New books to hit the spot


TOUCHDOWN is a weekly selection of outstanding new titles: books either anticipated or surprising, just out of the carton! Follow the links for more information, to purchase these books or to have them put aside for you.

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3 October 2015


http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/963503-IslandHome-9781926428741
Island Home by Tim Winton         $45.00
A breathtakingly beautifully written meditation on the effect of place upon people; a memoir of how growing up in a particular place and landscape shaped him as a writer and a person. Conjuring the immediate particulars of the piece of Australia of which he is a part, even an extension, Winton makes some deep (and wide (and urgent)) observations about the relationship between humans and nature.
>> In The New Zealand Herald.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956886?barcode=9780571323760&title=GriefistheThingwithFeathers
Grief is the Thing with Feathers by Max Porter           $27.99
Two young boys face the unbearable sadness of their mother's sudden death. Their father, a Ted Hughes scholar and scruffy romantic, imagines a future of well-meaning visitors and emptiness. In this moment of despair they are visited by Crow - antagonist, trickster, healer, babysitter. Short-listed for the 2015 Goldsmiths Prize.
"This deeply moving book about death and its grief-stricken consolations – love and art – appears to be no more than a scattering of text, dialogue and poetry that lifts and settles on the page, the frailest sort of thing. Yet as we read on, we become aware that the way it has been put together is robust indeed. The book is much more than the sum of its parts. Porter’s story is a profound meditation on the difficulty of writing about love and loss. This book that looks and reads like a collection of poetry is very much a novel; a complex poetic grouping of ideas and images that is as easy to read as a children’s story. Grief is the Thing with Feathers shows us another way of thinking about the novel and its capabilities, taking us through a dark and emotionally fraught subject, one airy page after another, as though transported by wings." - Kirsty Gunn, Guardian
>> BTW: Porter was Eleanor Catton's editor for The Luminaries.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956882-TheDiversClothesLieEmpty-9781782397700
The Diver's Clothes Lie Empty by Vendela Vida          $32.99
When a woman visits Morocco and has her backpack and passport stolen, the police 'return' her another bag and passport, and so begins a tale of slipping identities and strange possibilities. What is the secret in her past that makes her so willing to be someone else?
"This had me thinking, laughing out loud and completely enthralled for days. If you like the writing of Jennifer Egan, Rachel Kushner and Shelia Heti you will want to read this." - Stella
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/974284?barcode=9780908321490&title=TheDreamingLand%3A2015
The Dreaming Land by Martin Edmond        $49.99
"So here I am walking again an old path made new by the very fact that I am upon it once more, accompanied by familiar hordes: the fecund majority of the dead, the myriad of the living in all of their many forms, defunct, mutant, revenant or otherwise, traversing memory's infinite field." In the evocative, profoundly resonant prose that makes him one of our most distinctive writers, Martin Edmond recalls his experiences of growing up in rural New Zealand in the 1950s and 60s.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/920804?barcode=9781781254912&title=AHandReachedDowntoGuideMe
A Hand Reached Down to Guide Me by David Gates       $33.00
"Reading David Gates is far from an uncomplicated experience; his writing is dark, bitter, hilarious, truthful and complex, full of emotional turmoil and damaged characters, deeply flawed people doing pretty unspeakable things to themselves and others, and yet the self-aware flickers of humour, the knowing nods to the frailty of human existence, make him utterly compulsive." - Independent
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956796-TheHollowoftheHand-9781408865736
The Hollow of the Hand by P.J. Harvey and Seamus Murphy         $39.99
Between 2011 and 2014, P.J. Harvey and Seamus Murphy set out on a series of journeys together to Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Washington DC. Harvey collected words and Murphy collected pictures, and the conversation between poetry and image make this beautifully produced book (Harvey's first poetry collection) a unique portrait of the prickly edges of our times.
>> Oh, and she sings.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/959075-TheMarvels-9780545448680
The Marvels by Brian Selznick          $35.00
Another breathtakingly wonderful dual-narrative story told in text and pictures, from the author who brought us The Invention of Hugo Cabret and Wonderstruck. The journey begins on a ship at sea in 1766, with a boy named Billy Marvel. After surviving a shipwreck, he finds work in a London theatre. There, his family flourishes for generations as brilliant actors until 1900, when young Leontes Marvel is banished from the stage. Nearly a century later, Joseph Jervis runs away from school and seeks refuge with an uncle in London. Albert Nightingale's strange, beautiful house, with its mysterious portraits and ghostly presences, captivates Joseph and leads him on a search for clues about the house, his family, and the past.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/885022-WhiletheGodsWereSleeping-9781782270799
While the Gods Were Sleeping by Erwin Mortier         $23.00
"'It sounds dreadful,' I said to him one day. 'But actually the war is the best thing that ever happened to me.'" Helena's mother always said she was a born poetess. It was not a compliment. Now an old woman, Helena looks back on her life and tries to capture the past, filling notebook after notebook with memories of her respectable, rigid upbringing, her unyielding mother, her loyal father, her golden-haired brother. She remembers how, at their uncle's country house in the summer of 1914, their stately bourgeois life of good manners, white linen and afternoon tea collapsed into ruins. And how, with war, came a kind of liberation amidst the mud and rubble - and the appearance of a young English photographer who transformed her existence.
"Beautifully unorthodox." - Independent 
"Almost too beautiful a writer. The footprint of Proust is visible on every page." - Financial Times
"Mortier is sensitive to every nuance, both of circumstance and language. To read his work is to be immersed in immediate experience - the immediate experience of another." - Thomas
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/961963-Nein-AManifesto-9781925240382
Nein. A manifesto. by Eric Jarosinski            $26.00
A very sharp and amusing 'compendium of utopian negation' by an endearingly nihilistic philosopher who rose to prominence in the Twittersphere.
