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Water For Elephants

Water For Elephants

Water For Elephantsby Sara Gruen, Allen & Unwin, $24.99.

Orphaned and broke, just as the Great Depression begins to bite, veterinary student Jacob Jankowski runs away to join the dirty glamour of a travelling circus.

There, among the weird and wonderful characters of the Benzini Bros’ Most Spectacular Show on Earth, Jacob finds two great loves: Marlena, the beautiful equestrienne, and Rosie, the clever but misunderstood Elephant.

Both are badly treated by cruel animal trainer August, and it seems powerless Jacob can do little to help.

Water for Elephantsis alternately narrated by young Jacob and old Jacob, now 90-something and institutionalised in a nursing home.

When the circus comes to town, old Jacob is desperate to visit, his body may be frail, but his memories are strong.

Will Marlena and Rosie survive August’s cruelty and escape with young Jacob? Will old Jacob get a final bittersweet glimpse into the world of the circus? The plot is as gripping as a big-tent high-wire act.

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The Paris Wife

The Paris Wife

The Paris Wife by Paula McLain, Virago, $29.99.

Until she was 28 years old, shy, sheltered Hadley Richardson lived an unremarkable life in suburban Missouri. But in 1920 she met a young aspiring writer, married and moved to a tiny flat in Paris.

Her husband was a big drinking man of big ambitions, and his name was Ernest Hemingway. What followed were glorious years of magnificent adventures, fly fishing in Italy, skiing trips, bullfighting festivals and glorious villas in the south of France.

But life in the jazz age fast lane wasn’t kind to the Hemingway marriage. The Paris Wife takes us from love in a Paris garret, to heartbreak in a Cap d’Antibes mansion, fictionalising the story of no-nonsense Hadley with a lively sympathy.

Paula McLain trawls literary Paris between the wars for great characters, with cameos by Gertrude Stein, Ezra Pound, and Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald, but even among this sparkling crowd, ordinary Hadley shines.

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The Saturday Big Tent Wedding Party

The Saturday Big Tent Wedding Party

The Saturday Big Tent Wedding Party by Alexander McCall Smith, Little, Brown, $34.99.

What a joy to catch up once again with our old fictional friend Precious Ramotswe, and the small mysteries and daily dramas of life in Botswana.

Readers familiar with the No.1 Ladies’ Detective Agency will be thrilled to spot this latest instalment, and settle in for a pleasurable escape to the company of a traditionally built lady with a brain for detection.

The countdown is on to Mma Makutsi’s wedding, but there are obstacles big and small to overcome.

Naughty apprentice Charlie may have gone too far with his adolescent shenanigans. Mma Ramotswe is on the hunt for a cattle killer, and for the ghost of her much loved little white van. And then there’s the drama of the costly but unreliable wedding shoes, much to Mma Makutsi’s distress.

The Saturday Big Tent Wedding Party is as comfortable, warm and quirky as a zebra print Snuggie: hibernate and enjoy.

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Damn You, Scarlett O’Hara

Damn You, Scarlett O'Hara

Damn You, Scarlett O’Hara by Darwin Porter and Roy Moseley, BloodMoon Productions, $39.95.

It’s a wonder Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh found time to become two of the greatest actors of the 20th century, it seems they were busier in the bedroom than on the stage or screen, and not necessarily with each other.

Olivier cut a swathe through the major figures of his time, seducing, among others, war poet Siegfried Sassoon, the Duke of Kent, comedian Danny Kaye, and most of his female co-stars. Leigh was even more prolific. But the burning love affair between these two talented and glamorous stars captivated the world.

Porter and Moseley make us feel as though we’re along for the turbulent ride: filming Gone With The Wind, arguing viciously on the way to the wedding, being targeted by Nazis for spying for Britain in World War II, and watching poor Vivien fight a brave but losing battle with mental illness.

Damn You, Scarlett O’Hara is as compelling, surprising, and exciting as these two legendary stars.

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Moonlight Mile

Moonlight Mile

Moonlight Mile by Dennis Lehane, Little, Brown, $32.99.

Eleven years ago, at the end of Lehane’s Gone, Baby, Gone, hard-bitten private investigators Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro faced a terrible moral dilemma: should they “rescue” missing four-year Amanda McCready if it means taking her away from loving and safe carers and returning her to the neglectful, abusive mother from whom she’s been helped — illegally — to escape.

They took her. Amanda is now 16 and she’s gone missing again. Not stolen this time, and clearly not wishing to be found — but her still-slatternly mother wants her back, and the law says she’s entitled.

The earlier decision has haunted all their lives, will Kenzie and Gennaro get it right this time? And will the various Russian mobsters, identity thieves and drug-taking drop-kicks who stand in their way even give them the chance?

Though a sequel, Lehane explains the back-story quickly enough to let the new novel stand alone, with a twisty plot and dialogue as sharp as a razor.

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The Butterfly Cabinet

The Butterfly Cabinet

The Butterfly Cabinet by Bernie McGill, Hachette, $29.99.

The first chapter sets up the classic elements of fiction. A fortress-like castle on an isolated Irish headland. A proud, wealthy family shattered by their young daughter’s death. An old retainer who finds the black-bound diary her Mistress wrote in prison and decides, finally, she must tell the truth about the girl’s tragic fate.

Yet The Butterfly Cabinet is inspired by real events that befell the aristocratic Montagu family in 1892 — events both terrible and inexplicable, when a strict but apparently devoted mother disciplined her three-year-old daughter by leaving her locked and tied in a tiny punishment room — from which she was taken three hours later, dead.

