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$8.00
Introduces DI Jack Carrigan and DS Geneva Miller as they investigate the brutal rape and murder of a young Ugandan student. Plunged into an underworld of illegal immigrant communities, they discover that the murdered girl’s studies at a London College may have threatened to reveal things that some people will go to any lengths to keep secret… Good: Tidy condition.
$8.00

‘McInerney is Australia’s answer to Maeve Binchy, a modern-day Jane Austen.’
Sun Herald


A group of friends on an unconventional diet learn some important life lessons, a fashion-challenged grandmother weaves some magic in a dusty charity shop, a grieving young mother takes a healing journey, and a shy woman from a family of high-achievers learns to follow her dreams.

From one Australia’s most loved authors comes All Together Now, a collection of Monica McInerney’s short fiction gathered between two covers for the first time.  Including her popular novella, Odd One Out, this is a book to inspire and delight fans of all ages.

Family relationships, sibling rivalry, love lost and love found – these stories touch on the popular themes of Monica McInerney’s hugely successful novels, and are brimming with her trademark colour, warmth and humour.

‘It’s an almost sinful pleasure to delve into anything written by Monica McInerney, whose delightful prose brings her rich characters to sparkling life,’
Irish American Post, USA

‘Her books are for handbags and airports, traffic jams, railway stations and bus stops.  They make us forget the irritating details of the day.’
Sydney Morning Herald



Good: Tidy condition.
$8.00

Warrior clans nursing ancient grudges. Western missionaries brandishing pistols. Beautiful geishas who are deadly ninjas.

1861 – after two centuries of isolation Japan has been forced to open its doors. Now new influences are tearing apart the old order. Japan is as unprepared for outsiders as missionaries are for samurai assassins, executions and honour killings. Genji’s life is at risk. He plans his escape to the Cloud of Sparrows but the road is long and there are many places along the way for brutal samurai to attack -The demons of the past, the treachery of the present, an uncertain future are about to collide in the most terrifying ways.

Good: Tidy condition.
$8.00
Elliot is on the run from a situation that’s just too big to handle. Sooner or later, it’s going to catch up with him.

Elliot’s in need of a fresh start, so he’s dispatched to a new city to work as an apprentice electrician. His boss, Arnie, is an ex-naval officer whose bad temper and frequent advice don’t make for easy living – but Elliot’s out of options.

Elliot is just settling into some sort of routine when a disturbing rumour surfaces about his ex-girlfriend, Lena.

As Lena tries to track him down, Elliot dives for cover. But a problem this big only attracts more problems, and, after a shocking workplace accident, they’re all going to catch up with him at once.

The question is, will Elliot come out of hiding and face them head on?

Coming Home to Roost is a fast-paced, bighearted novel about an age-old situation, from the award-winning author of Snakes and Ladders. Good: tidy condition.
$6.00
After Chester lands, in the Times Square subway station, he makes himself comfortable in a nearby newsstand. There, he has the good fortune to make three new friends: Mario, a little boy whose parents run the falling newsstand, Tucker, a fast-talking Broadway mouse, and Tucker’s sidekick, Harry the Cat. The escapades of these four friends in bustling New York City makes for lively listening and humorous entertainment. And somehow, they manage to bring a taste of success to the nearly bankrupt newsstand. Fair: This book is in very tidy condition except the binding is a little loose. No pages are missing.
$8.00
The Back of Beyond by Doris Davidson is a historical family saga set between Scotland and London in the years surrounding World War II. Alistair Ritchie and Dougal Finnie are two young men from a remote Scottish village who dream of escaping their rural lives and making their fortunes in London. Leaving behind their close-knit community, they also leave behind Lexie Fraser, a determined young woman who has long been in love with Alistair. Lexie faces her own struggles, including caring for her sick mother and coping with the mystery of her father’s disappearance. As the years pass, the characters’ lives are shaped by love, marriage, children, and the upheaval of war. Although they seek new opportunities in the city, their ties to their Scottish homeland remain strong. Eventually, the challenges of wartime London lead them back to the safety and familiarity of the Highlands — the “Back of Beyond.” There they must confront old relationships, family secrets, and the contrast between city life and the traditions of the community they once left behind. The House of Lyall by Doris Davidson is a sweeping historical saga set in Scotland that follows the rise of an ambitious young woman determined to escape poverty and reinvent herself. Marion Cheyne grows up in a poor village with little hope of improving her circumstances. Frustrated by her lowly position as a servant and the limitations of her background, she seizes an unexpected opportunity to change her life, even though it means compromising her morals. Leaving her old life behind, she travels to Aberdeen and gradually transforms herself into Marianne, a sophisticated woman who marries the heir to Castle Lyall. Although her marriage is based more on practicality than love, Marianne becomes fiercely devoted to her status and the prestigious Lyall name. As decades pass and the world is shaped by war, family conflicts, and social change, she fights relentlessly to protect the life she has built. However, the secrets of her humble beginnings continue to threaten her carefully constructed world, and in a close-knit Highland community, the truth cannot remain hidden forever. The novel combines family drama, romance, ambition, and social history, exploring themes of class, identity, loyalty, and the consequences of past choices. Fair: OK condition, creases on the front cover.
$4.00
An extraordinary account of a nurse’s journey to Gallipoli aboard the New Zealand hospital ship Maheno. Her experiences include caring for the wounded and coping with the death of her brother Leddie, who was killed in action. Based on the letters of Lottie and Leddie Le Gallais and the war diary of John Duder. Suggested level: primary, intermediate.
$4.00
Two small boys in warrior garb peer at each other across a deserted landscape. Each is suspicious of the other; each is proud and boastful. And so, an argument breaks out that grows bigger and bigger, until it threatens to consume them and everything around them.
In this unusual book words take flight, morph into birds, race down gullies and flood the page. I Am I is a memorable and stimulating mediation on the power of imagination and the power of words–and a visual tour de force by a gifted author and artist.
$5.00
Julian Rodriguez is on a mission for the Mothership. He’s been sent to Earth to study human lifeforms and their bizarre habits–from their disgusting diet (orange sticks named carrots, flavorless liquid called water, and the revolting substance known as vegi-dogs) to their repressive treatment of their young (forcing them to carry out menial tasks known as chores, withholding access to the great cultural masterpieces called cartoons). When Julian’s Maternal Unit assigns a hideous task, it’s nearly too much for the hardened space veteran to bear–but he finds his courage at last.