"I hate Twitter. I think it should be prohibited - but Jarosinki's Nein is the only exception, the only reason that justifies it!"- Slavoj Zizek
>> "Hate yourself like nobody’s looking. They’re not.”
>> The Twitterfeed.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/961058-RecipesforLoveandMurderATannieMariaMystery-9781925240092
Recipes for Love and Murder by Sally Andrew           $37.00
Tannie Maria used to write a recipe column for the Klein Karoo Gazette. Then Head Office decided they wanted an advice column instead, so now she gives advice - in the form of recipes (because, as she says, she may not know much about love, but food - that's her life). Everything goes well until she receives a letter from Martine, whose husband beats her, and Tannie Maria feels a pang of recognition and dread. This may be a problem that cooking can't solve...
"If you want a vivid, amusing and immensely enjoyable read about detection (and cooking) in an intriguing part of southern Africa, then this is the book for you. A triumph." - Alexander McCall Smith
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/968108-WomeninDarkTimes-9781408845165
Women in Dark Times by Jacqueline Rose                $23.00
“I want to affect people like a clap of thunder, to inflame their minds not by speechifying but with the breadth of my vision, the strength of my conviction, and the power of my expression,” said Rosa Luxemburg, quoted by Jacqueline Rose in this book, which examines the response of various women to the iniquities of modern life. Inspiring, incisive and a blueprint of a new template for feminism.
"A surfeit of elegance and intelligence." - Ali Smith
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/862730-KarateChopMinnaNeedsRehearsalSpace-9781782271192
Karate Chop / Minna Need Rehearsal Space by Dorthe Nors         $25.00
Ordinary lives take unexpected turns: a son's love for his father is tested when he suddenly discovers its fragility; a woman in an abusive relationship seeks to better understand the choices she has made; a man with dreams of self-improvement is haunted by deceit; and a daughter watches on silently as her mother's search for meaning ends in madness.
"'Beautiful, faceted, haunting stories. Dorthe Nors is fantastic." - Junot Diaz 
"Unsettling and poetic. Some pieces, like one about a four-pound tomato, are oddly beautiful; othersare brilliantly disturbing." - New York Times  
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/957128-MyFamilyTableSimpleWholefoodRecipesfromPetiteKitchen-9781743365656
My Family Table: Simple wholefood recipes from Petite Kitchen by Eleanor Ozich               $45.00
The author of My Petite Kitchen confesses to being hopelessly in love with every aspect of food: where it comes from, how it's grown, its health benefits and how to make it taste amazing.
>> The blog! 
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/882859-FireColourOne-9780007512362
Fire Colour One by Jenny Valentine        $17.99
Iris's father, Ernest, is at the end of his life and she hasn't even met him. Her best friend, Thurston, is somewhere on the other side of the world. Everything she thought she knew is up in flames. Now her mother has declared war and means to get her hands on Ernest's priceless art collection. But Ernest has other ideas. There are things he wants Iris to know after he's gone. And the truth has more than one way of coming to light.
Winner of the Guardian Prize for young adult fiction.
"The best book I have read this year." - Bob Docherty
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/887330?barcode=9781781688595&title=ManTiger%3AANovel
Man Tiger by Eka Kurniawan          $38.00
Another book from rising Indonesian luminary Eka Kurniawan (have you read Beauty is a Wound yet?). Set in an unnamed town near the Indian Ocean, this book tells of two interlinked and tormented families, and of Margio, an ordinary half-city, half-rural youngster who also happens to be half-man, half-supernatural female white tiger (in many parts of Indonesia, magical tigers protect good villages and families).
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/884142-TheUprightThinkersTheHumanJourneyfromLivinginTreestoUnderstandingtheCosmos-9780141980997
The Upright Thinkers: The human journey from living in trees to understanding the cosmos by Leonard Mlodinow          $48.00
The questions 'Why?' and 'How?' have got us a long way.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/911955-InsideTheBlackHorse-9780473315153
Inside the Black Horse by Ray Berard         $29.99
A fast-moving thriller, a story of fate, and unlikely love story for our time. Pio Morgan is waiting outside a pub on a cold winter night. There is a debt he must pay and no options left. What he does next drags a group of strangers into a web of confusion that over the course of a few days changes all their lives. The young Maori widow just trying to raise her children, the corporate executive hiding his mistake, the gang of criminals that will do what ever it takes to recover what they've lost - and the outsider sent to town to try and figure out who did what. Time is running out for all of them as events take an increasingly dark turn...
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/969190?barcode=9781780748153&title=ManV.Nature
Man v. Nature by Diane Cook           $25.00
A set of stories examining the unsettling boundary between the wild and the civilised.
"Sharply written and imaginative. Cook is an accomplished writer with a darkly comic touch. As with the short fiction of Stephen King and Miranda July, many of the bizarre tales in Man V. Nature would make for excellent viewing. Brilliant, with echoes of Margaret Atwood." - Irish Times
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/981470?barcode=9780473314637&title=TriumphontheWesternFront%3ADiaryofaDespatchRiderwiththeANZACs1915-1919
Triumph on the Western Front: Diary of a despatch rider with the ANZACs, 1915-1919 by Oswald Harcourt Davis        $46.00
Davis was attached to the ANZACs and given a Triumph motorcycle to carry pigeons and vital messages to the front line at a time when communications were limited and risky. A fascinating, fresh account.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/954533?barcode=9781869408374&title=TheManyDeathsofMaryDobie%3AMurder%2CPoliticsandRevengeinNineteenth-CenturyNewZealand
The Many Deaths of Mary Dobie: Murder, politics and revenge in nineteenth-century New Zealand by David Hastings        $39.99
'Dreadful murder at Opunake', said the Taranaki Herald, 'Shocking outrage', cried the Evening Post in Wellington when they learned in November 1880 that a young woman called Mary Dobie had been found lying under a flax bush near Opunake on the Taranaki coast with her throat cut so deeply her head was almost severed. It is a murder story, starting as a whodunit then becomes a whydunit. It takes the reader on a journey across the landscape of social and political tensions in the couple of years leading up to the invasion of Parihaka in 1881: Pakeha feared it was an act of political terrorism, Maori thought it would be the cue for the state to use force against them. Was it rape or robbery? Was the killer Maori or Pakeha?
