Category Archives: Genres of Culture

A fine puzzler mystery: Book review of Peter May’s Freeze Frame

Who would have thought the old-style puzzler mystery is still alive in the days of CSI and serial killers and jaundiced PIs? Freeze Frame by Peter May is just that. The fourth in a destined-for-long-life series featuring Enzo McLeod, a forensic analyst tackling cold cases from the files of a journalist, Freeze Frame is written in [...]

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Banal but rousing: Film review of Predators

Predators opens with a rush: battle-hardened men and women plummeting towards ground, desperately opening parachutes, snatched from separate lives across the globe. The underlying sci-fi concept – of warriors teleported to become the sport on an alien game reserve – is as old (and, I must say, as satisfying) as sci-fi itself. I haven’t seen the [...]

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Limpid: Book review of Beautiful Malice by Rebecca James

Beautiful Malice by debut novelist Rebecca James has arrived with an almighty marketing splash, one alas undeserved. Told in the first person and up close, it’s the tale of Katherine, a seventeen-year-old Sydney girl with a crippling secret, who is thrilled to be befriended by glamorous Alice. As the relationship builds, a dark undercurrent emerges [...]

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Brit magic: Music review of Sparkle Lane by Edward Rogers

Edward Rogers is an oddly positioned singer-songwriter of a type only Britain can produce. On Sparkle Lane, his third album, he pens imaginative, well-arranged songs that straddle folk-rock, Kinks-style pop and Bowie-style glam. One minute the listener is channelling Mott the Hoople in the wonderful title track, the next brings rolling modern folk like the [...]

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A brutal world: Book review of Nicolai Lilin’s Siberian Education

What a strange, unlovely book Siberian Education: Family, Honour, and Tattoos: An Extraordinary Underworld Life is. A memoir by Nicolai Lilin of his early and teen years, during the 1980s and 1990s, in a criminal community of displaced Siberians in Transnistria (a lawless semi nation within Moldova). There is much to find fascinating in the earnest [...]

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Sublime post-rock Brit folk: Music review of Tunng’s And then We Saw Land

Tunng is a subtle mix of folky music allied to complex arrangements of imaginative, insistent drumming and brilliant keyboards. Their previous album Good Arrows was whimsical and pleasurable; And then We Saw Land is a step forward, adding to the mix passionate, anthemic moments that seize the listener. Both of the band’s singers, Mike Lindsay and Becky [...]

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Doorstopper finale: Book review of Stieg Larsson’s The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest

So this is it, the conclusion (for author Stieg Larsson can write no more) to the Millennium thriller trilogy that has enlisted slavering fans since The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. At close to 600 pages pages, The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest is as meaty as the first two books. Once more it features [...]

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Heavenly electronica: Music Review of Four Tet’s There Is Love in You

Electronica and I have had a love/hate relationship, tilted more towards the latter, ever since I saw Tangerine Dream in concert in the 70s. I shun the vapidity of club music and therefore rarely buy electronic artists, but every few months I’m drawn to try my luck once more. I was told Radiohead cited Four [...]

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A cruel fate: Book review of Lisa Genova’s Still Alice

Still Alice by debut American novelist Lisa Genova peers into the downward spiral of Alice, a Harvard psychology professor at the top of her profession, in the grip of early-onset Alzheimer’s. Few diseases frighten us more, for it has no cure and the inevitable creeping decline treats victim and loved ones with equal cruelty. Sticking to [...]

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A dose of punk: Music review of The Soft Pack

Punk was the shout, the sneer (Johnny Rotten!), the rattling beat, the chorus. Punk is still all of those aspects, but I left it behind after a 70s love affair. Rarely does modern punk call to me, and if it does, the key has to be the melodic content. Melodic choruses drew me to the [...]

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