* “First in what readers will hope will be a robust series, this hybrid of fiction and graphic novel dusts off a favorite conceit with a slick swipe of edgy visuals and tart commentary….It’s impossible to read this without laughing.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)

$6.00
1. Both Joe and his father suffer from the fact that their last name adorns a large iron boot hanging at the entrance to the harbor, advertising the family shoe store. Why is the boot so oppressive that both Joe and his father sometimes dream about it? Why does Joe finally take it down? 2. Joe is haunted by the sense of his own insignificance: ‘It seemed to me that unless I did something that historians thought was worth recording, it would be as if I had never lived, that all the histories in the world together formed one book, not to warrant inclusion in which was to have wasted one’s life’ [p. 454]. Why does he feel this way? What is the relationship between the ambitions of Joe Smallwood and his paternal heritage of small-time shopkeeping, alcoholism, and failure? How do his experiences at Bishop Feild school affect his ideas about himself? 3. Johnston has created the structure of the book by interspersing Joe Smallwood’s first-person narrative with excerpts from Fielding’s journal, her History of Newfoundland, and her ‘Field Day’ newspaper columns. What is the effect, as you read, of the interplay of these parts? 4. Smallwood’s conversion to socialism takes place after his haunting vision of the frozen bodies of the sealers who died on the ice. Would you say that his walk across the island to unionize the men is Smallwood’s most heroic act in the novel? How does the rest of his career compare with the scale of this exploit? 5. Returning to Newfoundland after five years in New York, Joe says, ‘It was as if I saw, for a fleeting second, the place as it had been while I was away, and as it would be after I was gone, separate from me, not coloured by my past or my perceptions. . . . A kind of hurt surged up in my throat, a sorrow that seemed to have no object and no cause, which I tried to swallow down but couldn’t’ [pp. 211-12]. Why is this such a painful moment for him? 6. Johnston has given Joe Smallwood the role of protagonist and the main first-person narrative, but some reviewers have expressed the opinion that Sheilagh Fielding is a more compelling character. Is Fielding ultimately more admirable than Smallwood? Whose life story is more interesting? 7. Joe Smallwood is not mentioned in Fielding’s History, which ends in 1923 when Sir Richard Squires is prime minister. Why does Fielding end her history there? 8. Why does Smallwood’s marriage proposal to Fielding go awry? When he next sees her, she tells him with her customary irony that she has been ‘reduced to hermiting because you broke my heart’ [p. 228]. How true is this statement? Why does Smallwood marry Clara Oates and not Fielding? 9. Freezing to death on the Bonavista branch line, Smallwood imagines his own obituary [p. 225]. What makes this scene so touching and so comical? Joe is saved by Fielding, who here as at other crucial moments makes herself indispensable. Does Smallwood perform the same function in her life? Is their relationship, on the whole, reciprocal in terms of giving and receiving? 10. Sir Richard Squires tells Joe, ‘Power is what you want, though I’ll never get you to admit it. You picked socialism because you thought it was your best way of getting ahead. . . . You’re not an artist, you’re not a scientist, you’re not an intellectual. All that’s left to you is politics’ [p. 270]. How accurate is Sir Richard’s assessment of Joe’s character? Joe responds that ‘the distinguishing characteristic of the true socialist…was selflessness’ [p. 271]. Do selflessness and self-interest necessarily conflict? 11. Some Canadian readers have been troubled by the liberties that Wayne Johnston has taken with the life of Newfoundland’s first premier. Is the book more purely fictional, and therefore more purely enjoyable, for American readers, for whom Smallwood is not a known entity? It appears, for instance, that Johnston created the character of Fielding wholly from his own imagination. Why do you suppose he decided that Fielding was needed as a counterpart to Joe Smallwood? What would the novel have been like without the presence of Fielding? What are the particular complications and pleasures of fiction that is based on, but not entirely true to, historical reality? 12. The mystery of the anonymous letter to The Morning Post is not solved until the end of the novel, and it keeps Smallwood in the dark about some of the motivations of Fielding’s character as well as her true feelings for him. How satisfying is the resolution of this issue? Does the revelation about Fielding’s father highlight aspects of her character, or explain in part why she has conducted her life as she has? 13. Why does Joe bring Judge Prowse’s A History of Newfoundland with him to New York City? What is the symbolic significance of this book for various characters in the novel? 