a child with the gift of two spirits: one crow, one human. Crow Baby lives across the two worlds, content within her crow clan and her human family. But, one day, a time of crisis arrives, and Crow Baby must make a choice in order to save them all. Is she crow or child? A powerfully illustrated new story of wonder from best-selling Indigenous creator Helen Milroy.

  • av Karen Herbert
    320,-

    Frances is struggling to come to terms with her colleague's disappearance and her brother's death. In the course of her work as a public servant, she uncovers a trail of corruption that leads to the highest levels of government and the names of those who do anything to keep their names hidden.

  • av Dave Warner
    320,-

    Get ready for a wild ride through the Summer of Love with Dave Warner's newest crime novel. Two Australian police officers travel to San Francisco and Los Angeles in the summer of 1967 in search of a missing young man, only to find themselves fully immersed in the world of music, free love, drugs and hippie counterculture. They soon realise this isn't just any ordinary missing person investigation. A big gig is the perfect place to get away with murder, and their search becomes a thrilling journey through the seamy side of the 1960s counterculture. This book is not to be missed for fans of gripping crime fiction and rock' n' roll.

  • av David Whish-Wilson
    320,-

    Trainee private investigator Lee Southern finds himself drawn into a web of danger and deceit as he investigates a series of bribery attempts targeting a wealthy entrepreneur. Under the expert tutelage of retiring PI Frank Swann, Lee uses all of his developing skills, instincts and cunning to get to the heart of a sordid mystery. As Lee delves deeper into the case and questions the intentions of those he's working for, he finds himself the target of increasingly ominous threats and several attempts on his life. David Whish-Wilson's I Am Already Dead is a gripping and high-paced noir novel. This will keep fans of True West on the edge of their seat.

  • av Emma Young
    320,-

    Every woman should have this book on their to-do list. Meet Celia Stone, the ultimate hyper-organised, journal-obsessed thirty-something with a life that is perfectly planned out and running like clockwork. From her promising writing career to her devoted partner and rigorous fitness routine, Celia has it all - and she's right on track with her early retirement plan. But when her husband suggests it's time to start a family, Celia begins to question whether a new addition might just throw off-course everything she's worked so hard to achieve. Follow Celia's diary entries on a year-long journey of self-discovery as she navigates the ups and downs of trying to have it all.

  • av Chenee Marrapodi
    176,-

    If I wanted the lead role, Valentina had to go. A contemporary Ballet Shoes set in an elite dance academy, this compelling coming-of-age novel is all about overcoming pressure, standing up for yourself and the joy of ballet! The perfect gift for all young dancers. Amelia is a ballerina on the rise - she's talented, dedicated and set to star in the lead role of the annual production. But when Valentina arrives from Italy and joins the ballet academy, the competition gets fierce. Can Amelia outshine Valentina and keep her place in the spotlight?

  • av Caitlin Maling
    296,-

  • av Helen Milroy
    200,-

    Little birds, big birds, all different kinds. How many bush birds can you find? From curious blue wrens to booming emus, and from feasting lorikeets to eagles soaring, Bush Birds by Helen Milroy is a fun and lively read with bold illustrations designed to celebrate the birds in our bush.

  • av Renae Hayward
    266,-

  • av Renee Pettitt-Schipp
    320,-

  • av Michael Thomas
    320,-

    Western Australia, 1909. William Watson's beloved father is set on an expedition to the north-west to map water sources in the Pilbara. Invited along, fifteen-year-old William embarks on the outback journey of a lifetime. At sea and on land, William will forge lasting friendships with his fellow travellers, and transform his relationship with his father as together they face the darkness in some men's hearts - including the cruel and vengeful Sergeant Jardine. This is a classic rite-of-passage novel that follows one young man on his journey of growth and self-discovery.

  • av Kate Larsen
    200,-

    Public. Open. Space. is a collection of poetry inspired by spaces, places and situations that are controlled and contested online and in real life. Looking at firewalls and feminism, activism and apathy, Public. Open. Space. explores freedom and suppresion, censorship and silencing, propaganda and protest, as well as the difference between being told ' no' and choosing to say it ourselves.

