
Book Review: Done and Dusted
A debut to be proud of! This small-town brother’s best friend cowboy romance was such a wonderful introduction to country love stories!

A debut to be proud of! This small-town brother’s best friend cowboy romance was such a wonderful introduction to country love stories!

Hazelwood masterfully combines romance and intrigue, making this novel a must-read for paranormal romance fans or those new to the genre.

Gay expertly walks the tightrope of light and shade, dispensing wit at appropriate times while not shying away from the sombre and harrowing.

Even those who have never played will feel inspired to rattle some dice, dream up a character and enlist their friends to try something new.

Where lesser novels try to disguise a lack of substance, Pokwatka chooses to explore the inner worlds that multiple realities can mine.

Reading this at the tail-end of winter only served to sharpen the vitality and poignancy of this generous and moving novel.

Georgie follows her dream & stands up to her family to earn the respect she deserves, with the help of her brother’s best friend.

If you seek out novels for their deep dives into character and emotion, you’ll find a lot to love about this gorgeous, heavy, rhythmic book.

Fragmented, poetic and experimental – the kind of book you’ll want to pore over multiple times to sink back into.

Moving seamlessly across time, it sews together two experiences of queerness; one embraced and one repressed, both equally as devastating.

I adored this STEM love story! With a past betrayal and deception, this story is both plot AND romance heavy.

Told through multiple points of view, Generation Ship is a tale of community, power and the resilience of humanity.

Crosley utilises her humour, wit, and brutal honestly, and takes the awful experiences of loss and makes them reassuring and insightful.

It’s fun, it’s compulsive, it has a plot that is both dramatic and easy to follow and makes it all too easy to turn that next page.

Clark skilfully explores teenage friendship and manipulation, 2010’s internet culture, and the politics of class with a sharp eye.

The pacing is fantastic, building tension and a connection between Raeve and Kaan that is both raw and beautiful

Written as a biography of a fictional artist, this book is a wild experiment in history-making & the relationship between fact and fiction.

Ali Hazelwood strikes again with another science-y rom-com! Bee is such a loveable character. Nerdy, witty and deeply romantic.

Switching between the Old Woman’s present as she haunts a young man and her past, we get to see her slow and steady descent into villainy.

Through understated prose and a deep care for her characters, Dinan explores the challenges and rewards of being vulnerable.