

The Bookshelf
ABC Australia
What are you reading, loving or being challenged by? We review the latest in fiction for dedicated readers and for those who wish they read more.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Sep 30, 2022 • 0sec
The Book Club: The ouevre of Ian McEwan
In this edition of RN's monthly Book Club, we look at Ian McEwan's extraordinary body of work, paying particular attention to his new novel Lessons, a meditation on history and humanity presented through the span of one man's lifetime.

Sep 26, 2022 • 50min
Pod extra: Hilary Mantel, the Booker prize-winning author of the Wolf Hall trilogy has died
English writer Hilary Mantel has sadly died, aged 70. The Booker prize winning author spoke to Kate Evans for the Big Weekend of Books in 2020.

Sep 23, 2022 • 60min
Siblings, revelry and fear: Peggy Frew, Kate Atkinson and Adrian McKinty
Three sisters, locked in their lifelong roles, on a roadtrip, in Peggy Frew's Wildflowers; a London underworld full of betrayal and promise, in Kate Atkinson's Shrines of Gaiety (read by Rohan Wilson); and talking to Adrian McKinty about the differences between noir and thrillers.

Sep 16, 2022 • 60min
Drugs, gangs, racism and reputation: three new works of fiction
Reading Tracey Lien's All That's Left Unsaid, Diane Connell's The Improbable Life of Ricky Bird and Clarissa Goenawan's Watersong – Kate Evans and Elizabeth Flynn with guests George Haddad and Mandi McIntosh.

Sep 9, 2022 • 60min
A Renaissance wedding, a Mediaeval war and the ghosts of Modernism: three new novels
Kate and Cassie with three new novels: grappling with modernism and creativity in Sophie Cunningham's This Devastating Fever; a young woman caged by intrigue and expectations in Maggie O'Farrell's The Marriage Portrait; and working soldiers bleed across France in Dan Jones' Essex Dogs – with guests Stephen Gapps and Amy Walters

Sep 2, 2022 • 60min
The Book Club: Is crime fiction a literature of resistance? (plus a guide to Korean lit)
RN's Book Club in a different format to usual: a panel discussion plus a quick reading guide. The big question: Is crime fiction a literature of resistance? Also, a guide to fiction in translation from Korea

Aug 26, 2022 • 60min
Three monks in a boat, the last white man, and wild wild women
A story of three men trying to create a new world, on a craggy island in seventh-century Ireland, in Emma Donoghue's Haven; anxieties about race and migration, in Mohsin Hamid's The Last White Man; and scrappy voices from history, in Selby Wynn Schwartz's fragmentary lesbian colloquy, After Sappho.

Aug 19, 2022 • 60min
Joan of Arc re-imagined, dystopian coastlines and trees in the Oz literary imagination
Joan of Arc as a capable, scrappy young woman; unmoored on a strange coastline; and trees in both crime fiction and the Australian literary imaginary: reading Scott McCulloch's Basin, Katherine J Chen's Joan (with Prof of Philosophy Karen Green) and crime writer Margaret Hickey's Stone Town on both crime and landscape

Aug 12, 2022 • 0sec
A champion pedestrianist, an island haunted by grief and running into all your exes
Reading Robert Drewe's Nimblefoot, Eliza Henry-Jones' Salt and Skin and Sloane Crosley's Cult Classic with critic and literary judge Susan Wyndham and novelist and funeral director Jackie Bailey

Aug 7, 2022 • 54min
Big Weekend of Books at the State Library of NSW: writers special
Writers Hayley Scrivenor, Michael Brissenden and Yumna Kassab join Kate and Cassie onstage to talk libraries, stories, trauma, failure, children, Australian identity and more in this Big Weekend of Books edition of The Bookshelf