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956817?barcode=9781851685868&title=Iraq%3AAHistory
Iraq: A history by John Robertson          $37.00
"This vivid and fast-paced book is an enjoyable introduction for the general reader, from the beginnings of human civilization to the recent wholesale destruction of Iraq's archaeological heritage. Robertson's focus on pre-modern Iraq effortlessly blends political and military history with the history of ideas, and flows seamlessly into the present era and the terrible predicament in which the cradle of civilization now finds itself." - Publishers Weekly
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/958114-SilenceisGoldfish-9781510100435
Silence is Goldfish by Annabel Pitcher $24.99
"My name is Tess Turner - at least, that's what I've always been told. I have a voice but it isn't mine. It used to say things so I'd fit in, to please my parents, to please my teachers. It used to tell the universe I was something I wasn't. It lied. It never occurred to me that everyone else was lying too. But the words that really hurt weren't the lies: it was six hundred and seventeen words of truth that turned my world upside down. Words scare me, the lies and the truth, so I decided to stop using them. I am Pluto. Silent. Inaccessible. Billions of miles away from everything I thought I knew. "
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/921640-Vogue-TheJewellery-9781840916577
Vogue: The jewellery by Carol Woolton        $180.00
From couture to costume jewellery, the pieces featured on the pages of British Vogue for almost a century have encapsulated the fashion zeitgeist of each new age for which they were created. A superb archive.
>> We also have The Gown.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/811858-VeniceCultRecipes-9781743363096
Venice Cult Recipes by Laura Zavan      $59.99
Black cuttlefish risotto, grilled squid, fancy antipasti, delicious Venetian sweets and ice creams - here are 100 recipes that conjure up the real Venice. There are recipes for fish, chicken, antipasti, ravioli, gnocchi, risotto, soups, snacks, polenta and desserts. There are also recipes for Venetian drinks, including the internationally renowned bellini, the perfect blend of white peach juice with sparkling prosecco, synonymous with the sparkling city.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/962053?barcode=9780571321537&title=HouseofWindows
House of Windows by Alexia Casale        $16.00
Nick hates it when people call him a genius. Sure, he's going to Cambridge University aged 15, but he says that's just because he works hard. And, secretly, he only works hard to get some kind of attention from his workaholic father. Not that his strategy is working.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/885506-MildredstheVegetarianCookbook-9781845339982
Mildreds: The cookbook           $49.99
An accessible and versatile cookbook from the iconic Soho vegetarian restaurant.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/957195?barcode=9781472150622&title=KatherineCarlyle
Katherine Carlyle by Rupert Thomson       $33.00
In the late 80s, Katherine Carlyle is created using IVF. Stored as a frozen embryo for eight years, she is then implanted in her mother and given life. By the age of nineteen Katherine has lost her mother to cancer, and feels her father to be an increasingly distant figure. Instead of going to college, she decides to disappear, telling no one where she has gone. What begins as an attempt to punish her father for his absence gradually becomes a testing-ground of his love for her, a coming-to-terms with the death of her mother, and finally the mise-en-scene for a courageous leap from false empowerment to true empowerment.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956885-TheBookofMemory-9780571249626
The Book of Memory by Petina Gappah         $33.00
"The story you have asked me to tell begins not with the ignominious ugliness of Lloyd's death but on a long-ago day in April when the sun seared my blistered face and I was nine years old and my father and mother sold me to a strange man. I say my father and my mother, but really it was just my mother." Memory, the narrator of The Book of Memory, is an albino woman languishing in Chikurubi Maximum Security Prison in Harare, Zimbabwe, where she has been convicted of murder. As part of her appeal her lawyer insists that she write down what happened as she remembers it. The death penalty is a mandatory sentence for murder, and Memory is, both literally and metaphorically, writing for her life.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/867247-ExperimentalPhotography-AHandbookofTechniques-9780500544372
Experimental Photography: A handbook of techniques by Marco Antonini        $49.99
Breaks down into a step-by-step format the experimental techniques that photographers use to subvert or expand conventional camera technology.

9781460750988
After Alice by Gregory Macguire          $34.99
When Alice toppled down the rabbit-hole 150 years ago, she found a Wonderland as rife with inconsistent rules and abrasive egos as the world she left behind. But what of that world? How did 1860s Oxford react to Alice's disappearance? Can she be brought back to life? What happens when her best friend Ada goes down the rabbit hole after her? Macguire's novel delves into underworlds, undergrounds, underpinnings and understandings old and new...
"A brilliant and nicely off-kilter reading of the children’s classic, retrofitted for grown-ups—and a lot of fun." - Kirkus Reviews
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/957273?barcode=9780571326884&title=Everyman
Everyman adapted by Carol Ann Duffy      $28.00
The medieval miracle play adapted by Duffy. Then, as now, only death can give us perspective on life.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956808?barcode=9781408850145&title=Cyberphobia%3AIdentity%2CTrust%2CSecurityandtheInternet
Cyberphobia: Identity, trust, security and the internet by Edward Lucas        $33.00
Crossing the road, we look both ways. Riding a bicycle at night, we use lights. So why is our attitude towards online security so relaxed?