14. Why does Johnston wait until late into the novel to reveal Fielding’s secret about what happened when she was sixteen? How does this revelation affect your understanding of Fielding’s character and her motivations up to this point? Would you say that Fielding is a selfless character? 15. Is confederation a defeat for Newfoundland? Would it have been possible for such a bleak and economically unpromising land to survive as an independent nation? Was Smallwood right to think that, since socialism had failed, confederation was the only way to improve the lives of the outlanders? 16. How would you compare the political ideals of the young Smallwood to those of the man who becomes premier of the island after confederation? Has his character changed? What about his core ethical beliefs? Why is he so susceptible to people like Valdmanis? 17. Several reviews have commented on the skill with which Johnston has succeed in creating a novel that is reminiscent of the work of Charles Dickens. If you have read David Copperfield or Great Expectations, how does The Colony of Unrequited Dreams compare with them? What aspects of this book make it so compelling and so memorable?
$12.00
When Dr Ben Givens left his home in Seattle – heading east with his Winchester and his hunting dogs in tow – he never intended to return. It was to be a journey past snow-covered mountains to a place of canyons, sagelands and orchards, where, on the verges of the Columbia River, Ben Givens had entered the world and would now take his leave of it. What transpired was not the journey he anticipated. Dr Ben Givens had been a bypass heart surgeon – adroit and admired in his field. He had been well acquainted with the human body, but its fallibility had been distant from him until a diagnosis of his own condition, which he concealed even from his family. ‘You’re still the toughest old goat in the mountains,’ his grandson Chris says to him, unwarily proposing their next climbing trip. Since his wife Rachel died nineteen months before, Ben had returned to a pastime of his youth – shooting game birds in canyons and sageland. It would come to seem an unfathomably cruel choice for his final hours, but then so much unfathomably shifts in Ben’s perspective as his intended exit transforms into an eye-opening, life-enhancing diversion.
$6.00
When Marion Laing’s wealthy ex-husband dies, she is disappointed by what he leaves her: a country house and an annual allowance intended to maintain it for their children. Determined to gain greater control over the family fortune, Marion embarks on a calculated campaign of manipulation and seduction aimed at the trustees responsible for managing the inheritance. As greed, ambition, and emotional vulnerability collide, the lives of the trustees and the Laing children become increasingly entangled in a story of money, power, and deception. The novel combines satire, drama, and psychological insight in its exploration of family relationships and financial intrigue.
$5.00
A very funny and brilliantly illustrated book with an important message about difference, friendship and fitting in.
It’s the first day back at school for four very different children. Lee, Lloyd, Billy and Angela are expecting just an ordinary day . . . but all that changes when MARTIN zooms in from outer space! Join Lee, Lloyd, Billy, Angela . . . and Martin for a first day of term that’s out of this world! Good: Tidy condition.
$5.00
Following the success of A Dirty Story, the Neats and Grots are back in this humorous tale of mouldy drains and rubbish tips. The Grots run wild, the Neats get even and the angels fear to tread! Whether readers are neatniks with a burning passion for truth and justice, or filthy little monsters bent on proving that life is meant to be greasy, this story will entertain and delight. Very Good: Very tidy condition.
$10.00
Teaching for positive behaviour T Rohan New Zealand: New Zealand Ministry of Education, 2017•pb4l.tki.org.nz TEACHING FOR POSITIVE BEHAVIOUR 7 • inclusive language acknowledges diverse perspectives and different ways of behaving, feeling, and knowing • learning contexts and resources are culturally inclusive and reflect the diversity of student experience • instructional practices nurture and celebrate students’ identities, languages, and cultures. Very Good: Tidy condition.
$6.00
For New Zealanders who wish to improve their lifestyle as regards caring for the planet. Saving money and the planet. Fair: Tidy condition, stains on some pages. Binding is good.
$5.00
Ten fun adventure stories for an early reader. Ages 6+. Fair: Minor Crease on the cover. Tidy condition, binding is good
Moo
$6.00

Brilliantly funny satire set in a contemporary American university.

