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Harbour

Harbour

Harbour by John Ajvide Lindqvist, Text Publishing, $32.95

A remote Swedish island. A six-year old girl who disappears without a trace. A broken father, who returns to mourn the tragedy two years on – and discovers hers is not the first disappearance from the blighted island of Domaro.

It is not just the islanders, nursing a dark secret, but the sea itself which seems a malevolent force … Presenting, to disturb your sleep, the core ingredients of this latest Scandinavian chiller-thriller from the man who re-tooled the vampire genre with Let The Right One In.

He is, as one critic put it, “a dangerously imaginative man”. It does run away with him at the end but it’s an exciting trip as the girl’s father, Anders, regains his soul through the search to re-connect with his lost child. Who became “horrible”, as did all those who’d disappeared before. Yet his unfaltering love and dangerous search for the truth of what happened to her are the making of him as a father and a man.

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Half a Life

Half a Life

Half a Life by Darin Strauss, Hamish Hamilton, $26.95

“Half my life ago, I killed a girl.” She was just 16. Darin Strauss, the author of this memoir and also an acclaimed novelist, was 18 and soberly driving his father’s Oldsmobile when a freak accident – a girl, a bike, an inexplicable collision – changed everything.

This short book is about a young man who does the unthinkable – then spends the next half of his life thinking about it deeply and agonisingly. “Living for two people”, as the dead girl’s parents say he must though, they swear, they don’t blame him. And later sue him for millions of dollars. Though really, Strauss inflicts the worst punishment on himself.

The quality of the writing and ruthless examination of his own motives and conduct save it from being morbid; it is more the story of what could happen to anyone. Only in his late 30s does he manage to turn a crippling tragedy into a hard fact he can live with, and how he achieves this is quietly uplifting.

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A Food Lover’s Pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela

A Food Lover's Pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela

A Food Lover’s Pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela by Dee Nolan, Lantern, $100

This book is so beautiful it makes me squeak. That grass-green jacket – the colour, I’m told, of the hills on which you walk during stages of the grand six-week (though many do less) pilgrimage of St James, which ends at the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in western Spain.

My suggestion for savouring this book is you turn to pages 10-11 (just after the dazzling photographs of European verdancy by Earl Carter) and study the map of feeder routers to the cathedral – a dendritic fan through the most beautiful countryside of France, narrowed to two for the final push through Spain.

Your choice is between the busy, landmarked French route (Camino Frances) or the Camino del Norte along the wild green coast, la costa verde, where the rain never ceases and the sun is a stranger.

But this is a food lover’s pilgrimage and so a veneration of the farmers and growers discovered along the way, who follow the traditional practices and proudly show you their fat pigs, their woolly sheep, their full fruit baskets. Not self-conscious environmentalists but those who savour taste and value their bounty.

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The Lake Of Dreams

The Lake Of Dreams

The Lake Of Dreams by Kim Edwards, Viking, $29.95

Kim Edwards’ debut novel The Memory Keeper’s Daughter became a runaway bestseller when it was released in 2006 — and was published in 38 countries, selling millions of copies around the world.

Four years later her much anticipated second novel has a lot to live up to and while it may lack the heightened drama of the first work, a study of the redemptive power of love, The Lake of Dreams quivers – sometimes literally – with a quiet intensity which is most compelling when developing the strained relationships between the characters.

The novel is set largely in the atmospheric Finger Lakes region of upstate New York, an area Kim knows intimately and her descriptions of this beautiful part of the country give the work an almost filmic authenticity, the action swathed in the mists of the lakes. Indeed, you can almost feel the clear fresh bone-tingling water that protagonist Lucy so regularly plunges into.

The Lake Of Dreams opens with an earthquake in Japan where Lucy Jarrett, our confused heroine is living with her boyfriend Yoshi. The quake upsets Lucy and this sense of shaky foundations echoes throughout the novel as Lucy returns to her childhood home on the premise of a mercy mission to help her mother, but really to face the questions surrounding her father’s life and death a decade before. Back in the bosom of her family, Lucy still seems lost and a reconnection with her ex-boyfriend, a very charismatic glass blower and single dad, only confuses her further.

Add to this a new mystery surrounding the discovery of some papers and pieces of tapestry in a secret compartment in a window seat in her family home which reveal secrets about her great-grandfather’s suffragette sister and an illegitimate child, and you have a tale filled with hidden intrigue.

But it is the gentle, beautifully drawn characterisation, rather than the at times predictable plot, that draws you in to The Lake Of Dreams and keeps you reading to the end.

About the Author

Former teacher Kim Edwards, 52, was born in Texas, but at two months old, her parents moved the family back to the Finger Lakes region of upstate New York, her inspiration for The Lake Of Dreams.

“I grew up in a beautiful place, full of lakes and rolling hills, and spent my childhood swimming all summer, picking apples and berries in the fall and spring, and wading through snow drifts in the winters,” says Kim, who always wanted to be a writer “even before I could read”.

Nevertheless she found it “very hard” to get published – “being a writer takes a great deal of persistence, especially in the early years” she recalls.

Having worked in Asia, Kim currently lives in Kentucky with her husband and children where she is hatching an idea for a third novel but hasn’t yet started writing.

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The best critique will be printed in the May issue of The Weekly and the writer will win The AWW Cooking School cookbook, valued at $74.95.

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Never Let Me Go

Never Let Me Go

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro, Allen & Unwin, $22.99

Kathy, Ruth and Tommy were pupils at Hailsham – an idyllic establishment situated deep in the English countryside. The children there were tenderly sheltered from the outside world, brought up to believe they were special, and that their personal welfare was crucial. But for what reason were they really there? It is only years later that Kathy, now aged 31, finally allows herself to yield to the pull of memory.

What unfolds is the haunting story of how Kathy, Ruth and Tommy, slowly come face the truth about their seemingly happy childhoods – and about their futures. Never Let Me Go is a uniquely moving novel, charged throughout with a sense of the fragility of our lives.

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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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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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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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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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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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