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FICTIONS: Indigo

Barry Rosenberg

It was a few weeks before Christmas, and despite the Queensland heat, people were rushing to and fro with bulging shopping bags. Everyone was busy with buying, buying, buying. The shops on Cobble St were close together and their weathered look suggested that they had been there forever. They were traditional shops, too: the butcher, the baker and the candlestick maker. It was the type of street, with its suggestion of antiquity, in which a young man could wander and his mind could turn to fantasy.

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Review: Managing Death by Trent Jamieson

Managing Death – Trent Jamieson (Death Works #2)
Hachette Orbit, 2010
368 pages
RRP: AU$19.99
ISBN: 9780733624841

Reviewed by Liz Grzyb

Managing Death is the second in Jamieson’s Death Works series (the first, Death Most Definite, came out earlier in the year). Like the first, Managing Death is a fast-paced, thrilling adventure through the trials and tribuations of being responsible for streamlining Australia’s deaths. This story continues to show what happens when Steven de Selby takes over as Australia’s Regional Manager after a schism and the deaths of many of Australia’s Pomps in the first novel. Unfortunately things aren’t always fair in business and war; he barely gets his footing when Mortmax is threatened from another angle.

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Review: Bitten & Smitten by Michelle Rowen

Bitten & Smitten – Michelle Rowen (Immortality Bites #1)
Hachette Gollancz, 2010 (reprint)
372 pages
RRP: AU$22.99
ISBN: 9780575094000

Reviewed by Liz Grzyb

Bitten & Smitten is the first in the Immortality Bites series by Michelle Rowen. I’d read some of her work before, the young adult novel Reign or Shine, and found it amusing and light-hearted. Bitten & Smitten is no less amusing, but follows the somewhat darker tale of Sarah, who was unwillingly turned into a vampire on a blind date. When her sire is killed by the vampire hunters thronging the city, she flees, and is drawn into a love/hate relationship with Thierry, a sexy, six hundred year old vampire with enough ennui to sink a ship.

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Paranormal Noir Anthology Submissions Open

Damnation & Dames edited by Amanda Pillar and Liz Grzyb

We are looking for stories which show the paranormal and noir crime worlds colliding. You might find werewolf femme fatales, vampire hardboiled detectives, alcoholic psychic journalists, zombie bankrobbers, ghostly gendarmes, demonic insurance salesmen, down-on-their-luck djinns, double-crossing mummies, or even fae with a love for red herrings.

The anthology will be published by Ticonderoga Publications in 2012.

Submission guidelines:
Send us your best paranormal noir stories.
1. Story length 1,000 to 7,500 words. (Longer stories may be accepted, although payment is capped at 7,500).
2. Original stories only: no reprints, multiple, or simultaneous submissions.
3. Stories may be submitted via email at paranormalnoir@ticonderogapublications.com
4. Manuscript format: double spaced, large margins, sensible font, Australian English spelling.
5. The editors reserve the right to use their discretion in selecting stories.
6. Deadline: the anthology is open to unsolicited submissions until 1st November, 2011.
7. Payment: 2 copies of anthology and Aus 2 cents/word (GST inc., maximum payment $150) on publication.

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Review: Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins

Mockingjay – Suzanne Collins (The Hunger Games #3)
Scholastic, 2010
448 pages
RRP: AU$18.99
ISBN: 9781407109374

Reviewed by Liz Grzyb

The Hunger Games has taken the YA world by storm. It is set in a gritty, post-apocalyptic world where Panem is divided into Districts under the control of the Capitol, who takes their produced goods. Plus they must give Tributes, citizens chosen at random to compete in The Hunger Games, a fight to the death to provide entertainment to the Capitol and a reminder to the Districts of their servitude. In the first two novels in the series, the heroine, Katniss Evergreen fought against the odds to win the Hunger Games twice, with the help of her fellow District 13 tribute, Peeta. Now she has a new conflict to deal with, outside the arena.

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Review: Secret Ones by Nicole Murphy

Secret Ones – Nicole Murphy (Dream of Asarlai #1)
Harper Collins, 2010
416 pages
RRP: AU$22.99
ISBN: 9780732291617

Reviewed by Liz Grzyb

Secret Ones is the first in the Dream of Asarlai trilogy from Australian author Nicole Murphy. It follows Maggie, a teacher who has a talent for annoying the wrong people and a big secret. She’s not quite human. She is one of the Gadda, magical beings who look and seem to be indistinguishable from humans, apart from their amazing and sometimes terrifying talent with magic. Secret Ones starts with Maggie being banished from Sclossin, the Gadda enclave in Ireland, back to her family’s home in Australia. She resigns herself to a long while in banishment, until the arrival of Lucas, an intriguing American stranger who seems to have all the hallmarks of being Gadda, but doesn’t seem to belong to any of the known clans. As they become closer, we find out that there is something much bigger afoot than Maggie’s disgrace: someone is sending magical monsters to harm her grandfather. Can the two work together to save the family, and the Gadda, from this new threat?

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Review: Chalice by Robin McKinley

Chalice – Robin McKinley
Penguin Firebird, 2010 (reprint)
264 pages
RRP: US$8.99
ISBN: 978-0-14-241720-1

Reviewed by Liz Grzyb

As an avid reader of Robin McKinley since I was a young ‘un, I couldn’t wait to devour Chalice. My favourite McKinley tale has to be the original and the best, Beauty. Chalice has a lot of the magical fairytale atmosphere that I adored in that first reading, so it couldn’t possibly disappoint.

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Review: The Mammoth Book of Paranormal Romance 2 by Trisha Telep

The Mammoth Book of Paranormal Romance #2 – Trisha Telep (ed)
Constable & Robinson, 2010
532 pages
RRP: £7.99
ISBN: 978-1-84901-370-3

Reviewed by Liz Grzyb

This collection contains a broad range of short stories loosely bundled into the paranormal romance genre. Some are more real and contemporary than others, with a couple of great reads between these covers. You certainly get bang for your buck – at over 500 pages, this gives a good overview of the genre. Most of the heroines are suitably spunky and interesting, and the situations they are in are varied throughout the book.

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Review: Grave Secret by Charlaine Harris

Grave Secret – Charlaine Harris
Hachette Gollancz, 2010
320 pages
RRP: AU$22.99
ISBN: 9780575085565

Reviewed by Kate Smith

Grave Secret by Charlaine Harris was not what I expected it to be. Reading the earlier books first to gain an understanding probably would have helped and allowed for a greater impact from the tale.  Having said that, while it took me a little while to get into the story, Harris did smoothly integrated the uninitiated into the main people of her tale without providing a ‘summary’ at the beginning, something which is always disheartening to a reader.

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Review: The City and the City by China Miéville

The City and the City – China Miéville
Pan Macmillan, 2010
500 pages
RRP: AU$22.99
ISBN: 9780330493109

Reviewed by Liz Grzyb

The City and the City is an interesting read, exploring Inspector Borlu’s involvement in an international murder investigation of a body found in his city. I found it slow to begin, with the introduction of the two interlocking cities of the title being explored at length, somewhat to the detriment of the plot. I’ve seen many people compare this to 1984, and in structure and tone, I have to agree. The dark and initially confusing atmosphere of the twin cities and the ominous presence of the Breach and thought-crime makes this comparison an easy one.

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