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The Golden Prince

The Golden Prince

The Golden Prince by Rebecca Dean, HarperCollins, $32.99

Buttercup blond, blue-eyed 16-year-old Edward VIII – heir to the British throne and love-thwarted subject of novel, The Golden Prince – bears an uncanny physical resemblance to another young prince and heir to the British throne, about to wed in London this Easter. But this is where the similarity ends. Edward, of course, went on to marry a divorcee and abdicate for love.

But Rebecca Dean’s gentle, slightly far-fetched part-fact part-fiction tale precedes that, recounting a royal love affair which could have changed the course of history. The lonely teen naval cadet, eldest of four brothers, son of disciplinarian King George V and distant Queen Mary, falls in love with a commoner and for this prince there’s no happy ending. A country road collision brings “David” – as the Prince is known at Dartmouth naval college – face to face with Rose Houghton, the eldest of four sisters who reside at Snowberry, a gentrified, yet blue blood-less family seat. David is bewitched with the “spiffing family life” and especially with youngest sister, loveable Lily.

Dean deftly weaves social and political detail into her historical fantasy – Rose’s suffragette leanings, Marigold’s flirtation with an emerging Hollywood – as well as commentary on the stifling royal rulebook. Perfect to wile away the hours while waiting for Wills and Kate to appear on Buck House balcony, for their post-wedding kiss.

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Separate Beds

Separate Beds

Separate Beds by Elizabeth Buchan, Penguin UK, $24.95

British author Elizabeth Buchan writes chick-lit for the middle-aged woman which may sound a little grumpy-old-womanish but is actually surprisingly thought-provoking and hugely enjoyable.

Separate Beds centres on Annie Nicholson, a 49-year-old health service manager, who hasn’t slept in the same bed as her media exec hubby Tom for five years. Added to this the couple appears to have been abandoned by their eldest daughter, their son is facing the loss of his furniture business, wife and child and their younger daughter is living in the attic trying to be a novelist. So when Tom loses his high-powered job, the new stress threatens to push this family further apart.

What sets Buchan apart in this crowded genre is her perceptive and intelligent observations, smart plotting and likeable characterisation.

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The Leopard

The Leopard

The Leopard by Jo Nesbo, Harvill Secker, $32.95

Since Swedish author Stieg Larsson and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo smashed the bestseller lists, a new literary sub-genre has developed – “Scandicrime” – with a buzz all of its own. Scandicrime is noir-ish, slightly subversive packed with antiheroes and set in the frozen snow-deadened landscapes of Scandinavia. There literally seems to be something in the water – well the snow – that seems perfectly suited to confronting, dark, emotional thrillers but the similarities between the works ends there and standing head and shoulders above the Scandi stereotypes is Norwegian writer Jo Nesbo.

The Leopard is Nesbo’s sixth Harry Hole novel published in English (his eighth over all) and at 611 pages, it may seem quite an undertaking. But fear not, you won’t be putting this down! Nesbo’s special skill is in his storytelling – even more impressive when you consider this is in translation.

The gentle drip drip of nuggets of information, and superb twists and turns, keep you guessing always a few steps behind the wily protagonist – brooding detective Harry Hole, who at the beginning of the story is holed up in Hong Kong, trying to erase the memory of his last painful case and the loss of his wife and son with a mix of compulsive gambling and opium.

The beautiful Kaja is sent over to lure Harry back to Oslo to work on the case of a burgeoning serial killer whose form of murder involves a uniquely gruesome torture instrument called Leopold’s apple which chokes its victims and then shoots deadly spikes into them at the pull of a chain. Harry only agrees to come because officer Kaja tells him his father is gravely ill.

Once back in Oslo, Harry finds himself at the centre of a police turf-war and forced to work undercover with only a couple of officers to help him (including Kaja) which of course suits his unconventional ways perfectly. As the bodies mount up, it becomes evident that the only connection between the victims is that they all spent a night together in an isolated mountain hut along a ski route and the killer is picking off the guests one by one. How many will die before Harry works it out?

The action switches deftly between Hong Kong, Norway and Africa and the constantly swirling plot is laced with a fevered romance, a subplot as Harry tries to help his dying father and lashings of dark emotion. This is slick, sophisticated thriller telling at its peak.