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/958067-NowheresChildTheInspiringStoryofHowOneWomanSurvivedHitlersBreedingCampsandFoundanIrishHome-9781473609471
Nowhere's Child: How one woman survived Hitler's breeding camps and found an Irish home by Kari Rosvall         $39.99
When she was sixty-four, the author learned she was a Lebensborn child: part of Hitler's 'Spring of Life' programme, which encouraged Nazi soldiers to have children with Scandinavian women in order to create an Aryan race.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/919600-StandingMyGroundAVoiceforNatureConservation-9781927322048
Standing My Ground: A voice for nature conservation by Alan Mark           $45.00
 From his call in the 1960s for the establishment of tussock-grassland reserves in the South Island high country to his involvement in the 2011-13 campaign to save the Denniston Plateau from mining, Mark has been a passionate and effective advocate for the preservation of areas of ecological importance. In this book he describes the challenges and achievements, the frustrations and successes that have made up his remarkable life, now in its ninth decade.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956905-MoreLettersofNote-CorrespondenceDeservingofaWiderAudienceVolume2-9781782114543
More Letters of Note: Correspondence deserving of a wider audience edited by Shaun Usher         $69.99
Discover Richard Burton's farewell note to Elizabeth Taylor, Helen Keller's letter to The New York Symphony Orchestra about 'hearing' their concert through her fingers, the final missives from a doomed Japan Airlines flight in 1985, David Bowie's response to his first piece of fan mail from America and even Albus Dumbledore writing to a reader applying for the position of Defence Against the Dark Arts Professor at Hogwarts. Including letters from: Jane Austen, Richard Burton, Helen Keller, Alan Turing, Albus Dumbledore, Eleanor Roosevelt, Henry James, Sylvia Plath, John Lennon, Gerald Durrell, Janis Joplin, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Janis Joplin, Hunter S. Thompson, C. G. Jung, Katherine Mansfield, Marge Simpson, David Bowie, Dorothy Parker, Buckminster Fuller, Beatrix Potter, Che Guevara, Evelyn Waugh, Charlotte Bronte and many more.

http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/954610-ImaginaryFred-9780008126148
Imaginary Fred by Eoin Colfer and Oliver Jeffers        $29.99
Sometimes, with a little electricity, or luck, or even magic, an imaginary friend might appear when you need one. An imaginary friend like Fred... Fred floated like a feather in the wind until a lonely little boy wished for him and found a friendship like no other.

http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/959738-Tacopedia-TheTacoEncyclopedia-9780714870472
Tacopedia by Deborah Holtz          $45.00
More than everything you ever wanted to know about tacos! Explore one of Mexico's most popular culinary traditions through 100 recipes accompanied by interviews, street and food photography, illustrations, graphics, and maps that bring the full story behind each taco to life.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/826199-LatinforBirdwatchers-9781760110642
Latin for Birdwatchers by Roger J. Lederer and Carol Burr         $39.99
Forget trying to learn the language of birds, a smattering of Latin will give you insight into your feathered friends' habits, ancestry and lore. Beautifully illustrated.

http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/957138?barcode=9780711237001&title=TheFineArtofFashionIllustration-400YearsofBeauty
The Fine Art of Fashion Illustration by Julian Robinson     $79.99
From the Renaissance to Art Deco.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/973012-TrustNoOne-9781927262641
Trust No One by Paul Cleave          $35.00
In this psychological thriller by the Edgar-nominated author of Joe Victim, a famous crime writer struggles to differentiate between his own reality and the frightening plot lines he’s created for the page.Jerry Grey is known to most of the world by his crime writing pseudonym, Henry Cutter—a name that has been keeping readers at the edge of their seats for more than a decade. Recently diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s at the age of forty-nine, Jerry’s crime writing days are coming to an end. His twelve books tell stories of brutal murders committed by bad men, of a world out of balance, of victims finding the darkest forms of justice. As his dementia begins to break down the wall between his life and the lives of the characters he has created, Jerry confesses his worst secret: The stories are real.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/957135-PretendYoureinaWar-TheWhoandtheSixties-9781781315231
Pretend You're at War: The Who and the Sixties by Mark Blake       $25.00
Pete Townshend was once asked how he prepared himself for The Who's violent live performances. His answer? 'Pretend you're in a war.' For a band as prone to furious infighting as it was notorious for acts of 'auto-destructive art' this could have served as a motto.
"A definitive tome for both Who fans and newcomers alike." - Q Magazine
>> Is this war?
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/980678?barcode=9781927213674&title=NelsonPineTheStory
Nelson Pine: The story         $39.99
Nelson Pine Industries was established in 1984, as a manufacturing facility to add value to the Nelson region’s renewable resource of Pinus radiata plantation forests. Production of Medium Density Fibreboard (MDF) started in 1986, with a second line commissioned in 1991. The third line, commissioned in 1997, made Nelson Pine Industries one of the largest single site producers of Medium Density Fibreboard in the world.




25 September 2015


http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/878819?barcode=9781408867785&title=HeartGoesLast
The Heart Goes Last by Margaret Atwood     $36.99
Stan and Charmaine are a married couple trying to stay afloat in the midst of economic and social collapse. Living in their car, surviving on tips from Charmaine's job at a dive bar, they're increasingly vulnerable to roving gangs, and in a rather desperate state. So when they see an advertisement for the Positron Project in the town of Consilience - a 'social experiment' offering stable jobs and a home of their own - they sign up immediately. All they have to do in return for this suburban paradise is give up their freedom every second month, swapping their home for a prison cell. At first, all is well. But slowly, unknown to the other, Stan and Charmaine develop a passionate obsession with their counterparts, the couple that occupy their home when they are in prison.
