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Reviewed by Gillian, Berkelouw Books Mona Vale
Somewhere around the beginning of the twentieth century, Susan Cain argues, Americans changed from a "culture of character", where the ideal self was serious, disciplined and private, to a "culture of personality" where people began to focus more on how other people perceived them. This, in Cain'... (continued)
Reviewed by Sarah, Berkelouw Books, Mona Vale
Thirteen year old Conor is woken every night at seven minutes past midnight by a monster outside his bedroom window. Conor has been having the same nightmare every night since his mother started her treatments, but there's a twist - this monster is ancient and wild and has become a part of Conor'... (continued)
Reviewed by Sarah, Berkelouw Books, Mona Vale
This is a book about Australia and how the land was formed. It describes the land's transformation as animals and humans inhabit and adapt it to suit their needs and like Window by Jeannie Baker there is the same environmental message that there is a cost to development. In this book though the l... (continued)
Reviewed by Sarah, Berkelouw Books, Mona Vale
Little Mouse finds a delicious apple and decides to keep it a secret from his friends by burying it in the ground. A beautifully illustrated story aimed at 3-5 year olds, this book teaches us that it's far better to share amongst friends than keep things all to oneself. (continued)
Reviewed by Gillian, Berkelouw Books, Mona Vale
Opposite the title page of The Chemistry of Tears there is a list of 17 books under the heading "Also by Peter Carey". I've read 15 of them, usually falling on them greedily on the day of publication. In my opinion Carey writers two types of books - great ones and good ones. Parrot and Olivier in... (continued)
Reviewed by Gillian, Berkelouw Books, Mona Vale
Louise Hawson is an inspiring person who, in 2009-2010, produced a blog, that grew into an exhibition and finally blossomed into a beautiful book. Her project was to visit a new Sydney suburb every week for a year and to photograph the people, places and objects that interested her. Her particul... (continued)
Reviewed by Gillian, Berkelouw Books, Mona Vale
I finally picked up this handsome volume when I realised it was the basis for the new film Hugo, direct by the venerable Martin Scorsese. What a treat was in store! Set in a time between the world wars, the story describes Hugo Cabret's life hidden in the bowels of the Montparnasse railway stati... (continued)
Reviewed by Gillian, Berkelouw Books, Mona Vale
It's 1938 and Pat Donlon is filled with the conviction that he can paint in a wholly new and Australian way. He is contemptuous of local art schools, newly married, extremely poor and ready to risk rejection he asks an art patron for money. Humiliated he finds himself in the office of Arthur Lain... (continued)
Reviewed by Gillian, Berkelouw Books Mona Vale
I know of no other character in Australian fiction who has come so completely and plausibly into our lives as Edith Campbell Berry - the heroine of three Moorhouse novels written in the last 25 years. Journalist Annabel Crabb launched the third instalment in Edith's story dressed as Berry. In hi... (continued)
Reviewed by Gillian, Berkelouw Books, Mona Vale
Winner of the 2001 Miles Franklin Award this book was published seven years after Grand Days. Dark Palace takes us back to Geneva, pre-World War II where Edith’s marriage to the journalist Robert Dole is slowly unravelling. Edith is despondent that the League’s efforts to bring about ... (continued)
Reviewed by Gillian, Berkelouw Books Mona Vale
Edith Campbell Berry heading from Paris to Geneva by train meets Englishman Ambrose Westwood. She is an Australian on her way to take up a position with The League of Nations. Major Ambrose Westwood is a doctor who served in World War I, a former British Foreign Office executive he also works at ... (continued)
Reviewed by Gillian, Berkelouw Books Mona Vale
Did you know that there was such a great demand from the sex industry in Japan for authentic JAL flight attendant uniforms that the company issued numbered uniforms which had to be returned for destruction at the end of their useful life? The introduction of quirky snippets of informatio... (continued)
Reviewed by Sarah, Berkelouw Books Mona Vale
“You were born to be Fifth Keeper. It is your Destiny” Goldie Roth has returned home to the City of Jewel with her best friend Toadspit. As a thief and a liar, Goldie was able to use her skills to overcome the brizzlehound and save the Museum of Dunt from t... (continued)
Reviewed by Taegan, Berkelouw Books Mona Vale
This much anticipated new novel from the acclaimed author of ‘The English Patient’, takes us aboard a cruise liner, making the long journey from Sri Lanka to London. Our protagonist is Michael, an eleven-year-old boy who has found himself travelling alone, presumably to be re... (continued)
Reviewed by Gillian, Berkelouw Mona Vale
Cloud Atlas is a sextet performed by one virtuoso –author David Mitchell. Five sections of the sextet are enacted in two parts which frame a sixth central episode. The novel begins and ends with The Pacific Journal of Adam Ewing, a diary written by a mid-nineteenth century t... (continued)The Berkelouw family has traded in books for generations. Read about our family history.
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