Please turn JavaScript on
Newtown Review of Books icon

Newtown Review of Books

Follow Newtown Review of Books's news and updates in a matter of seconds! We will deliver any update via email, phone or you can read them from here on the site on your own news page.

You can even combine different feeds with the feed for Newtown Review of Books.

Subscribing and unsubscribing is fast, easy and risk free.

The whole service is free of cost.

Newtown Review of Books: NRB Home - Newtown Review of Books

Is this your feed? Claim it!

Publisher:  Unclaimed!
Message frequency:  0.29 / day

Message History

In Jill Johnson’s new novel, Professor Eustacia Rose is done with murder – it’s time to settle down with the love of her life, Matilde. For anybody new to this series, which began with Devil’s Breath, Professor Eustacia Rose is the Head of Botanical Toxicology at University College. An expert in rare and highly poisonous […]

The post


Read full story

Ray Nayler shows his versatility in his latest novel, a historical fantasy exploring war, survival, birdlife, and magic. Ray Nayler is a speculative fiction author who does not remotely do the same thing twice. His first novel, The Mountain in the Sea, was a slightly futuristic tale involving sentient octopuses. His second novel, Where the […]

The post


Read full story

The new novel from the author of Intimacies offers different versions of the roles we take on, questioning our assumptions about truth. Shortlisted for the 2025 Booker Prize, Kitamura’s latest novel contains many things jostling for our attention. The two parts, or perhaps twin novellas, which make up this work are centred around the same […]

The post


Read full story

In Tom Baragwanath’s latest crime novel, Lorraine Henry knows only too well how small towns and close communities are a blessing and a curse. Tom Baragwanath first introduced ‘Lo’ Henry in Paper Cage, a novel about a small but divided community and a string of missing children. In his latest release, Lucky Thing, Lo is […]

The post


Read full story

Gathered in a McDonald’s as a bushfire races towards their town, the characters in George Kemp’s debut are all on the cusp of change. George Kemp’s novel is a delight, despite its heavy themes. Simply told, it’s a story with universal resonance but a distinctly Australian feel. Jacob, his sister Fern, and their friend Ethan […]

The post


Read full story