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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13 May 2016
A Country Road, A Tree by Jo Baker $37.00
Paris, 1939: the pavement rumbles with the footfall of marching Nazi soldiers along the Champs-Elysees. A young writer, recently arrived from Ireland to make his mark, smokes a last cigarette with his lover before the city they know is torn apart. As war takes hold, he will put his own life and that of his loved ones in mortal danger by joining the Resistance. Inspired by the life of Samuel Beckett, this is a story of life at the edges of human experience, and how one man came to translate it all into literature.
""In this worthy successor to Longbourn, Baker skillfully captures Beckett's world, the rhythms of his bare-bones prose, and the edginess of his point of view." - Publishers Weekly
>> A country road. A tree.
Second-Hand Time: The last of the Soviets, An oral history by Svetlana Alexievich $39.99
From the 2015 winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, Svetlana Alexievich, comes the first English translation of her latest work, an oral history of the disintegration of the Soviet Union and the emergence of a new Russia. Bringing together dozens of voices in her distinctive documentary style, Second-Hand Time is a monument to the collapse of the USSR, charting the decline of Soviet culture and speculating on what will rise from the ashes of Communism. As in all her books, Alexievich gives voice to women and men whose stories are lost in the official narratives of nation-states, creating a powerful alternative history from the personal and private stories of individuals.
On Bowie by Simon Critchley $18.99
What made Bowie the cultural icon he is today? And what made millions of people around the world tune into his peculiar wavelength and find exactly what they'd been looking for all along? These are the questions asked by Simon Critchley in this keen-eyed, textured tribute to Bowie. Each of the two dozen short chapters looks at Bowie from a new angle, slowly unfolding the enigma that was his artistic life. From the author's earliest childhood exposure to the bizarre musical and sexual contours of Ziggy Stardust right through to the supernova glow of Blackstar, and covering everything in between, Critchley traces the development of Bowie's music and lyrics to tell the story of how he tapped into zeitgeist and hooked the hearts of millions.
>> The soundtrack to this book.
Dust by Michael Marder $22.99
No matter how much you fight against it, dust pervades everything. It gathers in even layers, adapting to the contours of things and marking the passage of time. In itself, it is also a gathering place, a random community of what has been and what is yet to be, a catalog of traces and a set of promises: dead skin cells and plant pollen, hair and paper fibers, not to mention dust mites who make it their home. And so, dust blurs the boundaries between the living and the dead, plant and animal matter, the inside and the outside, you and the world. This book treats one of the most mundane and familiar phenomena, showing how it can provide a key to thinking about existence, community, and justice.
"Somewhere I have the notes for a long-form essay on dust I began some years ago. I am, therefore, looking forward to reading this." - Thomas
Deleted Scenes for Lovers by Tracey Slaughter $29.99
"The knowledge of everyone they're about to hurt is not an element easy to breathe in. They're the lovers. You can blame them now, if you want to. That's your choice: this is the director's cut." Seventeen powerful stories of contemporary New Zealand life.
Silencing Science by Shaun Hendy $14.99
What is the first duty of scientists in a crisis - to the government, to their employer, or to the wider public desperate for information?
Fale Aitu / Spirit House by Tusiata Avia $25.00
Speaking from Samoa, Christchurch, Gaza, and New York - Avia's fearless voice combines mythic with the everyday stories, never shying away from moments of pain nor strange wonder.
Chronicles: On our troubled times by Thomas Piketty $37.00
With Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Thomas Piketty wrote a bestselling book that was widely agreed to be 'extraordinarily important' (Martin Wolf, Financial Times). His powerful, evidence-based analysis and solutions - including progressive wealth taxes to reduce inequality - were praised as much as his wonderful range of reference and panache. Bringing readers the same expert eye, breadth of thought and practical ideas - but in very short pieces - Chronicles provides Piketty's analysis of the financial crisis, and of subjects and individuals, from productivity in Britain to Barack Obama.
Quick and Easy Spanish Recipes by Simone and Ines Ortega $45.00
Spain's most popular cookbook, 1080 Recipes, was published in 1972, and sold over 3 million copies in Spain. Quick and Easy Spanish Recipes culls the quickest and easiest recipes for an updated collection geared toward busy home cooks. Culinary novices and experts can master iconic Spanish recipes such as paella, patatas bravas, tortilla espaƱola, churros, and crema catalana, among many others.
What the Light Hides by Mette Jakobsen $35.00
Vera and David have been passionately in love since the day they met more than twenty years ago. They live in the Blue Mountains where Vera is a sculptor and David makes furniture. Their son, Ben, is at university in Sydney. Or at least he was. What the Light Hides begins five months after Ben's death, an apparent suicide. Vera is trying to pick up the pieces, but David cannot let go, cannot believe that Ben is dead. He goes to Sydney, ostensibly to work, but cannot get Ben out of his mind. He keeps seeing him in the street, visits the room where he was living, goes in pursuit of Ben's friends. His refusal to come to terms with the death of his son is destroying his relationship with Vera, but he cannot help himself, in spite of all the evidence.
The Cauliflower by Nicola Barker $38.00
To the world he is Sri Ramakrishna - godly avatar, esteemed spiritual master, beloved guru. To Rani Rashmoni, he is the Brahmin fated to defy tradition. But to Hriday, his nephew and long-time caretaker, he is just Uncle - maddening, bewildering Uncle, prone to entering trances at the most inconvenient of times, known to form dangerous acts of self-effacement, who must be vigilantly safeguarded not only against jealous enemies but also against that most treasured yet insidious of sulphur-rich vegetables: the cauliflower.
"Dazzlingly inventive and brilliantly comic, irreverent and mischievous, The Cauliflower delivers us into the divine playfulness of 'one of the most exhilarating, audacious, and ballsy writers of her generation." - Observer
What's Hidden in the Woods? by Aina Bestard $32.99
What's hidden in the woods? At first glance, all is still and quiet in the woods. But look closely through three coloured transparent sheets to discover hidden secrets. As if by magic, each sheet shows animals and plants coming to life. Watch nature's surprises emerge in front of your eyes! A wonderful book.
Sirocco: Fabulous flavours from the East by Sabrina Ghayour $49.99
Follows and complements her wonderful Persiana.
Being Chinese: A New Zealander's story by Helene Wong $39.99
Helene Wong writes about her New Zealand childhood, about student life in the 1960s, and coming of age in Muldoon's New Zealand. What her Chinese ancestry means to her gradually illuminates the book as it sheds new light on her own life. Drawing on her experience of writing for New Zealand films, she takes the narrative forward through the places of her family's history - the ancestral village of Sha Tou in Zengcheng county, the rural town of Utiku where the Wongs ran a thriving business, the Lower Hutt suburbs of her childhood, and Avalon and Naenae.
