Friday 30 November 2012

The Spaces Between by Russell Haley

Lulled by a great cover, an author who has also published poetry and a story set in contemporary Auckland, I was more than a little disconcerted to feel as though I’d landed amidst a chronicled video-game as the story bounced around between realities. I stuck with it as the main premise had reeled me in: a man wakes up in a dubious medical institution on Auckland’s North Shore after apparently being beaten up in downtown Fort St. But things are definitely not what they seem. ...Posted by Hastings Book Chat


 About the Author

In a writing career of over 30 years, Russell Haley has published several collections of short stories - one of which was co-published by Victoria University Press and New Directions in New York. His four previous novels were critically successful and his biography of New Zealand painter Patrick Hanley was an award-winniing book in 1989. Haley has held the Auckland University Writing Fellowship and the Katherine Mansfield Fellowhip in Menton. ....Wheelers 

Other Reviews 



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The Spaces Between by Russell Haley, 2012

 Other books by Russell Haley in our Catalogue


Tuesday 27 November 2012

RIP Bryce Courtenay

Byrce Courtenay was an excellent storyteller and writer who will be sadly missed by all his many fans.  His books are hugely popular with library members.

Here is a tribute from his publishers:

It is with sadness Penguin Group (Australia) wish to advise that Bryce Courtenay AM passed away peacefully at 11:30pm on Thursday 22 November in Canberra with his wife Christine, son Adam and his beloved pets Tim, the dog, and Cardamon, the Burmese cat by his side. He was 79.

Christine Courtenay said this morning, “We’d like to thank all of Bryce’s family and friends and all of his fans around the world for their love and support for me and his family as he wrote the final chapter of his extraordinary life. And may we make a request for privacy as we cherish his memory.”

Gabrielle Coyne, Chief Executive Officer, Penguin Group (Australia) said, “It has been our great privilege to be Bryce’s publisher for the past 15 years. We, as well as his many fans will forever miss Bryce’s indomitable spirit, his energy and his commitment to storytelling.”

Bob Sessions, Bryce Courtenay’s long standing Publisher at Penguin said, “Bryce took up writing in his fifties, after a successful career in advertising. His output and his professionalism made him a pleasure to work with, and I’m happy to say he became a good friend, referring to me as ‘Uncle Bob’, even when we were robustly negotiating the next book contract. He was a born storyteller, and I would tell him he was a ‘latter-day Charles Dickens’, with his strong and complex plots, larger-than-life characters, and his ability to appeal to a large number of readers.
“Virtually each year for the last 15 years, I have worked with Bryce on a new novel. He would write a 600 page book in around six months, year in, year out. To achieve that feat he used what he called ‘bum glue’, sometimes writing for more than 12 hours a day. He brought to writing his books the same determination and dedication he showed in the more than 40 marathons he ran, most of them when he was well over 50. Not to have a new Bryce Courtenay novel to work on will leave a hole in my publishing life. Not to have Bryce Courtenay in my life, will be to miss the presence of a very special friend.”

The last word belongs to Bryce himself. In a moving epilogue in his final book, Bryce said to readers “It’s been a privilege to write for you and to have you accept me as a storyteller in your lives. Now, as my story draws to an end, may I say only, ‘Thank you. You have been simply wonderful.’

23 Nov 2012  - Media Statement- Issued by Penguin Group (Australia) on behalf of Christine Courtenay
_____________________________________________


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Bryce Courtenay's books  & talking books





Monday 26 November 2012

Costa Book Awards Shortlists Announced

The Costa Book Awards recognise the most enjoyable books in five categories – First Novel, Novel, Biography, Poetry and Children’s Book - published in the last year by writers based in the UK and Ireland.

Originally established in 1971 as the Whitbread Literary Awards, Costa announced its takeover of the sponsorship of the UK's most prestigious book prize in 2006. 2012 marks the 41st year of the Book Awards.

This year’s Costa Book Awards attracted 550 entries.

Winners in the five categories, who each receive £5,000.  The overall winner of the Costa Book of the Year 2012 will receive £30,000.

