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Invisible Boys (Holden Sheppard, Fremantle Press)

Released October 2019

In the coastal town of Geraldton, several young men struggle with the restrictions placed on them by culture, parental expectations and peer pressure. With the threat of violence a constant,... Read more

My Folks Grew Up in the ’80s (Robin Feiner, illus by Beck Feiner, ABC Books)

Released October 2019

From the first glance of this picture book, those of us (particularly Generation Xers) who grew up in the 80s know we’re in for a treat. There, on the cover,... Read more

Ghost Bird (Lisa Fuller, UQP)

Released October 2019

Lisa Fuller was the recipient of the 2017 David Unaipon Award for an Unpublished Indigenous Writer for Ghost Bird. In this young adult novel, Stacey Thomson’s twin sister, Laney, is... Read more

Windcatcher (Diane Jackson Hill, illus by Craig Smith, CSIRO Publishing)

Released October 2019

Windcatcher is the story of the migration of the short-tailed shearwater. In particular, the solo offspring of bird number 625. Her mother was tagged with a metal leg band so... Read more

The Lost Stone of SkyCity (H M Waugh, Fremantle Press)

Released October 2019

When the princess of the terrifying, fabled Ice-People kidnaps Danam, claiming him as her prophesied protector, his friend Sunaya knows she’s the only one who can rescue him. But it’s... Read more

Act of Grace (Anna Krien, Black Inc.)

Released October 2019

Anna Krien’s debut novel is an ambitious and compelling study of trauma and how it’s transferred and inherited, told through the points of view of four disparate but interconnected characters.... Read more

Paris Savages (Katherine Johnson, Ventura)

Released October 2019

Katherine Johnson’s fourth novel is a poignant imagining of the true story of three young Aboriginal people—Bonny, Dorondera and Jurano—who in 1882 agree to tour Europe with German engineer Hans... Read more

Bruny (Heather Rose, A&U)

Released October 2019

Set in a near future, Heather Rose’s latest book is a work of political intrigue that samples current events and headlines. A diplomat returns to her Tasmanian hometown, charged with... Read more

Womerah Lane: Lives and landscapes (Tom Carment, Giramondo)

Released October 2019

Tom Carment’s Womerah Lane is a lively and pensive personal history, chronicling 30 years of life and art from one of Australia’s most well-known landscape artists. Taking an episodic, essayistic... Read more

Her Kind of Luck (Michelle Balogh, Brio)

Released October 2019

When Michelle Balogh’s great-grandmother Shan-Yi dies, Balogh moves into her apartment temporarily. Struggling with depression, the opportunity to live in the luxurious Sydney home provides a welcome change, but it... Read more

Wearing Paper Dresses (Anne Brinsden, Macmillan)

Released October 2019

Life is tough in the Mallee in the 1950s, and when city sophisticate Elise, brimming with artistic and musical talent, is uprooted with her young children to her father-in-law’s wheat... Read more

There Was Still Love (Favel Parrett, Hachette)

Released October 2019

Favel Parrett’s third novel, There Was Still Love, is a meticulously observed and masterfully crafted immigrant story about a displaced Czech family. The novel oscillates in nearly every way—between the... Read more

Summer Time (Hilary Bell, illus by Antonia Pesenti, NewSouth)

Released October 2019

Summer Time, Hilary Bell and Antonia Pesenti’s third picture book collaboration, explores ideas of time within the grand nostalgic mythology of Australian summer. On each double-page spread, a chapter-like stanza... Read more

The Man in the Water (David Burton, UQP)

Released October 2019

Four years after his award-winning YA memoir How to be Happy, David Burton returns with The Man in the Water, a coming-of-age mystery novel with an undercurrent of grief and... Read more

Angel Mage (Garth Nix, A&U)

Released October 2019

Recently in fantasy there has been a move away from medieval Europe settings. One of the most popular examples of this is the 17th-century-Europe-inspired ‘Flintlock Fantasy’, though it owes as... Read more

All of the Factors of Why I Love Tractors (Davina Bell, illus by Jenny Løvlie, Little Hare)

Released October 2019

A little boy called Frankie, accompanied by his mother, visits the library and borrows his favourite book about tractors. He is already well versed in all the characteristics and functions... Read more

Super Nova (Krys Saclier, illus by Rebecca Timmis, Ford St)

Released October 2019

Super Nova is the story of the protagonist and his sister Nova, who he believes is getting up to all sorts of mischief. 'Nova always gets away with it,' says... Read more

The Glimme (Emily Rodda, illus by Marc McBride, Scholastic)

Released October 2019

The Glimme starts in a perfectly ordinary and dull fishing village with a boy called Finn sketching dragons and monsters. But it’s not long before Finn is standing in front... Read more

Ask Hercules Quick (Ursula Dubosarsky, illus by Andrew Joyner, A&U)

Released October 2019

Hercules lives with his alligator aunt in a building full of quirky characters. On a trip to the shops his imagination is captured by a magic box, but how will... Read more

The Woman Who Cracked the Anxiety Code: The extraordinary life of Dr Claire Weekes (Judith Hoare, Scribe)

Released October 2019

Australian doctor Claire Weekes found worldwide fame with her bestselling books on ‘nervous illness’ in the 1960s and 1970s—but despite gratitude from thousands of sufferers, she is almost forgotten today.... Read more