Paper: Paging through history by Mark Kurlansky $49.99
Paper is one of the simplest and most essential pieces of human technology. For the past two millennia, the ability to produce it in ever more efficient ways has supported the proliferation of literacy, media, religion, education, commerce and art. It has created civilisations, fostering the fomenting of revolutions and the stabilising of regimes. History's greatest press run produced 6.5 billion copies of Mao zhu xi yu lu, Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung and Leonardo da Vinci left behind only 15 paintings but 4,000 works on paper. Now, on the cusp of "going paperless"-and amid speculation about the effects of a digitally dependent society-we've come to a world-historic juncture to examine what paper means to civilisation. Who better than Mark Kurlansky to riffle through this history with us?
Alpha Bravo Charlie: The complete book of nautical codes by Sara Gillingham $29.99
A graphically stunning volume of nautical codes for children This extraordinary visual reference is an introduction to maritime communication through nautical flags, along with Morse code, the phonetic alphabet, and semaphore signaling.
ArtRage! The story of the BritArt revolution by Elizabeth Fullerton $69.99
The Young British Artists (YBAs) stormed on to the contemporary art scene in 1988 with their attention-grabbing, ironic art. They exploded art-world conventions with brazen disdain. Dismissed as trivial gimmickry and praised for its witty energy, their art made a mark both on the art scene and on public consciousness that continues to reverberate today. Now, almost three decades after they emerged, Artrage! tells the story of the YBAs with the benefit of perspective. Among the artists discussed are Damien Hirst, Rachel Whiteread, Tracey Emin, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Sarah Lucas and Gary Hume.
Ai Weiwei by Uli Sigg $130.00
Follows his early New York days right through to his recent practice. Focus moments include his international breakthrough in the early 2000s, his porcelain Sunflower Seeds at the Turbine Hall of the Tate Modern, his response to the Sichuan earthquake of 2008, and his police detention in 2011.
Portraits: John Berger on artists by John Berger $45.00
Berger's rejigging of the relationship between art and history makes for stimulating reading.
The Shopkeepers: Storefront businesses and the future of retail by R. Klanten $130.00
If you are going to start your own shop, and want to offer an alternative to e-retail, this book is packed full of inspiring examples of shops that get it right.
The Trouble with Women by Jacky Fleming $29.99
Can women be geniuses? Or are their arms too short? Why did we learn about only three women at school? What were all the others doing?
"Jacky Fleming nails it with her razor-sharp observational writing and drawing in this very funny and fresh take on women in history. Fleming is a genius but with normal hair" - Simone Lia
Crucial Interventions: An illustrated treatise on the principles and practice of nineteenth-century surgery by Richard Barnett $49.99
"The surgery may have been performed on patients under anaesthetic but readers of this book have no such protection from discomfort. Beautifully executed chromolithographs of procedures and instruments abound. Fortunately there are fewer pictorial horrors on the text pages, which lack enables the reader to stay the long enough to read." - Thomas
Better Living Through Criticism: How to think about art, pleasure, beauty and truth by A.O. Scott $37.00
We are al critics anyway, so learning to be better ones is probably a good idea.
Sleeping Giants by Sylvain Neuvel $37.00
An eleven-year-old girl named Rose is riding her bike in the woods near her home in Deadwood, USA, when the ground disappears beneath her feet. When she comes to, she finds herself in a deep pit, lying in the palm of a giant metallic hand. Seventeen years later, Dr Rose Franklyn is leading a top-secret scientific investigation into the strange artefact she unwittingly discovered all those years ago. It is clear to Rose and her team that the hand is not only ancient but also not of this world. A search begins for the rest of this vast creation. What they find defies their imaginations: it is perhaps the greatest mystery humanity has ever faced. But even more terrifying is the power it begins to unleash.
Storm Walker by Mike Revell $19.99
Ever since his mum died, Owen has felt lost. But he's got football trials coming up soon, and his dad to look out for ...Then one day in school, Owen gets sucked out of real life into a terrifying world: a wasteland where a Storm of darkness plagues the city, threatening the lives of everyone in it. Owen's dad is a writer and he uses his imagination to help his sadness. But every time he writes, Owen gets pulled into this dangerous story. To help his dad, Owen must brave the terrible Storm in this other world. But what if the darkness gets him and he never manages to find his way back home?
The War that Saved My Life by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley $21.00
Nine-year-old Ada has never left her one-room flat. Her mother is too humiliated by Ada's twisted foot to let her outside. So when her little brother Jamie is shipped out of London to escape the war, Ada doesn't waste a minute - she sneaks out to join him. So begins a new adventure for Ada, and for Miss Susan Smith, the woman who is forced to take in the two children. As Ada teaches herself to ride a pony, learns to read, and watches for German spies, she begins to trust Susan - and Susan begins to love Ada and Jamie. But in the end, will their bond be enough to hold them together through wartime?
Tickle My Ears by Jorg Muhle $15.00
When you're settling down to sleep, do you like to have your ears tickled?
LaRose by Louise Erdrich $37.99
An accidental fatal shooting of a 5-year-old boy near the boundary of an Indian reservation in North Dakota opens Louise Erdrich’s new novel, detonating a story of revenge, sacrifice and restitution.
The Hidden Oracle ('The Trials of Apollo' #1) by Rick Riordan $26.00
How do you punish an immortal? By making him human. After angering his father Zeus, the god Apollo is cast down from Olympus. Weak and disorientated, he lands in New York City as a regular teenage boy. Now, without his godly powers, the four-thousand-year-old deity must learn to survive in the modern world until he can somehow find a way to regain Zeus's favour. But Apollo has many enemies - gods, monsters and mortals who would love to see the former Olympian permanently destroyed. Apollo needs help, and he can think of only one place to go ...an enclave of modern demigods known as Camp Half-Blood. Return to Percy Jackson's world in this exciting new series!
The Last of Us by Rob Ewing $39.99
When a pandemic wipes out the entire population of a remote Scottish island, only a small group of children survive. How will they fend for themselves?
Ray Davies: A complicated life by Johnny Rogan $34.00
Ray's journey from working-class Muswell Hill to the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame with The Kinks was tumultuous in the extreme, featuring breakdowns, bitter lawsuits, spectacular punch-ups and a ban from entering the USA.
>> The cure to all our ills.
