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Category Archives: Classic Literature
Better Reading Top 100 Books as voted by YOU!
Aside
Better Reading’s Top 100 is the first wide-ranging book survey voted for by Australians
Are we really a sports-loving nation obsessed by footy and the outdoors? Well, our Top 100 list reveals that we’re also a nation of avid readers.
Around 5000 people responded to Better Reading’s survey on their favourite books, the first survey of its kind. Is your favourtite among them? Continue reading
Our Shelf
June was the perfect month for grabbing a hot drink and curling up with a good book. So that’s what a few of us did last month and these are the books we enjoyed.
Jody
I finished one book this month, Little Women by Louisa May Alcott and have nearly finished Daughters of the Storm by Kim Wilkins.
Little Women – Louisa May Alcott
I could not put Little Women down. I started off listening to the audio book which was so soothing and enjoyable. But because I couldn’t listen to it all the time I decided I had to read it as well. Needless to say Little Women was all I thought about for two weeks. I savoured every moment I spent reading and listening. The language and story are beautiful. I read it when I was young but I know I never enjoyed it as much as I have this time. I am spoilt now and want my next book to consume me as much as Little Women did.
A classic beautiful, beautiful, book that I will definitely be reading again and again. If you haven’t read it, treat yourself to a great read. Sit back relax and enjoy the language, story and loveable characters.
5/5 stars.
Amanda
Stay With Me – Maureen McCarthy
I have read and loved Maureen McCarthy’s books since I was a teenager and this one was no different. The main character Tess is running from a violent partner and Maureen’s writing really draws you in so you feel as though you are taking that journey right beside her. I only wish the ending hadn’t wrapped up quite so quickly, it felt like it was all over before you had a chance to take a breath!
4/5 stars
The Bellwether Revivals – Benjamin Wood
This book has been compared to Donna Tartt’s The Secret History and Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisted and I’d say that’s a fair comparison. Oscar is a quiet, bookish character who is drawn into a group of wealthy, privileged students from King’s College when he falls in love with Iris, a medical student. Iris’s brother, Eden, is a charismatic musical prodigy who believes that music, and his music in particular, has the power to heal. The book really captures you from the first moment and it is gently suspenseful right to the end. Benjamin Wood’s writing is quite beautiful, descriptive without being overbearing. He makes you question the relationship between genius and madness and whether they always go hand in hand. I have had this one on my to-read pile for so long, and I’m so glad I picked it up this time!
5/5 stars
Jenny
I just finished reading two books, both of which could probably be called romance novels, not the usual sort of book I would read, so I was surprised to find that I really enjoyed them both.
The country practice by Meredith Appleyard
Recommended to me by a friend who lives in rural South Australia. This is the first book published by this Australian author. An enjoyable read, set in rural South Australia, tells the story of Meghan, who returns to Australia from London after breaking up with her fiance. She takes up a job as a locum doctor in Magpie Creek and grows to love this little town and it’s community. Wonderful depiction of life in rural Australia. Great setting and likeable characters. I would recommend it to any rural romance readers.
3/5 stars
I picked up Lovesong by Alex Miller from our book sale table after remembering a recommendation from a reader at our Constitution Hill Branch. Her enthusiasm for the book encouraged me to give it a go. What an enthralling read. On a rainy summer afternoon in Paris, John an Australian takes shelter in the cafe run by Houria and her niece Sabiha, and so begins the story of John and the exotic and mysterious Sabiha. The story is told by a writer who regularly meets up with John and becomes this friend later in his life. I really loved this book, great characters, great story, great settling and quiet moving. Highly recommended.
5/5 stars
If you would like to reserve your copy of our picks for June, click on the images below.
Hopefully July will be an even better month for reading some great books.
Jody
“Read outside your comfort zone” Challenge
Are you looking for something different to do over the Summer? Do you want to expand your reading horizons and challenge yourself? Why not take part in our Adult Reading Challenge starting Monday 1 December! Continue reading
Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Colombian author and winner of the Nobel Prize for his great novel ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’ has died at the age of 87.
‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’, is considered one of the 20th Century’s great novels, acclaimed throughout the world.
Celebrate Gabriel’s life by reading one of his wonderful books.
One Hundred Years of Solitude
The novel tells the story of the rise and fall of the mythical town of Macondo through the history of the family. It is a rich and brilliant chronicle of life and death, and the tragicomedy of humankind. In the noble, ridiculous, beautiful, and tawdry story of the family, one sees all of humanity, just as in the history, myths, growth, and decay of Macondo, one sees all of Latin America. Continue reading