The shocked community sent the mother to gaol; she was also charged for cruelty to three of her other children. You can call her a monster, but Bernie McGill is aiming for something deeper with this novel, which explores not just the contradictory character of a stiff-necked woman, who tries yet can’t properly love her child — but the complex, high-risk business of motherhood itself. What it demands, and what happens to those who fall short.

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Caleb’s Crossing

Caleb's Crossing

Caleb’s Crossing by Geraldine Brooks, HarperCollins, $32.99.

Geraldine Brooks has a rare gift for unearthing small, overlooked historical facts which she then shapes and spins into great human stories.

She’s done it three times already (with Year of Wonders, March, and People of the Book) and excels with this, her fourth.

The nugget this time was discovering that Caleb, a chieftain’s son from the Wopanaak tribe of Martha’s Vineyard — where the Australian author now lives — was the first native American to graduate from Harvard. Not in the civil rights era, as one assumes, but in 1665.

This is Brooks’ imagining of the difficulty and scale of that journey. From a proud boy in furs, feathers and wampum… to a Latin-speaking scholar in black robe and ceremonial cap.

The story is told by the determined Bethia Mayfield, daughter of pioneers and Caleb’s secret friend since childhood, who has her own battles to fight on the education and equality front.

The stories mesh into a wonderful, bittersweet novel which made me laugh, think and cry for the cost of Caleb’s crossing.

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Before I Go To Sleep

Before I Go To Sleep

Before I Go To Sleep by S.J. Watson, Text Publishing, $32.95.

Every morning, Christine wakes in an unfamiliar bedroom next to a man she doesn’t recognise, with no idea how she got there. Alarmed, ashamed — she can see his wife’s clothes — she goes to the mirror and sees a woman 25 years older than herself staring back.

She starts to panic, then sees a photograph of herself with the stranger in the bed. “Your husband”, it says. But is he? She simply can’t remember.

This cracking debut novel takes the popular theme of memory loss and weaves it into a psychological thriller so tight and tense it’s almost impossible to put down.

You won’t thank me for telling too much of the plot, but essentially it involves a long-ago “accident” which causes the events and discoveries of each new day to be wiped from Christine’s memory during sleep — until she starts a journal, which bit by bit challenges everything she is being told. Better read it before the Ridley Scott film comes out later this year.

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Fran Drescher: My gay ex-husband is my best friend

Fran Drescher: My gay ex-husband is my best friend

The star of ’90s TV show The Nanny, Fran Drescher, will be imitating life in her new TV show Happily Divorced, which she has based on her own relationship with her gay ex-husband.

The 53-year-old’s new show, which premieres on June 15 in the US, is about a woman whose husband turns out to be gay, which is exactly what happened to Drescher, the actor told People magazine.

“He had already been living a gay life away from me after we divorced, and he said, ‘I don’t want you to be shocked. I’m dating men’,” she said.

Drescher’s husband Peter Marc Jacobson came out of the closet after the pair had been married 21 years, but his announcement didn’t exactly surprise her.

“During our marriage he had told me he might be bisexual, but he wanted to stay married,” she said.

“By the time he told me, I had survived uterine cancer. Nothing could shake me.” The pair have remained friends since divorcing in 1999 and Drescher has campaigned for gay rights in support of her ex-husband.

“It’s great that we had the ability and the wisdom to reinvent our relationship. All those years weren’t for nothing,” she said. “We’re very tight. We’re best friends.”

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Boost your mood with food

Five common foods that can improve your mood

You are what you eat. So if you’re finding yourself moody and tired, taking a look at your diet may help to explain a few things. Making a few tweaks to your diet can help to boost your mood. Here nutritionist and exercise physiologist Caitlin Reid reveals five foods that can help lift your spirits.

1. Salmon

A healthy, happy brain depends on omega-3 fats, which are found in oily fish such as salmon, tuna and mackerel. Omega-3 fats are a major component of brain cell membranes and are crucial for keeping brain signals moving smoothly. Research suggests that omega-3 fats may help reduce depressive symptoms. Be sure to add salmon or another oily fish to your weekly shopping list.

2. Pasta

As a low-GI carbohydrate, pasta helps to control blood sugar levels, maintaining energy levels and mood. Carbohydrates also influence serotonin levels in the body. Serotonin is a brain chemical that boosts mood and relaxes us. Enjoy pasta through your salad at lunch or as a tasty evening meal. Be sure to watch you’re portion sizes though, as too much can leave you feeling sluggish.

3. Low-fat milk

Packed with protein and low-GI carbohydrates, low-fat milk is bound to brighten your day. It’s rich in the amino acid tryptophan, which increases serotonin levels in the body. However, to achieve this, tryptophan must get into the brain and it requires insulin to do so. This is where the carbohydrates in milk become important — they increase insulin levels, which drives tryptophan into the brain so it can be used to make serotonin. Enjoy low-fat milk on your cereal each morning.

4. Eggs

Eggs contain many mood nutrients such as folate, vitamin B12, iron, protein, vitamin D and omega-3, which have been shown to have a positive effect on a person’s mood and help alleviate the signs of depression. In particular, low levels of the two B vitamins, folate and vitamin B12, have been found in people suffering from depression. These vitamins are thought to be used by the body to make seratonin. Eggs can be used to make a delicious frittata or quiche.

5. Bananas

This low-GI fruit is also a good source of tryptophan, vitamin B6 and potassium. Potassium is thought to relieve irritability, with mood swings seen in people with low potassium levels. Vitamin B6 is vital for the function of the nervous system and is necessary for the conversion of tryptophan to serotonin. Vitamin B6 deficiency is common in people suffering from depression. Bananas are a convenient, nutritious snack.

Your say: Have you noticed that some foods impact your emotions?

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