The Lubetkin Legacy by Marina Lewycka $37.00
North London in the twenty-first century: a place where a son will swiftly adopt an old lady and take her home from hospital to impersonate his dear departed mother, rather than lose the council flat. A time of golden job opportunities, though you might have to dress up as a coffee bean or work as an intern at an undertaker or put up with champagne and posh French dinners while your boss hits on you. A place rich in language - whether it's Romanian, Ukrainian, Russian, Swahili or managementese.
"This book is a delightful critique of modern life and current government policies of neo-liberalism, where human decency and care is sacrificed and people have to make allowances to satisfy current political philosophy." - Peter
May Your Shadow Never Grow Less: The life and times of Henry and Jane Holland, Canterbury, New Zealand, 1863-1945 by Helen Thomas $49.99
Illusive 4: Contemporary illustrations edited by John Reilly $89.99
Have a look through this - you will want to take it home.
Make Your Mark: The new urban artists by Tristan Manco $65.00
Celebrates and discusses the work of forty-five urban artists, extraordinarily diverse but united by one basic principle: their work is completely fresh, original and the epitome of creativity - the perfect antidote to the jaded imagery that fills our streets and our media.
Miniscapes: Create your own terrarium by Clea Cregan $34.99
Tiny magical gardens in their own glass-walled world.
Thatcher Stole My Trousers by Alexei Sayle $29.99
In 1971 comedians on the working men's club circuit imagined that they would be free to go on telling their tired, racist, misogynistic gags forever but their nemesis, a 19 year old Marxist art student with a bizarre concern for the health of British manufacturing was slowly coming to meet them. Through the next decade Alexei Sayle would be a student at Chelsea Art School, a clerk in a DHSS office (where nobody did any work), one of London's bottom ten freelance illustrators, a school dinner lady and a college lecturer (who kidnapped his students), before he became the original MC of London's first modern comedy club, the Comedy Store, and the landscape of British comedy was altered forever.
>> 'Ullo John, Got a new motor?
The Old Man and the Sea: A true story of crossing the Atlantic by raft by Anthony Smith $24.99
Octogenarian Anthony Smith's journey was inspired by the incredible story of the survivors of a 1940 boat disaster, who spent 70 days adrift in the Atlantic, eventually reaching land emaciated and close to death. While this might sound like a voyage no-one would wish to emulate, to octogenarian Anthony Smith it sounded like an adventure.
>> Ready to go.
The War of the Four Isles ('Ship Kings' #3) by Andrew McGahan $18.99
Nearly three years have passed since Dow Amber escaped the ruin of the Twelfth Kingdom. In that time, war has raged across the Four Isles, but Dow himself has been hidden away by his Twin Islands hosts, relegated to a backwater of the war in the company of the beguiling Cassandra. But when word reaches Dow that Ignella of the Cave has been imprisoned on the infamous Ship Kings dungeon-isle of Banishment, he can be patient no longer. He sets forth on an epic voyage that will take him halfway around the world - defying storm and monster, betrayal and despair - to the heart of the greatest battle of the age, and to the discovery at last of his true purpose upon the high seas.
Michelangelo's Notebooks: The poetry, letters and art of the great master edited by Carolyn Vaughan $39.99
Spirit to the Stone: Building the Old Ghost Road by Marion Boatwright $37.00
In the North West corner of the South Island a ghost has awakened. A long-forgotten gold miners’ road has been revived as a mountain biking and tramping trail – connecting the old dray road in the Lyell (Upper Buller Gorge) to the mighty Mokihinui River in the north.
>> Website.
Let's Go Camping! Crochet your own adventure by Kate Bruning $29.99
Useful.
6 May 2016
Dodge Rose by Jack Cox $37.00
Eliza travels to Sydney to deal with the estate of her Aunt Dodge, and finds Maxine, a hitherto unknown cousin, occupying Dodge’s apartment. When legal complications derail plans to live it up on their inheritance, the women’s lives become consumed by absurd attempts to deal with Australian tax law, as well their own mounting boredom and squalor.
"Dodge Rose is a stealth reappraisal of narrative technique. Cox has created in Max one of the most extraordinary narrative voices I’ve read this year." - Joanna Walsh
"Dodge Rose is a Modernist novel, reminiscent of Beckett and Joyce, with all the tropes (or trappings, depending on your perspective) of this novel form (expect a lack of punctuation, missing capitals and some stream of consciousness). Ultimately, it is the clues that the author drops for us that give the full picture. This is a novel that tells a history of Australia, its colonial past, an indigenous story (without ever mentioning the word ‘aboriginal’) that reveals a tale of social class, your origins and how this shapes your place in the world." - Stella
>> Listen to Stella reviewing the book on RNZ National.
The Last Painting of Sara Vos by Dominic Smith $36.99
An evocative novel that bridges the historical and the contemporary, tracking a collision course between a rare landscape by a female Dutch painter of the Golden Age, an inheritor of the work in 1950s Manhattan, and a celebrated Australian art historian who painted a forgery of it in her youth. In 1631, Sara de Vos is admitted to the Guild of St. Luke in Holland as a master painter, the first woman to be so honoured. Three hundred years later, only one work attributed to de Vos is known to remain-a haunting winter scene, 'At the Edge of a Wood', which hangs over the Manhattan bed of a wealthy descendant of the original owner. An Australian grad student, Ellie Shipley, struggling to stay afloat in New York, agrees to paint a forgery of the landscape, a decision that will haunt her. Because now, half a century later, she's curating an exhibition of female Dutch painters, and both versions threaten to arrive...
Memorandum of Understanding by Bill Nelson $25.00
Bill Nelson steps into John Coltrane's body and wears it around. He is a turtle disappearing into the sea. He plumbs the depths of business jargon. He takes singing lessons in Berhampore. He takes his grandfather roller skating. These poems test our understanding of understanding.
Black Hole Blues, And other songs from Outer Space by Janna Levin $55.00
The full inside story of the detection of gravitational waves at LIGO, one of the most ambitious feats in scientific history. In 1916 Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves: miniscule ripples in the very fabric of spacetime generated by unfathomably powerful events. If such vibrations could somehow be recorded, we could observe our universe for the first time through sound: the hissing of the Big Bang, the whale-like tunes of collapsing stars, the low tones of merging galaxies, the drumbeat of two black holes collapsing into one.
"What makes the book most rewarding is Levin’s exquisite prose, which bears the mark of a first-rate writer: an acute critical mind haloed with a generosity of spirit." - New York Times
The Odd Woman and the City by Vivian Gornick $29.99
Gornick becomes a flaneur, walking the streets of New York and using the city to think about her aloneness, anxiety and desires.