The winner of the inaugural Costa Short Story Award, voted for by the public, will also be announced at the Awards ceremony in London on 29 January 2013. The shortlisted six stories for the Costa Short Story Award will be revealed on the Costa Book Awards websiteon Tuesday 27 November.

Read more at the Costa website:  www.costabookawards.com
 

COSTA BOOK AWARDS 2012 SHORTLISTS 

 

2012 Costa Novel Award shortlist 


2012 Costa First Novel Award shortlist 

  • J W  Ironmonger - The Notable Brain of Maximilian Ponder
  • Jess Richards - Snake Ropes
  • Francesca Segal - The Innocents
  • Benjamin Wood - The Bellwether Revivals 

2012 Costa Biography Award shortlist 

  • Artemis Cooper - Patrick Leigh-Fermor: An Adventure
  • Selina Guinness - The Crocodile by the Door: The Story of a House, a Farm and a Family 
  • Kate Hubbard  - Serving Victoria: Life in the Royal Household
  • Mary Talbot and BryanTalbot - Dotter of Her Father’s Eyes 

2012 Costa Poetry Award shortlist 

  • Sean Borodale - Bee Journal
  • Julia Copus - The World’s Two Smallest Human
  • Selima Hill - People Who Like Meatballs
  • Kathleen Jamie - The Overhaul 

2012 Costa Children’s Book Award shortlist 

  • Sally Gardner - Maggot Moon
  • Diana Hendry - The Seeing 
  • Hayley Long - What’s Up with Jody Barton? 
  • Dave Shelton - A Boy and a Bear in a Boat

Friday 23 November 2012

Year of the flood by Margaret Atwood

Margaret Atwood surely needs no introduction and once again she weaves a complex and intriguing tale. Her intelligence, environmentalist beliefs and scientific background are on full display.
 In “The Year of the Flood” she has created a believable world in the not-too-distant future - a post-apocalyptic world where strange creatures roam. Creatures that were the product of man’s mass intervention, cross-breeding species resulting in atrocities such as green rabbits and “liolam” (yes, a lion crossed with a lamb) to name just two. 
As usual her sense of humour is apparent, lifting this book from what could be macabre and depressing.  One example: A Health and Beauty Clinic in this new world is called Anoo Yoo Spa in the Park. 
The novel is narrated mostly by two main characters and is interwoven with lyrics from “The Gods’ Gardener’s Oral Hymnbook”. Oryx and Crake and Jimmy from earlier novels make an appearance late in the piece but you will lose nothing if you have not read the earlier works.

John Updike of The New Yorker wrote of this book: “scarcely a sentence of her quick, dry yet avid prose fails to do useful work, adding to a picture that becomes enormous.”
About the Author - Margaret Atwood

Margaret Attwood lives in Toronto, Canada and has won literary awards too numerous to list including: The Booker, The Man Booker and The Orange.  
Margaret Atwood's website:  www.margaretatwood.ca
Official website for Year of the Flood:  yearoftheflood.com/ca
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Year of the flood by Margaret Attwood, 2009

Thursday 22 November 2012

Notes from a Big Country by Bill Bryson, audiobook


After nearly two decades in England, the world’s best loved travel writer returned to live in the country he had left as a youth. Of course there were things Bryson missed about Blighty, but any sense of loss was countered by the joy of rediscovering some of the forgotten treasures of his childhood. So, gathered here, are eighteen months’ worth of his popular columns from the Mail on Sunday’s Night & Day magazine about the strangest of phenomenal the American way of life.   [Description on ePukapuka] 

Notes from a Big Country by Bill Bryson, 1999,



Bill Bryson's official website: www.billbryson.co.uk

Audiobooks are great to listen to while gardening, doing housework, or even just lazing around.  There's something special about being read to, especially by the author.  ePukapuka Overdrive has a growing collection - just check it out, download and listen on your computer or mobile device.