About the Author

Jo Nesbo was born in Oslo, Norway in 1960, his father a bus company managing director and his mother a librarian. He describes his childhood as “a painful delight” and decided to be a writer when he was 14 “songwriting for my friends who all played in bands”.

He worked as a freelance journalist and even a strockbroker before writing his first Harry Hole novel at 36, an instant hit winning the Glass Key Award for best Nordic crime novel. He also continued writing songs and is the lead singer and songwriter in Norwegian rock band Di Derre.

His inspiration for Harry Hole was “the police officer in the village where my grandmother lived. She would tell us kids that if we weren’t home by eight, Hole would come get us!” and he says he derived the ideas for the crimes in The Leopard from “my own fears and nightmares.”

Jo has a daughter Selma, 11, and is currently working on his ninth Harry Hole novel.

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Please ensure you leave an email address you can be contacted on in order to be eligible for the prize.

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Should Australia allow same-sex marriages?

Should Australia allow same-sex marriages?

Thinkstock

This weekend’s Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras parade will have a political message, rallying against the federal law that prohibits same-sex marriages.

With gay marriage high on the national agenda, Mardi Gras isn’t missing the chance to tap into the debate, featuring an estimated 15 floats dedicated to the issue.

“We are planning something huge and spectacular that will send a loud and clear message to the world about how strongly our community feels about this issue,” Parade producer Vicktor Petroff said.

While the positions of both major parties are that marriage should be between a man and a woman, some politicians are responding to the community’s campaign, signalling a willingness to change their position.

Liberal frontbencher Malcolm Turnbull has privately polled his electorate finding 68 per cent in favour of same-sex marriage, acknowledging community views were changing despite the firm stance he earlier took against same-sex marriage.

Deputy Liberal leader Julie Bishop has said she is willing to listen to the views of her electorate when considering her vote, and Labour powerbroker Mark Arbib has come out in favour of same-sex unions.

Your say: Do you think the government allow same-sex unions to be legalised? Would you support gay marriage in your state? openline@bauermd

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Angela Carter’s Book of Wayward Girls & Wicked Women

Angela Carter's Book of Wayward Girls & Wicked Women

Angela Carter’s Book of Wayward Girls & Wicked Women edited by Angela Carter, Virago, $35

A revolutionary and pioneering collection of short stories about mad and bad women, written by women writers, including Angela Carter, this anthology was first published in 1986, just six years before Carter’s premature death at 51. In the preface she noted that: “Most of the girls who inhabit these stories, would seem much worse if men had invented them… predatory, drunken hags… promiscuous heartbreakers. On the whole women writers are kind to women.”

With a debut tale, The Last Crop by the late Elizabeth Jolley, the British-born Australian writer, who only won acclaim as a writer in her fifties, an ex-con mother and apartment block cleaner, welcomes the poor neighbourhood to make use of the washing machine in the penthouse, canoodle in the comfort of the plush bedroom, while the out of town residents are away. She is depicted by Jolley, as Carter suggests, to have extenuating circumstances for her “crimes”.

Through the eyes of a woman, her acts are more ingenious and generous, than low down and devious. Carter’s own contribution, The Loves of Lady Purple, manipulates marionette virtuoso the Asiatic Professor, as he twists and turns murderous, necrophiliac prostitute puppet Lady Purple to a life imitating art (or is it the other way around?) finale. As deliciously and dangerously disruptive today, as it was when published 24 years ago.

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Frank: The Making of a Legend

Frank: The Making of a Legend

Frank: The Making of a Legend by James Kaplan, Sphere, $35

James Kaplan’s 700-page biography of the first 39-years-old of Frank “The Voice” Sinatra (1915 until 1954), packs a colourful, sometimes crude and blue, but entertaining punch, littered with fascinating and dogged detail.

Dubbed “scarface” by fellow New Jersey street kids because of facial disfigurements from a brutal forceps birth, the only child was both spoiled and neglected by his ambitious mum, midwife and sometime abortionist “Hatpin Dolly”.