"She does what the best memoirists do, taking life as it is lived into another register, distilling it onto the page, "riding the tide" of life, not to a destination, but towards understanding, despite it all, something of the tangled actuality of existence before it passes us by." -Sydney Morning Herald
>> Gornick talks with Kim Hill, RNZ National, Saturday 7 May, 10:05AM
Don't Wake Up the Tiger by Britta Teckentrup $23.00
Tiger is fast asleep, but oh dear! She's lying completely in the way. Just how will the animals get past without waking her up?
Rain: Four walks in English weather by Melissa Harrison $27.99
Whenever rain falls, our countryside changes. Fields, farms, hills and hedgerows appear altered, the wildlife behaves differently, and over time the terrain itself is transformed. Beautifully written nature writing.
The Story of My Teeth by Valeria Luiselli $22.99
Gustavo 'Turnpike' Sanchez is a man with a mission: he is planning to replace every last one of his unsightly teeth. Studying auctioneering under Grandmaster Oklahoma and the famous country singer Leroy Van Dyke, Highway travels the world, amassing his collection of 'collectibles' and perfecting his own specialty: the allegoric auction. In his quest for a perfect set of pearly whites, he finds unusual ways to raise the funds, culminating in the sale of the jewels of his collection: the teeth of the 'notorious infamous' - Plato, Petrarch, Chesterton, Virginia Woolf et al.
"A remarkable story about stories." - Frieze
>> An interview!
Texts from Jane Eyre, And other conversations with your favourite literary characters by Mallory Ortberg $24.99
>> Ortberg introduces her book.
100 Best Jewish Recipes: Modern classics, from everyday meals to food for special occasions by Evelyn Rose $39.99
Find inspiration for no-fuss, flavoursome classics, from the kitchens of Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean to the Middle East and beyond.
>> Are these the 100 best Jews referred to in the title?
>> Song (with an acknowledgement to Evelyn Rose).
The Sport of Kings by C.E. Morgan $34.99
Hellsmouth, an indomitable thoroughbred filly, runs for the glory of the Forge family, one of Kentucky's oldest and most powerful dynasties. Henry Forge has partnered with his daughter, Henrietta, in an endeavour of raw obsession: to breed the next superhorse. But when Allmon Shaughnessy, an ambitious young black man, comes to work on their farm after a stint in prison, the violence of the Forges' history and the exigencies of appetite are brought starkly into view.
"C.E. Morgan has delivered a masterpiece. Rich, deep, and ambitious, this book is, by any standard, a Great American Novel." - Philipp Meyer
Hitman Anders and the Meaning of It All by Jonas Jonasson $34.99
A madcap new novel from the author of The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared!!! It's always awkward when five thousand kronor goes missing. When it happens at a certain grotty hotel in south Stockholm, it's particularly awkward because the money belongs to the hitman currently staying in room seven. Per Persson, the hotel receptionist, just wants to mind his own business, and preferably not get murdered. Johanna Kjellander, temporarily resident in room eight, is a priest without a vocation, and, as of last week, without a parish. But right now she has two things at her disposal: an envelope containing five thousand kronor, and an excellent idea.
Mothering Sunday by Graham Swift $35.00
March 30th 1924. It is Mothering Sunday. How will Jane Fairchild, orphan and housemaid, occupy her time when she has no mother to visit? How, shaped by the events of this never to be forgotten day, will her future unfold?
"With a clear focus on the possibilities of the short form, Graham Swift achieves a delicate harmony between the cool detachment of the narrative voice and the intensity of emotion conveyed on every page. This is a rare read indeed." - Spectator
"Mothering Sunday is a powerful, philosophical and exquisitely observed novel about the lives we lead, and the parallel lives - the parallel stories - we can never know. It may just be Swift's best novel yet." - Observer "Mothering Sunday is bathed in light; and even when tragedy strikes, it blazes irresistibly. Swift's small fiction feels like a masterpiece." - Guardian
A Boy of China: In search of Mao's lost son by Richard Loseby $36.99
Intrigued by stories of a son given away by Mao and his then-wife during the Long March, and mystified by the 'official' explanation of the boy's fate (Whereabouts unknown - No further information available), Loseby sets out alone across China in search of answers. Tracing Mao's own revolutionary journey, the author encounters the extraordinary realities of a new revolution, one that is transforming an ancient culture into a modern economic powerhouse. At the heart of the journey is the hunt for an elusive truth about a brutal and traumatic time in the nation's still raw history. Who was that abandoned boy? Might he still be alive? Would he even want to be found?
Kevin Barry on Cork, 'as intimate and homicidal as a little Marseille'; Lucy Caldwell imagining forbidden first love in Belfast; an exclusive extract of Colm Toibin's next novel, about growing up in the shadow of a famous father; fiction from Emma Donaghue about Victorian Ireland's miraculous fasting girls; and Sara Baume describing the wild allure and threat of the rural landscape.
The Lonely City: Adventures in the art of being alone by Olivia Laing $39.99
What does it mean to be lonely? How do we live, if we're not intimately engaged with another human being? How do we connect with other people? When Olivia Laing moved to New York City in her mid-thirties, she found herself inhabiting loneliness on a daily basis. Fascinated by the experience, she began to explore the lonely city by way of art. Is aloneness necessary to creativity? Is connectedness an impediment to cultural innovation?
The Raw Kitchen by Olivia Scott $59.99
100 amazing gluten-free, dairy-free, refined sugar-free recipes to nourish you from breakfast to dinner and beyond.
Judge This by Chip Kidd $24.00
First impressions are everything. They dictate whether something stands out, how we engage with it, whether we buy it, and how strongly we feel. This is especially true when it comes to design. And design is all around us, secretly shaping our world in ways we rarely recognise. Except if you yourself are a designer, like Chip Kidd.
>> Design done.
The Blue Touch Paper by David Hare $45.00
"All credit to Hare for giving us his shabbiness as well as his triumphs. By the time he brought down the curtain I had come to understand what a vibrant force he has been for wringing excellence out of people, including himself. The Blue Touch Paper is an engrossing dive into the passions, the disappointments, the quarrels and the elation of a great professional trying to get something done." - New York Times
"An invigorating memoir, an elegantly unvarnished tale." - Guardian
“Frank, moving, and beguiling, The Blue Touch Paper is the fascinating story of becoming a writer in the 1960s and 70s when Britain was changing even faster than the author.”—Joan Didion
The Face: Strangers on a pier by Tash Aw $14.99
From a taxi ride in present-day Bangkok, to eating Kentucky Fried Chicken in 1980s Kuala Lumpur, to his grandfathers' treacherous boat journeys to mainland China in the 1920s, Aw weaves together stories of insiders and outsiders, images from rural villages to megacity nightclubs and voices in a dizzying variety of dialects and slangs.
