Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Cat Catcher


Caroline Shaw

Meet Lenny Aaron, a Zen-cool young ex-cop with a few left-field addictions, a super droll style and a seedy little office of her own in downtown Footscray. Sworn off true crime after a harrowing experience on duty, Lenny earns her living tracking missing cats down Melbourne’s alleys and byways.

But everything changes for Lenny when a routine search for a daughter’s missing Ragdoll brings her into the viperous bosom of Australia’s most powerful media family. The patriarch is dying, and the stakes are sky-high for a piece of the action. When someone takes it, brutally, Lenny finds herself back in the murder business.

And is doesn’t stop there. While Lenny trawls through the morass of corruption, sex, greed, power and money to find the killer, she is forced to confront her haunting past. Will her feline cunning and ice-cool courage be enough to survive? -- book cover
Contact the library to request this book

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Gilead


Marilynne Robinson


In 1956, towards the end of Reverend John Ames life, he begins a letter to his young son: "I told you last night that I might be gone sometime ... you reached up and put your fingers on my lips and gave that look I never in my life say on any other face beside your mother's. It's a kind of furious pride, very passionate and stern. I'm always a little surprised to find my eyebrows unsinged after I've suffered one of those looks. I will miss them." - book cover


This book was chosed by the New York Times Book Review as one of the top six novels of the year.

In Her Shoes


Jennifer Weiner


Rose Feller is thirty; a successful lawyer with high hopes of a relationship with Jim, Mr Not-Quite-Right, a senior partner in her firm. The last thing she needs is her messed-up, only occasionally employed sister Maggie moving in: drinking, smoking, stealing her money - and her shoes - and spoiling her chance of romance. If only Maggie would grow up and settle down with a nice guy and a steady job.


Maggie is drop dead gorgeous and irresistible to men. She's going to make it big as a TV presenter, or a singer, or an actress. All she needs is a lucky break. What she doesn't need is her uptight sister Rose interfering in her life. If only Rose would lighten-up, have some fun - and learn how to use a pair of tweezers.


Rose and Maggie think they have nothing in common but a childhood tragedy, shared DNA and the same size feet, but they are about to find out that they're more alike than they's ever believe."

Monday, February 2, 2009

One True Thing


Anna Quindlen

Ellen Gulden is a young, successful New York journalist. When her mother gets cancer, her father, a university professor, insists she come home. As she looks after her mother their relationship, tender, awkward and revealing – deepens and Ellen is forced to confront painful truths about herself and her adored father.

But as Kate lies during, and in the weeks that follow her death, events take a shocking and unexpected turn. Family emotions are laid bare as a new drama is played out: between Ellen and her brothers, between Ellen and her father, and in court. – book cover.
Contact the library to request this book

Under the Lake


Stuart Woods

The lake had been built at a terrible price to satisfy one man’s obsession. But its horrifying secret still lay beneath the placid waters … waiting.
Contact the library to request this book

Titan


James McVean

Ronsay, an idyllic Hebridean island set in a turbulent indigo sea. To the whale, wounded, desperate, hunted almost to exhaustion, it represented a single chance for survival, its shoals a very present help in time of trouble.

But for its inhabitants, Ronsay was a social and economic cul de sac, a relic of threadbare feudalism dragging its slow way towards extinction.

The arrival of the whale could perhaps change all that. To Alex Lindsay, proprietor of Ronsay’s only hotel, the whale meant hope – of profit, of a future. To Lady Strathmore, Ronsay’s laird, and her grand-daughter, it meant one more, perhaps the last and overwhelming problem in the grim struggle against decay. To the interloper Koenig, tycoon and despot, it represented the key to an ElDorado. To Billy Con, American naturalist, it was a Cause. But to the ordinary people of the island, the great animal was a prize round which to rehearse ancient enmities. – book cover
Contact the library to request this book

Worth Her Salt


Margaret Bevege, Margaret James & Carmel Shute, editors

Worth Her Salt brings together research and recollection in an illuminating exploration of women’s experiences in Australia. A collection of refreshing diversity, its range of topics includes sexual harassment at work, flappers and their lifestyle, the continuing fight for equal pay, and women pioneers of politics and social reform; it ranges from education in Adelaide at the turn of the century to life in north Queensland in World War II, and looks at the contemporary implications of technological change. – book cover
Contact the library to request this book