  • av Helen Milroy
    200,-

  • av Jayden Boundry
    266,-

  • av Georgia Tree
    296,-

    A daughter''s telling of her father''s tale of addiction, resurrection, dumb luck and love. Her whole life, Georgia''s father has told her she will be the one to write his story. Its a story in which living is just a game of chance: why did Grant Tree survive when others didn''t? Why did he find love and happiness, and a grown daughter to spill his story to so that she can record the whole beautiful, unlikely mess of it? Told in parallel to Grants story is the life of his friend and dealer Brian Geoffrey Chambers, known in the book as Charlie, who was ultimately executed in Malaysia for drug smuggling. Narrated in vivid, conversational detail as transcribed by Grants daughter from hours of recorded interviews and underlaid with research into life in Perth and the north-west from the 1930s to 1988, this memoir details the rites of passage of young manhood, ordinariness, dysfunction, and what is like to live on the edges of other more ordinary suburban working class Australians.

  • av Jock Serong
    320,-

    Jock Serong, Mark Smith and Neil A. White posed the question: what would happen if a group of Australia's finest storytellers were invited to let their minds go walking through the Paul Kelly songbook? Twenty-one writers responded with tales of forbidden love, with the ghosts that inhabit St Kilda and the ' special treatment' of the Noongar people; with the dumb things they did when they crossed the Nullarbor, and how a simple song could bind a father and daughter forever. Like Paul Kelly's songs, the stories in this anthology will take you anywhere, and everywhere, and they will keep coming back to you like a cork on the tide.

  • av Simone Lazaroo
    296,-

  • av Isobel Bevis
    266,-

  • av Katie Stewart
    266,-

  • av Dawn Mauldon
    340,-

  • av Chemutai Glasheen
    200,-

    This enticing collection of contemporary fiction is a celebration of our ubuntu: the invisible ties that bind us all together. From ancient forest guardians to modern cultural warriors, from grappling with age-old traditions to championing hair identity, these evocative stories explore the duality of Kenyan life and how to find a way between two cultures, both of which are yours. Chemutai Glasheens unforgettable characters are drawn from her early life in Africa with all its richness, diversity and complexity.

  • av Steve Hawke
    296,-

  • av Cheryl Kickett-Tucker
    266,-

  • av Peter Burke
    320,-

    In 1846, linguistics professor Fabrice Cleriquot is despatched from Lyon to the Swan River Colony, sent away with a box full of silkworms to stop him from bringing more disgrace upon the family. Accompanying him on board the Elizabeth are twenty-eight mismatched and misguided Catholic missionaries including Dom Salvado, who seeks to create a Spanish Benedictine monastery deep in the bush, and the Irish Sisters of Mercy, who are fleeing a dreadful famine. Given the job of distributing a huge donation from a wealthy benefactress, Fabrice bears witness to the folly of his travelling companions whose presumptuous attempts to rescue the colony and the original inhabitants from themselves, can only lead to tragedy.

  • av Brooke Dunnell
    320,-

    Julia Lambett heads across the country to her hometown where she's been given the job of moving her recalcitrant father out of his home and into care. But when Julia arrives at the 1970s suburban palace of her childhood, she finds her father has adopted a mysterious dog and refuses to leave. Frustrated and alone, when a childhood friend crosses her path, Julia turns to Davina for comfort and support. But quite soon Julia begins to doubt Davina's motivations. Why is Davina taking a determined interest in all the things that Julia hoped she had left behind? Soon Julia starts having troubling dreams, and with four decades of possessions to be managed and dispersed, she uncovers long-forgotten, deeply unsettling memories.

  • av Martin Ingle
    320,-

    Try Not to Think of a Pink Elephant is a collection of real-life stories about living with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. Contributors are Martin Ingle on OCD and sexual intimacy; Dani Leever on contamination-based OCD; Patrick Marlborough on living with OCD in NYC; Katharine Pollock on over-achievement and control of food and body; and Sienna Rose Scully on the untimely death of her mother, an event that actualised her most persistent OCD obsession. At times humorous, at times heartbreaking, this engaging anthology on mental health and invisible illnesses will keep you on the edge of your seat, compelling you to read on as five talented authors tell their stories about living with OCD.

  • av Bron Bateman
    336,-

  • av Nadia Rhook
    290,-

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