Posts Tagged ‘biography’

Father’s Day


Posted: 24 August 2010 at 6:39 pm

In the August issue of Bookseller+Publisher Andrea Hanke rounded up some of the picture books that might appeal to fathers of little ones this Father’s Day. Here are her picks:

My Aussie Dad (Yvonne Morrison, illus by Gus Gordon, Scholastic, August) celebrates Aussie fathers in all their guises; My Dad Thinks He’s Funny (Katrina Germein, illus by Tom Jellett, Black Dog Books) explores that sense of humour that’s unique to fathers; and Me and My Dad (Sally Morgan & Ezekiel Kwaymullina, illus by Matt Ottley, Little Hare) introduces a father who isn’t afraid of stinging jellyfish or hungry sharks, but cowers at the sight of a seagull.

Because You Are With Me (Kylie Dunstan, Hachette Children’s Books) is a thankyou to dads for their help and encouragement; Me and My Dad (Alison Ritche, illus by Alison Edgson, Koala Books) is a sweet story about a father and son bear; and there are kisses aplenty with Daddy Kiss (Margaret Allum & Jonathan Bentley, Little Hare) and from the ‘My Little Library’ series Kisses for Daddy (Fraces Watts & David Legge, Little Hare).

Grandfathers also have a choice of Adventures with Grandpa (Rosemary Mastnak, Hardie Grant Egmont) and Grandad and Billy (Julie Kingston, Lothian Children’s Books).

You can check out Andrea’s Father’s Day recommendations in the realms of fiction, biography, sport, military, food and wine and much more in the article from page 22 of the magazine, now online here.

Most mentioned books this week


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Posted: 19 July 2010 at 12:19 pm

Blanche d’Alpuget’s Hawke: The Prime Minister (MUP) sits at number one on the most mentioned chart this week. The release of this book coincides with the announcement of the federal election and the screening of the Hawke miniseries, all of which shouldn’t hurt sales. Other local titles in the chart included Roddy Parr (Peter Rose, Fourth Estate) and Gunshot Road (Adrian Hyland, Text). My Friend the Mercenary (James Brabazon, Text) and Inheritance (Nicholas Shakespeare, Harvill Secker) also received a number of mentions this week—Media Extra.

BOOK REVIEW: Manning Clark: A Life (Allen & Unwin)


Posted: 17 May 2010 at 11:18 am

Manning Clark: A Life by Brian Matthews (Allen & Unwin) was announced as the winner of this year’s $20,000 National Biography Award this morning. Author Brendan Gullifer reviewed the book for us back in the October 2008 issue of Bookseller+Publisher, giving it five stars. Here’s what he had to say at the time:

Ironic, playful, iconoclastic and provocative, historian Manning Clark left an indelible mark on this country, our thinking, how we view ourselves and our past. In this brilliant new biography, Brian Matthews follows up his award-winning work on Henry Lawson’s mother (Louisa) with an unflinching, detailed, poignant and beautifully written portrait of a brilliant mind wracked with uncertainty, sensitive to criticism, crippled by a lack of self esteem and haunted by his faith and alcoholism. In his early years as a young academic, Clark grappled with numerous literary false-starts and doubts. He was fuelled by an overwhelming desire to write coupled with a fear that he might have nothing to say. Ultimately, his six volumes of Australian history were, according to Matthews, ‘the most ambitious, visionary evocation of the annals of his country every attempted’. And, Matthews explains, the ‘fault finders were assiduous and mean’. Clark was a man alive, one of the great teachers of his time, unfettered by the academic cloisters within which he worked, writing history in a way that still inspires and manages to capture our great, sprawling and often contrary national story in prose that is elegant, at times baroque, and—like this biography—never dull.

Brendan Gullifer is a Melbourne writer, his first novel, Sold, was published by Sleepers Publishing in 2009. This review first appeared in the October 2008 issue of Bookseller+Publisher magazine. You can read the April 2010 issue of the magazine online here.

BOOK REVIEW: Breaking News: The Golden Age of Graham Perkin (Ben Hills, Scribe Publishing)


Posted: 4 May 2010 at 11:52 am

This engrossing biography, which unfolds against the backdrop of the history of the Age, journalism and media ownership, pays tribute to Graham Perkin, an extraordinarily talented man widely regarded as Australia’s greatest editor of the 20th century; a man whose life was tragically cut short at 45. For nine years, during one of Australia’s most significant periods of social and political change, Perkin—a pioneer, particularly in the area of investigative journalism—edited and transformed the Age, elevating it to one of the world’s top newspapers. It had come a long way from its Dickensian days of ‘hot metal’ technology, where green-bespectacled subs wielded great power and reporters had to pay for their own typewriters. Believing that a newspaper can effect social change, Perkin fearlessly set about exposing corruption and dodgy government activities. Wooed by media moguls, while unpopular with some politicians, he provided a lifelong inspiration to many people, including his biographer, veteran investigative journalist and author Ben Hills (Blue Murder), with whom he worked for six years. Other notable ‘Perkin’s people’ include Phillip Adams, Les Tanner and Michelle Grattan. This is a must-read for journos, journalism students and newspaper devotees, and a must-have for media studies/Australian history collections.

Paula Grunseit is a freelance journalist, editor and reviewer. This review first appeared in the May/June 2010 issue of Bookseller+Publisher magazine. You can read the April issue of the magazine online here.