Wednesday 21 November 2012

Publishers Book Expo

Join us tonight at the Havelock North Library to preview a stunning range of new and upcoming books from some of New Zealands top publishers.

This year's special guest is local author Janet Luke, author of
Green Urban Living

Get your bookgroups together and come on down to enjoy a glass of wine and some great reads! .


Where?    Havelock North Library
When?    Wednesday 21 November 2012, starts 
Time?      6.45pm to start at 7.00pm
Tickets?  $5.00 each - available in the libraries or on the night. 

Read about Janet Luke at her website: www.greenurbanliving.co.nz/index.php?CID=100019

Monday 19 November 2012

The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

Click here to view title details for The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

The Hunger Games Series, Book 1
by Suzanne Collins 


Now available as an eBook on ePukapuka Overdrive!

Every year, twelve boys and twelve girls are chosen to take part in the Hunger Games. Watched by the entire nation, this is action-packed reality TV at its most exciting - and most dangerous. Katniss Everdeen has grown up struggling to save the people close to her. Now she faces the biggest challenge of all - the fight for her life. Winning will make you famous. Losing means certain death. [Description on ePukapuka] 


What is ePukapuka?
www.hastingslibrary.co.nz/ebooks-and-audiobooks-are-available  

Friday 9 November 2012

Moranthology by Caitlin Moran

Moran published her first book ‘How to be a Woman’ - part humorous memoir and part feminist manifesto – to much success. Capitalising on that, Moranthology is a collection of her most successful and contemporary columns that she has written for British newspaper, The Times.
It’s a vast, amusing range of her rants, raves, and reviews. This book is like having your Friday night glass of wine with your witty best-friend on tap, anytime you like. She moons over the Sherlock series, enjoys lampooning Julian Fellowe's het-up Downton script, recounts her award winning interview with Lady Gaga and likens British Prime Minister, David Cameron, to a ‘C3PO made of ham’.
Despite this obvious and understandable dislike for the British leader (she was raised in a Labour-leaning family of ten in a council house), her writing sparkles with the joy of being alive, curiosity, and warmth for humanity we all respond to. Interspersed amongst the frivolity are columns that tackle more serious subjects. Despite going up the social ladder, she’s a champion of the people and writes directly and personally on issues such as benefit cuts, mental illness and library closures. But like all good relationships, these are kept firmly on a high positive to negative ratio.
Her writing is like a mini-whirlwind, an impression of the world caught in 60 seconds, leaving you wondering at the speed and busyness of life, yet buoyantly uplifted and refreshed for another round. I am now an avid fan and desperate for more Moran. My advice – read soon!  ...Posted by Spot

About the Author  - Caitlin Moran

Caitlin Moran had literally no friends in 1990, and so had plenty of time to write her first novel,The Chronicles of Narmo, at the age of 15. At 16 she joined music weekly,Melody Maker, and at 18 briefly presented the pop show 'Naked City' on Channel 4. Following this precocious start she then put in 18 solid years as a columnist onThe Times- as a TV critic and in the most-read part of the paper, the 'Celebrity Watch'. The eldest of eight children, home-educated in a council house in Wolverhampton, Caitlin isn't really her name. She was christened 'Catherine'. But she saw 'Caitlin' in a Jilly Cooper novel when she was 13 and thought it looked exciting. That's why she pronounces it incorrectly: 'Catlin'. It causes trouble for everyone. (Random House, New Zealand)


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Moranthology by Caitlin Moran


Thursday 8 November 2012

2013 Commonwealth Book Prize and Commonwealth Short Story Prize Open

The Commonwealth Book Prize is awarded for the best first book and the Commonwealth Short Story Prize for the best piece of unpublished short fiction.

The prizes are open to Commonwealth citizens aged 18 and over. The entries must be in English. The 2013 Commonwealth Book Prize closing date is Tuesday 18 December 2012 (12 noon GMT) and 2013 Commonwealth Short Story Prize closing date is Tuesday 4 December 2012 (12 noon GMT)'

Please visit www.commonwealthwriters.org/prizes/ for further information and the online entry form.