Final Solution: The fate of the Jews, 1933-1949 by David Cesarini $65.00
Cesarini attempts to deny that Nazi anti-Jewish policy was ‘systematic, consistent or even premeditated’, but rather erratic, local and spontaneous. He also attempts to counter Hannah Arendt's observations of 'the banality of evil'.
Griffith Review 52: Imagining the Future $35.00
It is time to envisage the future, without fear, as a landscape to be won through human striving and expression. Contributors include Al Gore, Tim Flannery, Maria Tumarkin, Anthony Funnel, Margaret Simons, Tony Birch, Don Henry, Ashley Hay, Leah Kaminsky, Graeme Davison, Tony Davis and Jane Gleeson-White.
Here Come the Dogs by Omar Musa $38.00
"A muscular examination of dislocation and disempowerment among the lives of Australian youths on the edge of mainstream society. Musa's blending of poetry and prose is refreshing. His descriptions, polished by his own ventures into hip-hop and songwriting, are at once tender, beautiful, gritty and raw. It is his voice, lyrical and incendiary, that will rise and soar." - The Guardian
"This stunning debut novel has such swaggering exuberance that it will make most other fiction you read this year seem criminally dull. You have been warned." - Irvine Welsh
Instrumental: A memoir of madness, medication and music by James Rhodes $36.99
"A person who has suffered in the way that James Rhodes has suffered, and has struggled to cope with the consequences of his suffering in the way that he has struggled, has the right to tell the world about it. And there is a corresponding public interest in others being able to listen to his life story in all its searing detail." - The Supreme Court
"You might expect James Rhodes to have been crushed by his experiences. On the contrary I don't think I've ever read an autobiography which is this exuberant, this full of life, this addictively readable." - Mark Haddon
"A poet once said great books help you to live your life. They also help you survive your ruin, and James Rhodes's Instrumental is a masterpiece of creative endurance. His passion is his programme, his heart is his true instrument, and you might not read a more moral or more loving book this decade." - Andrew O'Hagan
"Anyone can play Chopin." - Bach
Quiet Power: Growing up as an introvert in a world that can't stop talking by Susan Cain $37.00
Childhood, adolescence and your early twenties are times wrought with insecurity and self-doubt. Your search for your place in the world can seem daunting. Focusing on the strengths and challenges of being introverted, Susan Cain follows up her ground-breaking book Quiet.
The Dog, Ray by Linda Coggin $18.99
Twelve-year-old Daisy has just died in a car crash. But in a twist of fate, and through a heavenly bureaucratic mistake, Daisy ends up not where she is supposed to be - but in the body of a dog. Daisy may now be inhabiting a dog's body, but inside she is still very much Daisy, and is as bouncy, loyal, positive and energetic as she ever was. Daisy's only thought is to somehow be reunited with her parents, who she knows will be missing her. This is how she meets Pip, a boy who is homeless and on his own journey, and a lasting, tender friendship between boy and dog/girl is formed.
David Bowie by Steve Schapiro $69.99
The mostly never-before-published images in Schapiro's rare collection present a glimpse into the intimacy that Schapiro and Bowie shared during their time together in 1974. Bowie and Schapiro kidded and laughed about shooting a series of close-up portraits on a putrid green background because they felt it was the worst possible background colour for a magazine, and so they did on this lark - with the image eventually becoming a People magazine cover.
>> 1974.
>> Also 1974 (a year of changes). This book documents that transition.
The Food I Love: Beautiful, simple food to cook at home by Neil Perry $55.00
>> What does Neil Perry think of New Zealand?
Freddie Mole, Lion Tamer by Alexander McCall Smith $22.99
Freddie is an ordinary boy who joins the circus one day. He can't believe his luck as he is asked to understudy some of the acts. But is he brave enough to go into the lions' cage?
Something Fierce: Memoirs of a revolutionary daughter by Carmen Aguirre $29.99
One minute, 11-year-old Carmen is watching her hippy mum put curlers in for the first time, the next she is being dragged with her sister through LA airport with her mother muttering about 'the patriarchy' under her breath. The three of them board a plane that takes them to Peru, next door to the Chile from which the family had fled after Pinochet's coup. Eight days after landing in Lima, and still perplexed by their mother's disguises and lies, they're off again, on a bus bound they know not where. They are then to spend most of the next decade, the 1980s, moving from dictatorship to dictatorship, evading capture, torture and peril at every turn. It is no way to spend your teenage years, until, overnight, it becomes the way Carmen herself chooses.
>> Challenging Latino stereotypes.
Harry Watson, The Mile Eater by Jonathan Kennett $25.00
He won more road cycling championships than any other New Zealander, before or since. Watson's most interesting claim to fame, however, was racing in the grueling 1928 Tour de France, and finishing in 28th position. That year the course consisted of 5377 kilometres of gravel, sealed and cobbled roads. Only a quarter of the field managed to finish. If you've read The Invisible Mile, you'll want to read this!
Alice Jones: The impossible clue by Sarah Rubin $18.00
Maths-whizz Alice has already solved a mystery or two. Persuaded by wannabe sidekick Sammy to investigate a scientist's disappearance, she's soon entangled in her trickiest case yet. Dr Learner is reputed to have invented an invisibility suit, but is whacky science really to blame for his vanishing?
Let There be Water: Israel's solution for a water-starved world by Seth Siegel $44.99
60 percent of the earth's land surface-will soon face alarming gaps between available water and the growing demand for it. Without action, food prices will rise, economic growth will slow, and political instability is likely to follow. In Israel this problem is nothing new. Even with 60 percent of its country made up of desert, Israel has not only solved its water problem; it also had an abundance of water and supplies its neighbours. How has this been done? What can the rest of the world learn from it?
The Genius of Birds by Jennifer Ackerman $39.99
Birds - they're not just a feathered face! Jennifer Ackerman presents the latest research on bird intelligence and reveals that birds are much, much smarter than we ever supposed. Bird brains, it turns out, are mostly made of sophisticated information processing systems that work in much the same way as our own cerebral cortices. Whether it's making complex navigations, singing in regional accents, or joking around with humans, birds are capable of high-level abstract thinking, problem-solving, remembering, learning by example, recognising faces, and even conversing in a meaningful way - all with brains so tiny each would fit inside a walnut.
