The Book Show

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The Book Show

Your favourite fiction authors share the story behind their latest books.

  1. 3 DAYS AGO

    Alan Moore's delirious new fantasy The Great When

    Comic book legend, Alan Moore has renounced comics for novels and his new book The Great When uncovers a secret, fictional London. Rosalie Ham returns with a prequel to her bestselling novel The Dressmaker, and why Tigest Girma wrote a black vampire novel. British author Alan Moore has created iconic comics including Watchmen, V for Vendetta, From Hell, and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. He has since distanced himself from comics, however, and today puts his creative energy into being a magician and novelist. His new novel, The Great When is set in the years after World War Two, and imagines a secret London hidden within the city. Alan shares his wonder about our endless imagination and his memories of post-war England. Australian author Rosalie Ham returns to some of her characters in The Dressmaker series which began in 2000 and was later made into a film starring Kate Winslet and Judy Davis. It was followed by The Dressmaker's Secret and now the prequel is out, called Molly. The action starts in 1914 Melbourne against the backdrop of the first world war at a time of uncomfortable corsets and protests for women's suffrage. Sarah L'Estrange visits Rosalie Ham in her Melbourne home to find out more about her creative process. Tigest Girma is an Ethiopian writer based in Melbourne and her debut novel Immortal Dark is about vampires, race and revenge. And in September the novel hit number one on the New York Times young adult hardcover bestseller list which is an amazing achievement for a debut Australian novelist.

    54 min
  2. 17 NOV

    Roddy Doyle and the character who's stayed with him

    Booker Prize winner Roddy Doyle returns to the character Paula Spencer who first appeared in his fiction in the 1990s, we visit author of The Wedding Forecast Nina Kenwood in her seaside childhood home and Michelle de Kretser pushes the boundaries of fiction in Theory and Practice.    Roddy Doyle is an Irish novelist and Booker Prize winner (Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha). His latest novel is the last in a trio of books that he began almost 30 years ago. In 1996 he published The Woman Who Walked into Doors, where he introduced the character of Paula Spencer. Paula was a young woman living with a violent husband. He brought her back in the 2006 novel, named, Paula Spencer. Now she and her daughter Nicola are back in The Women Behind the Door. Roddy speaks about why writing difficult conversations is so satisfying as a novelist. Australian rom-com author Nina Kenwood takes The Book Show to her childhood home in the Victorian seaside village of Queenscliffe where her love of reading and writing was fostered. Nina explains why the main character in her latest novel, The Wedding Forecast is also a writer and how Nina focuses as much on getting the comedy right as the romance in her fiction. Michelle de Kretser is a two-time winner of the Miles Franklin literary award and is one of our country's most celebrated authors. Lately, Michelle has been set on redefining what exactly a novel can be. Theory and Practice is advertised as a novel but its narrator bears a strong resemblance to the author. Is it a novel, a memoir or something else altogether?

    54 min
  3. 10 NOV

    Garry Disher, Emily Maguire and David Dyer on a milestone, a myth and the moon landing

    Australian crime writer Garry Disher has been writing for almost 50 years but has only recently been able to make a living and now he's published his 60th book, Sanctuary. Emily Maguire explores the medieval urban legend of a female pope in Rapture and in his novel, This Kingdom of Dust, David Dyer imagines what might've happened if the Apollo 11 mission didn't go to plan. Australian crime-writing legend, Garry Disher has just published his 60th book in a career that ranges over four decades and began at a time when the cultural cringe towards Australian crime fiction meant it wasn't as popular as it is today. His latest novel Sanctuary draws on a side character, Grace, from his Peninsula Crime novels, that he couldn't let go. Garry shares how his love of writing began in childhood when his father told nightly bedtime stories with cliff hangers. David Dyer's first novel, The Midnight Watch, was about the tragedy of the Titanic, and his second novel takes up another iconic event of the 20th century, the 1969 moon landing. In This Kingdom of Dust David imagines an alternative ending for the Apollo 11 mission.  Australian author Emily Maguire's latest novel, Rapture, is a work of historical fiction and is a sharp turn for Emily, who has made her name with contemporary novels, including Love Objects and her Miles Franklin shortlisted novel, An Isolated Incident. Rapture takes up the story of Joan, the female Pope. According to the legend, Pope Joan disguised herself as a man, followed a lover to a monastery and ended up rising to the throne of St Peter.

    54 min
  4. 27 OCT

    Robbie Arnott, Fiona McFarlane and Malcolm Knox on wild cats, crime and satire

    A wild puma stalks through Robbie Arnott's haunting new novel, Dusk, Fiona McFarlane's homage to true crime podcasts in Highway 13 and Malcolm Knox raises the stakes in a Soviet era political thriller, The First Friend. Australian author Robbie Arnott has published four novels, and two of them — The Rain Heron and Limberlost — have been shortlisted for the Miles Franklin Literary Award. His latest novel, Dusk, is a Western and it's about two siblings who are on the trail of a wild puma that's been terrorising local graziers. Robbie tells Claire about his fascination with the natural world and why he aims to capture animals "as they are, not what we want them to be". Highway 13 is a crime novel with a difference, it's about the ripple effects of a serial killer's crimes - but not the crime itself - and is the fourth book by Australian born, US based author Fiona McFarlane. It's loosely based on the case of Australian serial killer Ivan Milat but is structured as interlinked stories about the murderer's former neighbours, the sister of his former wife and the brother of one of his victims. There's even a story written in the style of a true crime podcast.  Malcolm Knox is an award winning Australian journalist and novelist and his latest book The First Friend is a Soviet era satirical thriller. It draws on Malcolm's own interest in Russian fiction and history. It's a lesson in how to raise the literary stakes for fictional characters.

    54 min
  5. 13 OCT

    Grande Dames Pat Barker and Kate Atkinson

    Former Booker Prize winner Pat Barker grapples with the lot of Cassandra in her latest Ancient Greek novel, The Voyage Home and Life After Life author, Kate Atkinson, returns to her famous character Jackson Brodie in Death at the Sign of The Rook. Plus debut novelist Raeden Richardson on the importance of Melbourne's iconic Degraves Street in The Degenerates. Booker Prize winner Pat Barker is renowned for her World War One Regeneration trilogy. Her latest series draws on the mythology of the Ancient Greek Trojan War (Silence of the Girls and The Women of Troy) to re-imagine the lives of the women often sidelined in these myths. The latest, The Voyage Home, inhabits the plight of prophetess Cassandra, who's destined to never be believed. Pat reflects on the urgency she feels to write and why she's drawn to the tragedy of Clytemnestra. Kate Atkinson is another legend of British fiction who's celebrated for her books Life After Life, A God in Ruins and Transcription. Kate also writes crime fiction and has released the sixth novel in her Jackson Brodie series, Death at the Sign of The Rook. It's set at a manor house where a murder mystery show is underway. She tells Claire how a character she imagined 20 years ago finally made it into this book.  Melbourne author Raeden Richardson describes his debut novel The Degenerates as a love letter to the city. It's about a woman known as Mother Pulse who gives new life to the stories of social outcasts. Raeden takes The Book Show to the iconic Degraves Street, one of the key landmarks in the book and explains how its multi layered history influenced the story.

    54 min

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Your favourite fiction authors share the story behind their latest books.

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