Thursday, April 30, 2015

MOTHER'S DAY SUGGESTIONS




Here are some suggestions for Mother's Day.......... a book is a wonderful present, it's what I always want as a gift (or at least a voucher so I can choose my own!). A wonderful gift would be this special edition of Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird.


 Lone Star by Paullina Simons
Through the Wall by Anna Bligh
The Bird's Child by Sandra Leigh Price
The Girl Who Couldn't Read by John Harding
The Winter People by Jennifer McMahon
A Place Called Winter by Patrick Gale

BOOK REVIEWS



There are two more reviews on our website, another one from Mary Ellis and one more from Chris Pritchard.  Take a look and see what you think.

http://www.fosterslittlebookshop.com.au/index.php?page=book_reviews 

Monday, April 20, 2015

FAIRFIELD BOOKSHOP - A SENSE OF HUMOUR

This little funny is from Fairfield Bookshop (the one that had a car run into it's window back in March, so you might guess they have a sense of humour? )



"You just never what you will be asked next. A lady was just in asking if we had any books about camels. Further questioning, whether it was for a child etc, revealed that she wanted to teach the two camels she has at home better manners!! Surprisingly, we didn't have anything that quite fitted the bill."

And it's true............... 

BOOK SUGGESTIONS FOR A BOOK CLUB

I found this interesting website that suggests "32 perfect books to kick off your book club", or if you think your choices are now getting predictable.  Take a look here

What would be your four favourites?

                                                       

BELLE GIBSON - THE WHOLE PANTRY



It was reported by the Australian Booksellers Association in their e-newsletter last week that Australian retailers including Dymocks, Collins Booksellers and Booktopia say on their websites that Ms Gibson's book is no longer available. Bookworld, a division of Penguin Australia, has removed the book from its website.

Publishing house Penguin last month stopped supplying the cookbook after Ms Gibson failed to explain discrepancies about her health claims and fundraising activities detailed in the book's 3000-word preface.  (And yet this book still appears on the publishers website.)

Like another larger bookstore (Readings) we don’t believe in banning books, particularly as the publisher is not recalling stock. So, if you’re interested in some interesting recipes, you’ll find the last copy of this book still on our shelves.

What are your thoughts on banning books?



AUSTRALIAN BOOK INDUSTRY AWARDS SHORTLIST

There are some great names and titles in this year's shortlist for the industry awards.  You can see the full list here. And here are a couple of my favourites.

Golden Boys by Sonya Hartnett, The Bush by Don Watson and Plenty More by Yotam Ottolenghi.



 

The winners will be announced on May 21.


I'd like to know what book you thought should be included in the list for 2015........

BOOK REVIEW - THE PAUSE BY JOHN LARKIN

One moment. One pause. One whole new life. Declan seems to have it all: a family that loves him, friends he's known for years, a beautiful girlfriend he would go to the ends of the earth for. But there's something in Declan's past that just won't go away, that pokes and scratches at his thoughts when he's at his most vulnerable. Declan feels as if nothing will take away that pain that he has buried deep inside for so long. So he makes the only decision he thinks he has left: the decision to end it all. Or does he? As the train approaches and Declan teeters at the edge of the platform, two versions of his life are revealed. In one, Declan watches as his body is destroyed and the lives of those who loved him unravel. In the other, Declan pauses before he jumps. And this makes all the difference.

This is a young adult novel by the author of The Shadow Girl, winner of the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards 2012 Prize for Writing for Young Adults.  In this story John Larkin has put his finger on the pulse of those vulnerable teens who are unsure of their way in this 21st Century.  The feedback from one young reader was......."I enjoyed the complexities in the story and if I had a friend who I knew was depressed I would give them this book to read".

High praise indeed for this author.......




Friday, April 10, 2015

PROM COAST SEACHANGE FESTIVAL - DOUBLE TAKE

We are very pleased to be taking part in the Seachange Festival window art Double Take and we will be collaborating with Kim McDonald for a stunning installation.  This is the story of our collaboration.


BOOKS AND ART 
NATURAL FRIENDS


The message from our window installation is that art and books are natural companions, they both tell stories.

This art defines the space with a story that is based on memories of the past; the image will mean different things to each viewer as a reflection of their own experiences.  Those experiences will range from past to present and encompass old memories and new memories.

These books too tell a story; when you open a book you travel the path the author has chosen; the stories may link to memories for the reader, conjuring up experiences from the past.  The stories may also take the reader into places they have never been and so create memories from anothers experiences.



BOOK REVIEW - GOLDEN BOYS BY SONYA HARTNETT





Mary Ellis has provided us with another review, take a look here.


TERRY PRATCHETT - FINAL BOOK

Terry Pratchett's last book is being published by the newly combined Penguin Random House in late September.  The title The Shepherd's Crown is the final in his popular fictional realm of Discworld.  Terry published 70 novels from 1971 and 40 of them were set in Discworld, he sold 85 million books worldwide and they were translated into 37 languages.  

His friend and collaborator Neil Gaiman said: “Here’s somebody who’s fought to be taken seriously and to make people realise that you can write a serious novel, set in a fantasy context, on a flat world on the back of elephants on the back of a giant turtle floating through space and it can still be a real novel. And he’s got there.”  

He certainly did 'get there'...............

Terry Pratchett 

Saturday, April 4, 2015

HAPPY EASTER.........



A little bit of trivia.
The average 80gram hot cross bun contains 1,070 kilojoules.  When you add one teaspoon of margarine (135kJ) and two teaspoons of jam (160 kilojoules), this takes it up to about 1,365 kilojoules.  To walk off the kilojoules in that tasty bun you will need to take about 8,200 steps.

So much easier to just sit down with a good book.


BETTY CHURCHER ART HISTORIAN AND AUTHOR


Betty Churcher, who died earlier this week at 84, was an educator. For all of her life she taught art - first at secondary schools, and then at art schools, and then she taught the people of Australia - and she saw no higher calling than that.

As the first and so far only woman director of the National Galley of Australia, Churcher unapologetically regarded the marquee-title exhibitions that earned her the part derisive, part affectionate moniker "Betty Blockbuster" as mass classes in art education. Growing up in Brisbane in the 30s and 40s, she once told me, there was "just nothing", and in the excitement of the large-scale exhibition that came to town with all the thrill of the circus she saw an opportunity to provide for the public a portal into another world that was denied her as a young woman.

The fact that these blockbusters earned money was a bonus; that they have became an adopted feature on the calendar of every art institution around the country - and remain so - only shows her enduring fearlessness as an administrator. (Virginia Trioli).

Her two main publications Notebooks published in 2011 and Australian Notebooks published in 2014, were a major source of information to art loving Australians.  In these books she shared her love of art and her incredible knowledge, she also had a talent that was showcased in the explanative drawings she did in these to books to show how an artist had achieved certain aspects of their painting.

We’ve lost another one………Vale Betty Churcher.