Gorillas in Our Midst by Richard Fairgray and Terry Jones $27.00
You never know when there might be a gorilla around. Gorillas can be hard to spot, because they are masters of disguise and really good at hiding. Gorillas often have jobs where they get to wear masks - that's why so many gorillas are surgeons, astronauts, scuba divers, and ninjas.
Farewell to the Father: A memoir of love and madness by Tim Elliott $39.99
A charismatic, well-respected doctor by day, Tim Elliott's father became a roaring madman at night.
The Photographer's Wife by Suzanne Joinson $29.99
erusalem, 1920: in an already fractured city, eleven-year-old Prudence feels the tension rising as her architect father launches an ambitious - and wildly eccentric - plan to redesign the Holy City by importing English parks to the desert. Prue, known as the 'little witness', eavesdrops underneath the tables of tearooms and behind the curtains of the dance-halls of the city's elite, watching everything but rarely being watched herself. Around her, British colonials, exiled Armenians and German officials rub shoulders as they line up the pieces in a political game: a game destined to lead to disaster. When Prue's father employs a British pilot, William Harrington, to take aerial photographs of the city, Prue is uncomfortably aware of the attraction that sparks between him and Eleanora, the English wife of a famous Jerusalem photographer. And, after Harrington learns that Eleanora's husband is a nationalist, intent on removing the British, those sparks are fanned dangerously into a flame. Years later, in 1937, Prue is an artist living a reclusive life by the sea with her young son, when Harrington pays her a surprise visit.
Soon by Timothy Knapman and Patrick Benson $19.99
Little tired Raju keeps asking, "When can we go home again?" and, each time, his mummy replies, "Soon".
Hot Dudes Reading $39.99
Pictures of men with books all over New York.
>> It began with this Instagram account.
Eliza travels to Sydney to deal with the estate of her Aunt Dodge, and finds Maxine, a hitherto unknown cousin, occupying Dodge’s apartment. When legal complications derail plans to live it up on their inheritance, the women’s lives become consumed by absurd attempts to deal with Australian tax law, as well their own mounting boredom and squalor.
"Dodge Rose is a stealth reappraisal of narrative technique. Cox has created in Max one of the most extraordinary narrative voices I’ve read this year." - Joanna Walsh
"Dodge Rose is a Modernist novel, reminiscent of Beckett and Joyce, with all the tropes (or trappings, depending on your perspective) of this novel form (expect a lack of punctuation, missing capitals and some stream of consciousness). Ultimately, it is the clues that the author drops for us that give the full picture. This is a novel that tells a history of Australia, its colonial past, an indigenous story (without ever mentioning the word ‘aboriginal’) that reveals a tale of social class, your origins and how this shapes your place in the world." - Stella
>> Listen to Stella reviewing the book on RNZ National.
The Last Painting of Sara Vos by Dominic Smith $36.99
An evocative novel that bridges the historical and the contemporary, tracking a collision course between a rare landscape by a female Dutch painter of the Golden Age, an inheritor of the work in 1950s Manhattan, and a celebrated Australian art historian who painted a forgery of it in her youth. In 1631, Sara de Vos is admitted to the Guild of St. Luke in Holland as a master painter, the first woman to be so honoured. Three hundred years later, only one work attributed to de Vos is known to remain-a haunting winter scene, 'At the Edge of a Wood', which hangs over the Manhattan bed of a wealthy descendant of the original owner. An Australian grad student, Ellie Shipley, struggling to stay afloat in New York, agrees to paint a forgery of the landscape, a decision that will haunt her. Because now, half a century later, she's curating an exhibition of female Dutch painters, and both versions threaten to arrive...
Memorandum of Understanding by Bill Nelson $25.00
Bill Nelson steps into John Coltrane's body and wears it around. He is a turtle disappearing into the sea. He plumbs the depths of business jargon. He takes singing lessons in Berhampore. He takes his grandfather roller skating. These poems test our understanding of understanding.
Black Hole Blues, And other songs from Outer Space by Janna Levin $55.00
The full inside story of the detection of gravitational waves at LIGO, one of the most ambitious feats in scientific history. In 1916 Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves: miniscule ripples in the very fabric of spacetime generated by unfathomably powerful events. If such vibrations could somehow be recorded, we could observe our universe for the first time through sound: the hissing of the Big Bang, the whale-like tunes of collapsing stars, the low tones of merging galaxies, the drumbeat of two black holes collapsing into one.
"What makes the book most rewarding is Levin’s exquisite prose, which bears the mark of a first-rate writer: an acute critical mind haloed with a generosity of spirit." - New York Times
The Odd Woman and the City by Vivian Gornick $29.99
Gornick becomes a flaneur, walking the streets of New York and using the city to think about her aloneness, anxiety and desires.
"She does what the best memoirists do, taking life as it is lived into another register, distilling it onto the page, "riding the tide" of life, not to a destination, but towards understanding, despite it all, something of the tangled actuality of existence before it passes us by." -Sydney Morning Herald
>> Gornick talks with Kim Hill, RNZ National, Saturday 7 May, 10:05AM
Don't Wake Up the Tiger by Britta Teckentrup $23.00
Tiger is fast asleep, but oh dear! She's lying completely in the way. Just how will the animals get past without waking her up?
Rain: Four walks in English weather by Melissa Harrison $27.99
Whenever rain falls, our countryside changes. Fields, farms, hills and hedgerows appear altered, the wildlife behaves differently, and over time the terrain itself is transformed. Beautifully written nature writing.
The Story of My Teeth by Valeria Luiselli $22.99
Gustavo 'Turnpike' Sanchez is a man with a mission: he is planning to replace every last one of his unsightly teeth. Studying auctioneering under Grandmaster Oklahoma and the famous country singer Leroy Van Dyke, Highway travels the world, amassing his collection of 'collectibles' and perfecting his own specialty: the allegoric auction. In his quest for a perfect set of pearly whites, he finds unusual ways to raise the funds, culminating in the sale of the jewels of his collection: the teeth of the 'notorious infamous' - Plato, Petrarch, Chesterton, Virginia Woolf et al.
"A remarkable story about stories." - Frieze
>> An interview!
Texts from Jane Eyre, And other conversations with your favourite literary characters by Mallory Ortberg $24.99
>> Ortberg introduces her book.
100 Best Jewish Recipes: Modern classics, from everyday meals to food for special occasions by Evelyn Rose $39.99
Find inspiration for no-fuss, flavoursome classics, from the kitchens of Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean to the Middle East and beyond.
>> Are these the 100 best Jews referred to in the title?
>> Song (with an acknowledgement to Evelyn Rose).