Margaret Atwood writes novels that consistently strike at the heart of, by extrapolating from, problems of contemporary life without ever ceasing to be integral fictions in their own right.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/919626?barcode=9781472151391&title=BarbarianDays
Barbarian Days: A surfing life by William Finnegan             $33.00
How do you yield to something more powerful than yourself and remain upright? Finnegan's enjoyable book not only brings initiates you into a deep experience of surfing but also shows how the surfer's art is a microcosm for a wider life sensitively and intentionally lived.
"There are too many breathtaking, original things in Barbarian Days to do more than mention here - observations about surfing that have simply never been made before, or certainly never so well." - New York Times
"I'd press this book upon on a nonsurfer, in part because nothing I've read so accurately describes the feeling of being stoked or the despair of being held under. But also because while it is a book about a writer's life and, even more generally, a quester's life, more carefully observed and precisely rendered than any I've read in a long time." - Los Angeles Times
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/963388?barcode=9781877480461&title=JamesHectorExplorerScientistLeader
 James Hector: Explorer, scientist, leader by Simon Nathan      $45.00
 James Hector was the dominant personality in the small nineteenth-century scientific community in New Zealand. As the first scientist employed by the government, he was the founder of the Geological Survey (now GNS Science), Colonial Museum (now Te Papa), New Zealand Institute (now Royal Society of New Zealand) and the Colonial Botanic Garden (now Wellington Botanic Garden), as well as being a trusted government advisor. Whenever a tricky technical problem arose, the first question was often, ‘What does Dr Hector think?’ 
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/958755?barcode=9780701187712&title=WhiteRoad-APilgrimageofSorts
The White Road: A pilgrimage of sorts by Edmund de Waal         $39.99
A potter who has been working with porcelain for more than forty years, de Waal, author of the wonderful The Hare With the Amber Eyes, describes how he set out on five journeys to places where porcelain was dreamed about, refined, collected and coveted-and that would help him understand the clay's mysterious allure. From his studio in London, he starts by travelling to three "white hills" - sites in China, Germany and England that are key to porcelain's creation. But his search eventually takes him around the globe and reveals more than a history of cups and figurines; rather, he is forced to confront some of the darkest moments of twentieth-century history. Part memoir, part history, part detective story, The White Road chronicles a global obsession with alchemy, art, wealth, craft, and purity.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/958777?barcode=9781775535768&title=FromtheCuttingRoomofBarneyKettle
 From the Cutting Room of Barney Kettle by Kate De Goldi         $29.99
Barney Kettle knew he would be a very famous film director one day, he just didn't know when that day would arrive. He was already an actual director but so far only his schoolmates and the residents of the High Street had viewed them. Global fame was a little way off. It would come, though. Barney was certain about that. So begins the manuscript written from the hospital bed of an unnamed man. He has written it over many months as he recovers from serious injuries sustained in a city-wide catastrophe. He has written so he can remember the street where he lived, home to a cavalcade of interesting people, singular shops, and curious stories.He has written so he can remember the summer before he was injured, the last days of a vanished world. Above all, he has written so he can remember the inimitable Barney Kettle, filmmaker, part-time dictator, questing brain, theatrical friend; a boy who loved to invent stories but found a real one under his nose; a boy who explored his neighbourhood with camera in hand and stumbled on a mystery that changed everything.
James Hector: Explorer, scientist, leader by Simon Nathan      $45.00
Small House Living: Inspiring New Zealand Houses under 90m2 by Catherine Foster     $49.99
Family homes, baches and apartments demonstrating ingenious ways to reduce space and cut costs within a design-enriched environment.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956831?barcode=9781760111038&title=SingingBones-InspiredbyGrimms%27FairyTales
The Singing Bones by Shaun Tan           $39.99
You have to see this! (Warning: you will want it.) Shaun Tan has moved into the third dimension and has created wonderful sculptures inspired by fairy tales from Grimm.


http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/954534?barcode=9781869408305&title=OutcastsoftheGods%3F%3ATheStruggleOverSlaveryinMaoriNewZealand
Outcasts of the Gods? The struggle over slavery in Maori New Zealand by Hazel Petrie          $45.00
Was Maori slavery like the experience of Africans in the Americas? Were British missionaries or colonial administrators responsible for ending the practice? What was the nature of freedom and unfreedom in Maori society and how did that intersect with British colonists and the anti-slavery movement? This book is the first history of Maori war captives. Drawing on Maori oral sources as well the records of colonists, Petrie analyses freedom and unfreedom in traditional Maori society; the role of economics and mana in shaping captivity; and how the arrival of colonists, trade and war transformed Maori society and the place of captives.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/877386?barcode=9781781253410&title=AdventuresinHumanBeing
Adventures in Human Being by Gavin Francis         $37.00
"If the body is a foreign country, then to practise medicine is to explore new territory". Francis takes us on a very personable and informative guided tour of our own body, from cranium to metatarsus and gives us fresh understanding of our physical selves.