At a time when immigrant families huddled in one room, Sinatra listened to crooners like Bing Crosby on his radio alone in his bedroom. Dolly plied the skinny, acne-plagued boy with wheels and threads – a convertible Chrysler and a charge account at a department store – and later a sound system which amped up a then thin voice. Vocal coach Australian John Quinlan, a tenor with the Metropolitan Opera, stopped Sinatra sounding like a stevedore and he was soon spinning his own way to the top.

First wife Nancy’s father bemoaned his lack of a day job, but the night his son-in-law sang Smoke Gets in Your Eyes, capella, to the cream of New York society was the night Frank Sinatra “happened”.

Hollywood star Ava Gardner, his second wife, possessed him. “Francis” as she called him fell fast and their screaming squabbles and intoxicated infidelities were lived out publicly. An obsessive hand-washer, who Kaplan speculates attempted suicide on several occasions, hard drinker and pill popper Sinatra was nearly eclipsed by new crooners Frankie Laine and Johnnie Ray, but Fifties recordings of I’ve Got The World on a String and A Foggy Day magnified his new maturity and rhythmic ease, and a 1954 Oscar for From Here to Eternity had them standing in the aisles again. Captivating!

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Ask Me About Mary Kay

Ask Me About Mary Kay

Ask Me About Mary Kay by Jackie Brown, Strategic Book Group, $19.95

Jackie Brown rose through the ranks of Mary Kay Cosmetics as no-one else did and she became the role model for new recruits. In this pacey autobiography she takes us behind the scenes at the cosmetics house revealing the highs and more importantly the lows.

Pink epitomised femininity to 29-year-old Dallas legal secretary Jackie Brown in 1963, and so the plush lavender-decorated home of cosmetics guru Mary Kay would finally seduce her into giving up her job to become a full time beauty consultant, holding parties and bewitching recruits to flog facial masques, false eyelashes and wigs.

An astonishingly natural seller, Brown’s sales skills won her a crystal lazy susan dish for rapid success within her first few months, but the pressure to compete at all costs constantly clashed with God-fearing Brown’s desire to be a good mom and wife. And as the stakes got higher a ruthless rivalry developed between Brown and Kay. Eye liners at dawn!

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Insurrection

Insurrection

Insurrection by Robyn Young, Hodder & Stoughton, $32.99

Set during the period of the Wars of Scottish Independence, this historical fiction leads you in swiftly and doesn’t let you go. It starts in 1286 with the death of Alexander, King of Scotland, who is murdered by one of his own men as he rides home to his new wife on a dangerously stormy night. He leaves no heirs and the fight for the throne ensues.

Blood is quickly shed as the powerful ruling families of Scotland, rife with resentments and questionable allegiances, hunger for ultimate power. Unbeknownst to them, Edward, King of England, wants to claim Scotland for himself. It is Robert the Bruce, also a claimant to the Scottish throne, who unites the Scots through purpose and pride, and leads the insurrection against Edward.

Although there’s a lot of history to digest this enjoyable page-turner is written with a light touch. Be warned, the female characters in this novel don’t rate highly but the detail of the men’s business – descriptions of battles, marches, strategy meetings – definitely do.

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Henri Matisse Rooms with A View

Henri Matisse Rooms with A View

Henri Matisse Rooms with A View by Shirley Neilsen Blum, Thames & Hudson, $90

The window was integral to the paintings of French 20th century artist Henri Matisse offering a unique framing for many of his works and for the first time this stunning book analyses its role.

Art Historian Shirley Neilsen Blum looks at more than 50 paintings with a fresh eye showing not only how Matisse used light and colour but also offering our own window on the life of this extraordinarily talented painter. The paintings including are also reproduced in all their glory.

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The Incredible Journey

The Incredible Journey

The Incredible Journey by Sheila Burnford, Random House US, $12.95

I think I saw the film first, a brilliant film, and didn’t read the book until 15 years ago when I fell totally in love with it. It was first published in 1960 and is the most beautiful story about animals – a Labrador, a bull terrier and a Siamese cat – and the awful things that happen to them as they travel 300 miles across the rugged terrain of Canada.

I love animals of course, but it’s the brilliant characterisation and descriptions that are so exceptional. She really is a ravishing writer. It’s all about camaraderie; a love story really and the ending is so very touching it’s impossible not to read the last couple of pages without bursting into tears.

Jump! by Jilly Cooper, Random House, $32.95 is out now

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