The Sport of Kings by C.E. Morgan $34.99
Hellsmouth, an indomitable thoroughbred filly, runs for the glory of the Forge family, one of Kentucky's oldest and most powerful dynasties. Henry Forge has partnered with his daughter, Henrietta, in an endeavour of raw obsession: to breed the next superhorse. But when Allmon Shaughnessy, an ambitious young black man, comes to work on their farm after a stint in prison, the violence of the Forges' history and the exigencies of appetite are brought starkly into view.
"C.E. Morgan has delivered a masterpiece. Rich, deep, and ambitious, this book is, by any standard, a Great American Novel." - Philipp Meyer
Hitman Anders and the Meaning of It All by Jonas Jonasson $34.99
A madcap new novel from the author of The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared!!! It's always awkward when five thousand kronor goes missing. When it happens at a certain grotty hotel in south Stockholm, it's particularly awkward because the money belongs to the hitman currently staying in room seven. Per Persson, the hotel receptionist, just wants to mind his own business, and preferably not get murdered. Johanna Kjellander, temporarily resident in room eight, is a priest without a vocation, and, as of last week, without a parish. But right now she has two things at her disposal: an envelope containing five thousand kronor, and an excellent idea.
Mothering Sunday by Graham Swift $35.00
March 30th 1924. It is Mothering Sunday. How will Jane Fairchild, orphan and housemaid, occupy her time when she has no mother to visit? How, shaped by the events of this never to be forgotten day, will her future unfold?
"With a clear focus on the possibilities of the short form, Graham Swift achieves a delicate harmony between the cool detachment of the narrative voice and the intensity of emotion conveyed on every page. This is a rare read indeed." - Spectator
"Mothering Sunday is a powerful, philosophical and exquisitely observed novel about the lives we lead, and the parallel lives - the parallel stories - we can never know. It may just be Swift's best novel yet." - Observer "Mothering Sunday is bathed in light; and even when tragedy strikes, it blazes irresistibly. Swift's small fiction feels like a masterpiece." - Guardian
A Boy of China: In search of Mao's lost son by Richard Loseby $36.99
Intrigued by stories of a son given away by Mao and his then-wife during the Long March, and mystified by the 'official' explanation of the boy's fate (Whereabouts unknown - No further information available), Loseby sets out alone across China in search of answers. Tracing Mao's own revolutionary journey, the author encounters the extraordinary realities of a new revolution, one that is transforming an ancient culture into a modern economic powerhouse. At the heart of the journey is the hunt for an elusive truth about a brutal and traumatic time in the nation's still raw history. Who was that abandoned boy? Might he still be alive? Would he even want to be found?
SÄr: The essence of Indian design by Swapnaa Tamhane $110.00
The
Indian subcontinent is an amalgamation of peoples, cultures, languages
and philosophies. Throughout history Indian culture has been subject to
myriad different influences, from the Mughal empire to the British Raj
to the now globalized nation in transition. This is a wonderful book!
Granta 135: New Irish Writing $27.99Kevin Barry on Cork, 'as intimate and homicidal as a little Marseille'; Lucy Caldwell imagining forbidden first love in Belfast; an exclusive extract of Colm Toibin's next novel, about growing up in the shadow of a famous father; fiction from Emma Donaghue about Victorian Ireland's miraculous fasting girls; and Sara Baume describing the wild allure and threat of the rural landscape.
The Lonely City: Adventures in the art of being alone by Olivia Laing $39.99
What does it mean to be lonely? How do we live, if we're not intimately engaged with another human being? How do we connect with other people? When Olivia Laing moved to New York City in her mid-thirties, she found herself inhabiting loneliness on a daily basis. Fascinated by the experience, she began to explore the lonely city by way of art. Is aloneness necessary to creativity? Is connectedness an impediment to cultural innovation?
The Raw Kitchen by Olivia Scott $59.99
100 amazing gluten-free, dairy-free, refined sugar-free recipes to nourish you from breakfast to dinner and beyond.
Judge This by Chip Kidd $24.00
First impressions are everything. They dictate whether something stands out, how we engage with it, whether we buy it, and how strongly we feel. This is especially true when it comes to design. And design is all around us, secretly shaping our world in ways we rarely recognise. Except if you yourself are a designer, like Chip Kidd.
>> Design done.
The Blue Touch Paper by David Hare $45.00
"All credit to Hare for giving us his shabbiness as well as his triumphs. By the time he brought down the curtain I had come to understand what a vibrant force he has been for wringing excellence out of people, including himself. The Blue Touch Paper is an engrossing dive into the passions, the disappointments, the quarrels and the elation of a great professional trying to get something done." - New York Times
"An invigorating memoir, an elegantly unvarnished tale." - Guardian
“Frank, moving, and beguiling, The Blue Touch Paper is the fascinating story of becoming a writer in the 1960s and 70s when Britain was changing even faster than the author.”—Joan Didion
The Face: Strangers on a pier by Tash Aw $14.99
From a taxi ride in present-day Bangkok, to eating Kentucky Fried Chicken in 1980s Kuala Lumpur, to his grandfathers' treacherous boat journeys to mainland China in the 1920s, Aw weaves together stories of insiders and outsiders, images from rural villages to megacity nightclubs and voices in a dizzying variety of dialects and slangs.
Final Solution: The fate of the Jews, 1933-1949 by David Cesarini $65.00
Cesarini attempts to deny that Nazi anti-Jewish policy was ‘systematic, consistent or even premeditated’, but rather erratic, local and spontaneous. He also attempts to counter Hannah Arendt's observations of 'the banality of evil'.
Griffith Review 52: Imagining the Future $35.00
It is time to envisage the future, without fear, as a landscape to be won through human striving and expression. Contributors include Al Gore, Tim Flannery, Maria Tumarkin, Anthony Funnel, Margaret Simons, Tony Birch, Don Henry, Ashley Hay, Leah Kaminsky, Graeme Davison, Tony Davis and Jane Gleeson-White.
