• the promise


    the promise

    Damon Galgut
    Punctuated by four funerals and a changing South Africa, Damon Galgut’s Booker-Prize-winning novel tells the story a disintegrating white family and a broken promise. The repeated failure by various family members to honour a promise made to the black woman who has loyally worked for them for years, comes to define the moral fabric of the family, while also having wider historical resonances.

  • a swim in the pond in the rain


    a swim in the pond in the rain

    a swim in the pond in the rain

    George Saunders
    “The focus of my artistic life,” says George Saunders in his latest book, “has been trying to learn to write emotionally moving stories that a reader feels compelled to finish.” This book is a distillation of a creative writing course he taught at Syracuse University for over twenty years, in which seven short stories by great Russian writers are springboards for examining the craft and reflecting on the significance of storytelling.

  • no friend but the mountains


    no friend but the mountains

    no friend but the mountains

    Behrouz Boochani
    Winner of the Victorian Prize for Literature and the Prize for Non-fiction (Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards 2019) this book has been compiled from hundreds of Farsi texts sent by Kurdish poet and journalist from Manus Island, where he has been illegally detained since 2013. Translated by Omid Tofighian, Boochani’s account bears witness to the horrors and inhumanity of the Australian government’s treatment of asylum seekers.

  • bridge of clay


    bridge of clay

    Markus Zusak – Bridge of Clay

    Markus Zusak
    The first few chapters of this vast and beautiful novel were hard to get into, and I struggled to orient myself, but then the story opened up into a narrative of such emotional depth. ‘Bridge of Clay’ is the story of five brothers (and one in particular) who grapple as best they know how with the vicissitudes of life. As I turned the pages, this book quietly found a place on my shelf of all-time favourite reads.

  • i wish i wish


    i wish i wish

    i wish i wish

    Zirk van den Berg
    Winner of the Hofmeyr Prize for the Afrikaans edition, this gem of a book is the tale of how a terminally-ill young lad, close to death and fascinated with caskets, impacts on the life of a jaded mortician.

  • know my name


    know my name

    know my name

    Chanel Miller
    An articulate and devastating account of sexual-assault-survivor Chanel Miller’s journey through a flawed legal system towards recovery and reclamation of herself. Her words have inspired and provoked change.

  • lab girl


    lab girl

    lab girl

    Hope Jahren
    This memoir by scientist Hope Jahren makes for a fascinating and affecting read. With a fierce intellect and disarming honesty, Jahren seamlessly marries the story of her scientific research with her own very human story.

  • born a crime


    born a crime

    born a crime

    Trevor Noah
    Trevor Noah’s memoir – a mix of humour and heartache in Noah’s portrayal of his childhood, as a person of mixed-race growing up in apartheid and post-apartheid South Africa.