"Wonderful, subtle, unpretentious." - John Berger
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/921072?barcode=9780714869629&title=Jutaku-JapaneseHouses
Jutaku: Japanese houses by Naomi Pollock          $35.00
A wonderful survey of the latest, quirkiest, neatest, smallest and most innovative Japanese domestic architecture.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/957590?barcode=9781927213483&title=NewZealand%27sWorkingDogs
New Zealand's Working Dogs by Andrew Fladeboe        $39.99
First-rate portraits and stories of dogs in all walks of work, from rounding up sheep to sniffing for drugs at our borders. Very nicely done.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/962399?barcode=9781927213520&title=Brewed%3AAGuidetotheCraftBeerofNewZealand
 Brewed: A guide to the craft beer of New Zealand by Jules van Cruysen           $39.99
Bringing together brewing traditions from all over the world and combining these with Kiwi ingredients, ingenuity and creativity, New Zealand has a beer culture unlike any other.
>> Jules van Cruysen will be talking over the froth and giving away a glass of a special Yeastie Boys' I AM beer with the first 20 copies: Monday, 28 September: 5pm, Free House (Collingwood Street).
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/957589?barcode=9781927213544&title=IntheBush%28PB%29
In the Bush: Explore and discover New Zealand's native forests by Ned Barraud and Gillian Candler        $19.99  
The fourth in the wonderful 'Explore and Discover' series, introducing children to the wildlife that surrounds them.
>> Also in hardcover: $29.99.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/920766?barcode=9781925240375&title=SomethingforthePain%3AAMemoiroftheTurf
Something for the Pain: A memoir of the turf by Gerald Murnane        $37.00
"I never met anyone whose interest in racing matched my own. Both on and off the course, so to speak, I've enjoyed the company of many a racing acquaintance. I've read books, or parts of books, by persons who might have come close to being true racing friends of mine if ever we had met. For most of my long life, however, my enjoyment of racing has been a solitary thing: something I could never wholly explain to anyone else." Murnane's typically precise and unusual account of his lifelong obsession with horse racing gives unparalleled insight into the workings of his precise and unusual mind. "Murnane writes the best sentences in English of any living writer of fiction and I am awarding him the Nobel Prize for Literature. Read my reviews of some of his novels here." - Thomas
>> 8 questions.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/948786?barcode=9781847806482&title=CityAtlas%3ADiscoverthePersonalityoftheWorld%27sBest-LovedCitiesinThisIllustratedBookofMaps
City Atlas: Travel the world with 30 city maps by Martin Haake       $39.99
Take a tour of Toronto, look around Lisbon or hot-foot it to Helsinki with this global adventure in a book! 30 cities from around the world are brought to life with illustrations by Martin Haake, which show key landmarks, famous people, buildings and cultural icons. A search-and-find game on every page helps young readers to explore the cities and spot the details that makes each place unique.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/884495?barcode=9781921503740&title=MichaelParekowhai-thePromisedLand
The Promised Land by Michael Parekowhai          $45.00
Parekowhai's unique practice is characterised by a refined aesthetic and an engagement with the creation and role of culture in the contemporary world. Primarily sculptural, his works often play with scale and space, using humour to comment on the intersections between national narratives, colonial histories and popular culture. Parekowhai is known for bringing together an array of references, sometimes in a single object, with in-jokes and snippets of personal biography sitting side-by-side with art historical playfulness and big-picture cultural critique.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/961103?barcode=9781863957663&title=RegionsofThick-RibbedIceShortBlack4
Regions of Thick-Ribbed Ice by Helen Garner     $11.99
"They say that tourist ships to Antarctica, even more than ordinary human conveyances, are loaded down with aching hearts. Deceived wives and widowers, men who've never been loved and don't know why, Russian crew forced to leave their children behind for years at a time. And then there are the married couples: how calm the old ones, how eager the new! - but isn't a couple the greatest mystery of all?"
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/958763?barcode=9781775538073&title=ForTheLoveofaPlace
 For the Love of a Place: The stories and cuisine of Otahuna by Hall Cannon and Miles Refo         $79.99
Otahuna was built by Sir Heaton Rhodes in 1895 as a wedding present for his wife, using New Zealand timbers. A private park was developed, with rare plant varieties and formal landscaping, as well as kitchen gardens and fields of daffodils. In 2006, Hall Cannon and Miles Refo bought Otahuna and set about breathing new life into it. After an extensive refurbishment, they opened it as a private luxury lodge, bringing a spirit of hospitality and bonhomie back to one of the country's grandest country houses - and its garden. Recipes  by Simon Farrell-Green.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956877?barcode=9781760111236&title=NaturalWayofThings
The Natural Way of Things by Charlotte Wood        $32.99
Two women awaken from a drugged sleep to find themselves imprisoned in a broken-down property in the middle of a desert. Strangers to each other, they have no idea where they are or how they came to be there with eight other girls, forced to wear strange uniforms, their heads shaved, guarded by two inept yet vicious armed jailers and a 'nurse'. A starkly imaginative exploration of contemporary misogyny and corporate control, Wood's novel has been compared with William Golding's Lord of the Flies and Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale (neither of which she had read).
"A brave, brilliant book. I would defy anyone to read it and not come out a changed person." - Malcolm Knox
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/962010?barcode=9780702253775&title=GhostRiver
Ghost River by Tony Birch         $37.00
The river is a place of history and secrets. For Ren and Sonny, two unlikely friends, it's a place of freedom and adventure. For a group of storytelling vagrants, it's a refuge. And for the isolated daughter of a cult reverend, it's an escape. Each time they visit, another secret slips into its ancient waters. But change and trouble are coming - to the river and to the lives of those who love it. Who will have the courage to fight and survive and what will be the cost?
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/958742?barcode=9781781090305&title=TheGapofTime
The Gap of Time by Jeanette Winterson           $34.00
A boy and a girl are falling in love but there's a lot they don't know about who they are and where they come from. Winterson retells and remakes Shakespeare's A Winter's Tale and sets it in modern New Bohemia - all done with her usual considerable elan. The exercise shows how Shakespearean mechanisms continue to underlie our social interactions (and, indeed, our antisocial misinteractions).