Here Come the Dogs by Omar Musa $38.00
"A muscular examination of dislocation and disempowerment among the lives of Australian youths on the edge of mainstream society. Musa's blending of poetry and prose is refreshing. His descriptions, polished by his own ventures into hip-hop and songwriting, are at once tender, beautiful, gritty and raw. It is his voice, lyrical and incendiary, that will rise and soar." - The Guardian
"This stunning debut novel has such swaggering exuberance that it will make most other fiction you read this year seem criminally dull. You have been warned." - Irvine Welsh
Instrumental: A memoir of madness, medication and music by James Rhodes $36.99
"A person who has suffered in the way that James Rhodes has suffered, and has struggled to cope with the consequences of his suffering in the way that he has struggled, has the right to tell the world about it. And there is a corresponding public interest in others being able to listen to his life story in all its searing detail." - The Supreme Court
"You might expect James Rhodes to have been crushed by his experiences. On the contrary I don't think I've ever read an autobiography which is this exuberant, this full of life, this addictively readable." - Mark Haddon
"A poet once said great books help you to live your life. They also help you survive your ruin, and James Rhodes's Instrumental is a masterpiece of creative endurance. His passion is his programme, his heart is his true instrument, and you might not read a more moral or more loving book this decade." - Andrew O'Hagan
"Anyone can play Chopin." - Bach
Quiet Power: Growing up as an introvert in a world that can't stop talking by Susan Cain $37.00
Childhood, adolescence and your early twenties are times wrought with insecurity and self-doubt. Your search for your place in the world can seem daunting. Focusing on the strengths and challenges of being introverted, Susan Cain follows up her ground-breaking book Quiet.
The Dog, Ray by Linda Coggin $18.99
Twelve-year-old Daisy has just died in a car crash. But in a twist of fate, and through a heavenly bureaucratic mistake, Daisy ends up not where she is supposed to be - but in the body of a dog. Daisy may now be inhabiting a dog's body, but inside she is still very much Daisy, and is as bouncy, loyal, positive and energetic as she ever was. Daisy's only thought is to somehow be reunited with her parents, who she knows will be missing her. This is how she meets Pip, a boy who is homeless and on his own journey, and a lasting, tender friendship between boy and dog/girl is formed.
David Bowie by Steve Schapiro $69.99
The mostly never-before-published images in Schapiro's rare collection present a glimpse into the intimacy that Schapiro and Bowie shared during their time together in 1974. Bowie and Schapiro kidded and laughed about shooting a series of close-up portraits on a putrid green background because they felt it was the worst possible background colour for a magazine, and so they did on this lark - with the image eventually becoming a People magazine cover.
>> 1974.
>> Also 1974 (a year of changes). This book documents that transition.
The Food I Love: Beautiful, simple food to cook at home by Neil Perry $55.00
>> What does Neil Perry think of New Zealand?
Freddie Mole, Lion Tamer by Alexander McCall Smith $22.99
Freddie is an ordinary boy who joins the circus one day. He can't believe his luck as he is asked to understudy some of the acts. But is he brave enough to go into the lions' cage?
Something Fierce: Memoirs of a revolutionary daughter by Carmen Aguirre $29.99
One minute, 11-year-old Carmen is watching her hippy mum put curlers in for the first time, the next she is being dragged with her sister through LA airport with her mother muttering about 'the patriarchy' under her breath. The three of them board a plane that takes them to Peru, next door to the Chile from which the family had fled after Pinochet's coup. Eight days after landing in Lima, and still perplexed by their mother's disguises and lies, they're off again, on a bus bound they know not where. They are then to spend most of the next decade, the 1980s, moving from dictatorship to dictatorship, evading capture, torture and peril at every turn. It is no way to spend your teenage years, until, overnight, it becomes the way Carmen herself chooses.
>> Challenging Latino stereotypes.
Harry Watson, The Mile Eater by Jonathan Kennett $25.00
He won more road cycling championships than any other New Zealander, before or since. Watson's most interesting claim to fame, however, was racing in the grueling 1928 Tour de France, and finishing in 28th position. That year the course consisted of 5377 kilometres of gravel, sealed and cobbled roads. Only a quarter of the field managed to finish. If you've read The Invisible Mile, you'll want to read this!
Alice Jones: The impossible clue by Sarah Rubin $18.00
Maths-whizz Alice has already solved a mystery or two. Persuaded by wannabe sidekick Sammy to investigate a scientist's disappearance, she's soon entangled in her trickiest case yet. Dr Learner is reputed to have invented an invisibility suit, but is whacky science really to blame for his vanishing?
Let There be Water: Israel's solution for a water-starved world by Seth Siegel $44.99
60 percent of the earth's land surface-will soon face alarming gaps between available water and the growing demand for it. Without action, food prices will rise, economic growth will slow, and political instability is likely to follow. In Israel this problem is nothing new. Even with 60 percent of its country made up of desert, Israel has not only solved its water problem; it also had an abundance of water and supplies its neighbours. How has this been done? What can the rest of the world learn from it?
The Genius of Birds by Jennifer Ackerman $39.99
Birds - they're not just a feathered face! Jennifer Ackerman presents the latest research on bird intelligence and reveals that birds are much, much smarter than we ever supposed. Bird brains, it turns out, are mostly made of sophisticated information processing systems that work in much the same way as our own cerebral cortices. Whether it's making complex navigations, singing in regional accents, or joking around with humans, birds are capable of high-level abstract thinking, problem-solving, remembering, learning by example, recognising faces, and even conversing in a meaningful way - all with brains so tiny each would fit inside a walnut.
Gorillas in Our Midst by Richard Fairgray and Terry Jones $27.00
You never know when there might be a gorilla around. Gorillas can be hard to spot, because they are masters of disguise and really good at hiding. Gorillas often have jobs where they get to wear masks - that's why so many gorillas are surgeons, astronauts, scuba divers, and ninjas.
A charismatic, well-respected doctor by day, Tim Elliott's father became a roaring madman at night.
The Photographer's Wife by Suzanne Joinson $29.99
erusalem, 1920: in an already fractured city, eleven-year-old Prudence feels the tension rising as her architect father launches an ambitious - and wildly eccentric - plan to redesign the Holy City by importing English parks to the desert. Prue, known as the 'little witness', eavesdrops underneath the tables of tearooms and behind the curtains of the dance-halls of the city's elite, watching everything but rarely being watched herself. Around her, British colonials, exiled Armenians and German officials rub shoulders as they line up the pieces in a political game: a game destined to lead to disaster. When Prue's father employs a British pilot, William Harrington, to take aerial photographs of the city, Prue is uncomfortably aware of the attraction that sparks between him and Eleanora, the English wife of a famous Jerusalem photographer. And, after Harrington learns that Eleanora's husband is a nationalist, intent on removing the British, those sparks are fanned dangerously into a flame. Years later, in 1937, Prue is an artist living a reclusive life by the sea with her young son, when Harrington pays her a surprise visit.
Soon by Timothy Knapman and Patrick Benson $19.99
Little tired Raju keeps asking, "When can we go home again?" and, each time, his mummy replies, "Soon".
Hot Dudes Reading $39.99
Pictures of men with books all over New York.
>> It began with this Instagram account.
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