The Bookshelf

ABC Australia

What are you reading, loving or being challenged by? We review the latest in fiction for dedicated readers and for those who wish they read more.

  1. APR 24

    On the Shelf: Inga Simpson, Asako Yuzuki, Helen Bain and more

    This week The Bookshelf leans into the wild as Kate Evans and guests are circled by stories of wolves, wild boar and witches, along with the final year of celebrated poet Sylvia Plath and a sensual story of food and obsession from Japan. Kate is joined by regular guests, the novelist, poet and Professor of Australian literature Tony Birch; and critic Beejay Silcox, who arrives fresh from the U.K. ready to talk literary pilgrimages and bookish souvenirs. Plus, a bonus discussion on this year's Stella Prize shortlist. ~ BOOKS REVIEWED Inga Simpson, Once We Were Wildlife: Stories, HachetteSarah Walker, The Water Takes, Summit BooksAsako Yuzuki, Hooked, translated from the Japanese by Polly Barton, Fourth EstateHelen Bain, The Daffodil Days, BloomsburySally O’Reilly, Hagtale, Scribe~ 2026 Stella Prize shortlist Evelyn Araluen, The Rot, UQPGeraldine Brooks, Memorial Days, HachetteMiranda Darling, Fireweather, ScribeLee Lai, Cannon, GiramondoMarika Sosnowski, 58 Facets: On violence and the Law, Melbourne University Press  Tasma Walton, I am Nannertgarrook, Simon & SchusterNOTE: the winner will be announced on 13 May  ~ OTHER BOOKS MENTIONED Ian McEwan, What We Can KnowCormac McCarthy, The RoadKim Williams, Dead Man DanceJohn Higgs, Lynchian: The Spell of David LynchAsako Yuzuki, ButterMieko Kawakami, Breasts and EggsSayaka Murata, Convenience Store Woman; EarthlingsEmi Yagi, Diary of a VoidColum McCann, worksFiona McFarlane, Highway 13Guillaume Lecasble, Lobster Lucie Rico, Fowl EulogiesRobin Robertson, The Long TakeJenni Fagan, The DelusionsJames Alistair Henry, PagansLaurie Colwin, Shine On Bright and Dangerous ObjectTracy Chevalier, Burning Bright ~ CREDITS Presenter, Kate EvansProducer, Kate Evans and Sarah CorbettSound, Roi Huberman and Tegan NichollsArts Editor, Rhiannon Brown

    1h 8m
  2. APR 10

    Steve Toltz: A Rising of the Lights + Ben Lerner: Transcription + Siân Hughes: No Such Thing as Monday, and plenty more (REVIEWERS: Michael Robotham & Geordie Williamson)

    Memory, lost conversations and almost-fathers-and sons in Ben Lerner's Transcription; children divided by the throw of a dice, and that's just the start of it, in Steve Toltz's A Rising of the Lights; no such thing as unskilled labour, in Siân Hughes' No Such Thing as Monday, where a woman works as a drycleaner, trying desperately to rid herself of the stains of her childhood; new crime releases, and an Australian in Hollywood is reconsidered. Kate and Cassie with reviewers Michael Robotham and Geordie Williamson. BOOKS Ben Lerner, Transcription, Granta Steve Toltz, A Rising of the Lights, Penguin Siân Hughes, No Such Thing as Monday, Penguin Tana French, The Keeper, Viking Penguin Candice Fox, Redbelly Crossing, Penguin Patricia A. O'Brien, Errol Flynn: The true story of Australia's Hollywood Icon, Allen & Unwin [Keep scrolling for other books and writers mentioned in the discussion] GUESTS Michael Robotham is an internationally-acclaimed crime writer whose books include the Joseph O'Loughlan and Evie Cormac series. His latest novel is The White Crow — and his next one, Tell Me Something True, will be his first to be set in Australia Geordie Wiliamson is a literary critic, writer and publisher at Picador, whose books include a critical study of Alexis Wright in the Black Inc Writers on Writers series; and The Burning Library — on neglected Australian writers Other books mentioned in the discussion Karl Ove Knausgård, works Rachel Cusk, works W G Sebald, works Alexander Kluge, works David Foster Wallace, works Jonathan Franzen, works Wallace Stevens, works Les Murray, works Saul Bellow, works Philip Roth, works P D James, works Agatha Christie, works Sam Twyford-Moore, Cast Mates: Australian Actors in Hollywood and at Home CREDITS Presenters: Kate Evans and Cassie McCullaghProducers: Kate Evans, Sarah Corbett, Tracey TrompfSound Engineers: Craig Tilmouth, Roi HubermanA/ Arts Editor: Sarah Corbett

    1h 1m
  3. MAR 20

    John Lanchester: Look What You Made Me Do + Lauren Groff: Brawler + Mary Costello: A Beautiful Loan (REVIEWERS: Hannah Kent and Tim Rogers)

    What if the most talked‑about streaming show of the moment was a mirror reflecting your most private fears and failures? That unnerving question sits at the heart of John Lanchester’s Look What You Made Me Do, a sharp novel about resentment, revenge, money, class and generational unease. Plus: the art of the short story, as Hannah Kent reads and reflects on Lauren Groff’s new collection Brawler; and a woman’s inner life rendered with quiet and devastating precision in Mary Costello’s A Beautiful Loan. BOOKS John Lanchester, Look What You Made Me Do, FaberLauren Groff, Brawler, Hutchinson HeinemannMary Costello, A Beautiful Loan, TextGUESTS Hannah Kent, novelist behind the phenomenon Burial Rites + The Good People, Devotion and Always Home, Always HomesickTim Rogers, author of Detours; frontman of You Am I, The Hard-Ons and various musical escapades. His solo tour Le Charme Defensif kicks off this weekOTHER BOOKS MENTIONED Andrew O'Hagan, Caledonian RoadCharlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre, Emily Brontë, Wuthering HeightsMichelle de Krester, Theory and PracticeJacqueline Maley, Lonely MouthErin Somers, The Ten Year Affair James Joyce, The Dubliners; The Dead Thomas Mann, The Magic MountainColm Tóibín, The MagicianSteve Hanley, The Big Midweek: Life Inside the FallCREDITS Presenter: Kate Evans, Cassie McCullaghProducer: Kate Evans, Sarah CorbettSound: Craig Tilmouth, Antonia GauciArts editor; Sarah L'Estrange

    59 min
4.5
out of 5
32 Ratings

About

What are you reading, loving or being challenged by? We review the latest in fiction for dedicated readers and for those who wish they read more.

More From ABC Podcasts

You Might Also Like