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/865782-LateHarvest-9783777423500
Late Harvest by JoAnne Northrup et al           $65.00
This book simultaneously confirms, through historically significant wildlife paintings, and subverts, through contemporary art and photography, viewers' preconceptions of the place of animals in culture. The juxtaposition of contemporary taxidermy with iconic paintings is particularly resonant. Includes work by Richard Ansdell, David Brooks, George Browne, Berlinde De Bruyckere, Petah Coyne, Raymond Ching, Kate Clark, Wim Delvoye, Mark Dion, Elmgreen & Dragset, Carle e Fernandez, Richard Friese, Francois Furet, Nicholas Galanin, George Bouverie Goddard, Damien Hirst, William Hollywood, Idiots (Afke Golsteijn and Floris Bakker), Alfred Kowalski, Robert Kuhn , Wilhelm Kuhnert, Bruno Liljefors, Polly Morgan, John Newsom, Tim Noble and Sue Webster, Walter Robinson, George Rotig, Carl Rungius, Yinka Shonibare MBE, David Shrigley, Snaebjornsdottir/Wilson, Amy Stein, Archibald Thorburn, Mary Tsiongas, Joseph Wolf, Brigitte Zieger, and Andrew Zuckerman.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/957162?barcode=9781472151186&title=Spinster-MakingaLifeofOnesOwn
 Spinster: Making a life of one's own by Kate Bolick        $32.99
"What's surprising about Spinster is how, in its charmingly digressive style, the book sets forth a clear vision not just for single women, but for all women: to disregard the reigning views of how women should live, to know their own hearts and to carve out a little space for their dreams, preferably a space with 11-foot ceilings." - New York Times
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/958783?barcode=9780552573146&title=TheHollowBoy%28Lockwood%26Co%233%29
The Hollow Boy ('Lockwood & Co.' #3) by Jonathan Stroud        $19.99
Lockwood & Co. might be the smallest (some might say shambollic) Psychic Detection Agency in London. But its three agents - Lucy, Lockwood and George - are exceptional Talents. And they get results. When an outbreak of ghostly phenomena grows to terrifying levels in Chelsea, Scotland Yard is left baffled. Even more baffling is that Lockwood & Co appear to have been excluded from the huge team of Agents investigating the Chelsea Outbreak. Surely this is the perfect chance for them to show once and for all that they're actually the best in town? Well, that's if they can put aside their personal differences for long enough to march into action with their rapiers, salt and iron... If you've been chilled, warmed and intrigued by The Screaming Staircase and The Whispering Skull, you will, like us, be fighting over who gets to read this first in your family. If you haven't read the first two yet, you are very lucky indeed - great reading pleasure awaits!
"Stroud is a genius." - Rick Riordan
" The old cliché, 'I couldn't put it down', totally resonated for me. I was too terrified to put it down!" - Jan (of The Screaming Staircase)
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/958762?barcode=9781775537885&title=WildRoads
 Wild Roads: A New Zealand journey by Bruce Ansley         $49.99
New Zealand's most dangerous, infamous, remote and remarkable roads, from spectacular coastal highways to frightening alpine passes, back-country bullies to treasured pathway. These are the roads that dictate the terms of everyday life in New Zealand. Wild Roads features 60 of our wildest routes - sometimes a pleasure to drive, other times unpredictable, exposed and treacherous.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956832?barcode=9781760112653&title=Newt%27sEmerald
 Newt's Emerald by Garth Nix        $22.00
After the Newington Emerald is stolen at the height of a conjured storm, eighteen-year-old Lady Truthful Newington goes to London to search for the magical heirloom of her house. But as no well-bred young lady can hunt the metropolis for a stolen jewel, she has to disguise herself as a man, and is soon caught up in a dangerous adventure where she must risk her life, her reputation - and her heart...
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/961066?barcode=9780143573098&title=ThePenguinBookofNewZealandWarWriting
The Penguin Book of New Zealand War Writing edited by Harry Ricketts and Gavin McLean       $65.00
Features creative responses to conflict, such as a waiata written about an inter-tribal skirmish, short stories on the World Wars, extracts from plays and novels set in such campaigns as Chunuk Bair and Vietnam, and works by various poets, including James K. Baxter, Eileen Duggan, Denis Glover, Allen Curnow and Robert Sullivan. There are also vivid accounts by journalists reporting home as well as by soldiers recalling their experiences in the trenches, the desert or in the air. Rounding out this fascinating collection are thoughtful retrospective commentaries on the impact of wars from precolonial times up to Afghanistan.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/961064?barcode=9780143572459&title=NewZealandCafeCookbook
New Zealand Café Cookbook by Anna King-Shahab        $49.99
Tour the country's cafes and try their most popular dishes. Includes Morrison Street, the Boat Shed, TOAD Hall and the Wholemeal Trading Company.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/957054?barcode=9781927213506&title=WorldofWearableArt%3A30Designers
 World of WearableArt: 30 designers tell their stories by Naomi Arnold          $39.99
A fascinating insight into the worlds behind the winning WoW designs. Lavishly illustrated.
>> A good companion to WearableArt
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/961104?barcode=9781863957724&title=KillingtheBlackDogShortBlack10
Killing the Black Dog by Les Murray        $11.99
"On the last day of 1985, I went home to live in Bunyah, the farming valley I had left some twenty-nine years earlier. My wife and our younger children followed two days later ...at last I was going home, to care for my father in his old age and to live in the place from which I'd always felt displaced. What I didn't know was that I was heading home in order to go mad." A frank and insightful account of Murray's struggle with depression.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/921126?barcode=9780008135195&title=Grandpa%27sGreatEscape%28PB%29
 Grandpa's Great Escape by David Walliams         $24.99
 Jack's Grandpa wears his slippers to the supermarket, serves up Spam a la Custard for dinner, and often doesn't remember Jack's name - but he can still take to the skies in a speeding Spitfire and save the day.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/961924?barcode=9781863957670&title=TheBraveOnesEastTimor%2C1999-ShortBlack5
The Brave Ones: East Timor, 1999 by John Birmingham      $11.99
Follows the Indonesian Army's Battalion 745 as it withdrew from East Timor after the 1999 independence vote, leaving a trail of devastation in its wake.


http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/884702-TheBronteCabinetThreeLivesinNineObjects-9780393240085
The Bronte Cabinet: Three lives in nine objects by Deborah Lutz       $46.00
The lives of Anne, Charlotte and Emily as distilled in artefacts from Haworth. Branwell's laudanum glass does not feature.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/958778?barcode=9780552573542&title=TheBoyattheTopoftheMountain
The Boy at the Top of the Mountain by John Boyne        $21.00
New from the author of The Boy in Striped Pyjamas - another sensitive novel about children finding strength in themselves when the adult world is showing its worst. When Pierrot becomes an orphan, he must leave his home in Paris for a new life with his Aunt Beatrix, a servant in a wealthy household at the top of the German mountains. But this is no ordinary time, for it is 1935 and the Second World War is fast approaching; and this is no ordinary house, for this is the Berghof, the home of Adolf Hitler. Quickly, Pierrot is taken under Hitler's wing, and is thrown into an increasingly dangerous new world: a world of terror, secrets and betrayal, from which he may never be able to escape.
"Disturbingly vivid, utterly readable and appealing to audiences of all ages." - The Bookbag
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/954613?barcode=9780008134167&title=AnEagleintheSnow
 An Eagle in the Snow by Michael Morpurgo         $24.99
 Barney and his mother, their home destroyed by bombing, are travelling to the country when their train is forced to shelter in a tunnel from attacking German planes. There, in the darkness, a stranger on the train begins to tell them a story. A story about Billy Byron, the most decorated soldier of WW1, who once had the chance to end the war before it even began, and how he tried to fix his mistake.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/961926?barcode=9781863957694&title=TheOneDayShortBlack7
 The One Day by David Malouf          $11.99
'Silence was a deeply established tradition. Men used it as a form of self-protection; it saved those who had experienced the horrors of war from the emotional trauma of experiencing it all over again in the telling. And it saved women and children, back home, from the terrible knowledge of what they had seen and walked away from. One result of this was that the men who had actually lived through Gallipoli and the trenches did not write about it."
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/948782?barcode=9781847806369&title=DiaryofaTimeTraveller
Diary of a Time Traveller by Nicholas Stevenson and David Long     $33.00
When young Augustus falls asleep in history class, Professor Tempo decides to teach him a lesson and show him that history isn't boring at all! She hands him a magic diary, all he needs to do is write the time and place to travel there. Together they head out on a whistle-stop tour of history through the ages to meet some of the world's finest explorers, inventors, leaders, writers, composers and painters.


http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/961100?barcode=9781925240528&title=History%27sPeople%3APersonalitiesandthePast
History's People: Personalities and the past by Margaret MacMillan       $39.99
The actions of Hitler, Stalin and Thatcher had epic, resounding consequences, but there are other ways to shape the course of history: those like Samuel de Champlain, the dreamers, explorers or adventurers who stand out in history for who they were as much as for what they did; or observers like Michel de Montaigne, who kept the notes and diaries that bring the past to life for us. History's People is about the important and complex relationship between biography and history, individuals and their times, and the transformative moments that have shaped the world.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/954407?barcode=9781775537922&title=SnowontheLindis
 Snow on the Lindis: My life at Morven Hills Station by Madge Snow         $39.99
Morven Hills Station once extended to 400,000 acres and has perhaps the largest shearing shed in the country (34 stalls). 
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956835?barcode=9781760113605&title=TheophilusGreyandtheDemonThief
Theophilus Grey and the Demon Thief by Catherine Jinks         $23.00
Twelve-year-old Theophilus Grey is a linkboy in eighteenth-century London, guiding people home through the dark, dangerous alleys by the light of his torch. But in secret, he's also a spy gathering information for his master, the mysterious Garnet Hooke. When thieves and rogues start dropping without a scratch, rumours spread of a dangerous faery demon on the loose...
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/956830?barcode=9781925266955&title=Zeroes
Zeroes by Scott Westerfeld, Margot Lanagan and Deborah Biancotti      $22.99
"A fast-paced, highly original story of somewhat super-powered teens. I couldn't put it down." - Garth Nix
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/920889-DoingGoodBetterEffectiveAltruismandaRadicalNewWaytoMakeaDifference-9781783350490
Doing Good Better by William Macacskill       $33.00
Almost all of us want to make a difference. So we volunteer, donate to charity, recycle or try to cut down our carbon emissions. But rarely do we know how much of a difference we're really making. In a remarkable re-examination of the evidence, Doing Good Better reveals why buying sweatshop-produced goods benefits the poor; why cosmetic surgeons can do more good than charity workers; and why giving to a relief fund is generally not the best way to help after a natural disaster.
http://www.pageandblackmore.co.nz/products/957839-GeoffMurphy-ALifeonFilmImTakingThisBloodyCartoInvercargill-9781775540793
A Life on Film by Geoff Murphy       $39.99
The director's cut of his life.
>> "I'm taking this bloody car to Invercargill."
>> Hear Murphy speak at our Readers & Writers festival.