Deep in the wheatfields of the American midwest, Moo University is in a state of disarray…

In this witty and biting comedy of manners, Jane Smiley turns her wryly perceptive eye towards a community where men and women, the innocent and the cynical, thinkers and careerists, live and work together – in complete disharmony.

‘Satire on a grand scale, a microscopic examination of contemporary American mores conducted with great wit and gracious indulgence for human frailty …Trying to describe this book’s marvellous variety is like trying to describe London to someone who has never been there. The only appropriate exhortation is “Read it.”‘

Fair: Minor marks on the cover.
$8.00
“As Detective Bill Corde looks down at the beautiful face of the murdered girl in the mud, he cannot know that his own life is about to turn into a terrifyingly real nightmare. Before Corde knows it, the girl’s killer is trailing him and his unsuspecting family – his wife, his teenage son, his imaginative but vulnerable daughter Sarah. Sarah – who alone knows the identity of the man who took the life of the girl…the man who may be responsible for further deaths. And the lesson Bill Corde is about to learn – the lesson of her death – is an education that no one will ever forget.” — back cover. Fine: Tidy condition.
$8.00
CRIME & MYSTERY. In 1970, Harold Stamp, a retarded twenty-year-old was convicted on disputed evidence and a retracted confession of brutally murdering his grandmother the one person who understood and protected him. Less than three years later he is dead, driven to suicide by isolation and despair. A fate befitting a murderer, perhaps, but what if he were innocent? Thirty years on, Jonathan Hughes, an anthropologist specialising in social stereotyping, comes across the case by accident. He finds alarming disparities in the evidence and has little doubt that Stamp’s conviction was a terrible miscarriage of justice. But how far is he prepared to go in the search for justice? Is the forgotten story of one friendless young man compelling enough to make him leave his books and face his own demons? And with what result? If Stamp didn’t murder Grace Jeffries then somebody else did, which means there’s a dangerous killer still at large.
$7.00
In June 1941, Nazi troops march on Leningrad and surround it. Hitler’s plan is to shell, bomb, and starve the city into submission. Most of the cultural elite are evacuated early in the siege, but Dmitri Shostakovich, the most famous composer in Russia, stays on to defend his city, digging ditches and fire-watching …
$8.00

The reign of Queen Elizabeth I was a time of war, passion, and spectacular achievement. Elizabeth: The Golden Age finds Elizabeth facing bloodlust for her throne and familial betrayal. Growing keenly aware of the changing religious and political tides of late sixteenth-century Europe, Elizabeth faces an open challenge from the Spanish King Philip II, who is determined to restore England to Catholicism with his powerful army and dominating armada.

Preparing to go to war to defend her empire, Elizabeth struggles to balance ancient royal duties with an unexpected vulnerability: her love for the seafarer Sir Walter Raleigh. But he remains forbidden for a queen who has sworn body and soul to her country.

Yet as she charts her course abroad, treachery is the rot behind the glittering royal throne. Her most trusted adviser uncovers an assassination plot that could topple the throne, and the traitors may even include Elizabeth’s own cousin Mary Stuart. Good: Tidy condition.

$8.00
Calman’s heroine Bella is trying to remember what sex is like. Wasn’t it something that happened somewhere between the talking-and-going-out-to-dinner bit and the sobbing-and-eating-too-many-biscuits bit? But she is determined to fall off her sexual wagon before she becomes a virgin again (“all sealed over like pierced ears if you don’t wear earrings for too long”). But there’s one thing Bella is not prepared to hear again: the “L” word. Her body might be making hormonal demands, but she’s resolute in not wanting the emotional baggage of love again. Nobody will be surprised, of course, to learn that she’s back up to her neck in romantic trouble again–and why is it she always ends up with the wrong kind of man? Good: Tidy condition.
$8.00
Tonypandy in 1910 is a town of poverty, hardship, and strife, garrisoned by troops brought in to control the striking miners whose anger all too frequently erupts into bouts of violence and rioting. Megan Williams is 18 and in love with the boy next door, Victor Evans. But Megan’s father would rather see his daughter dead than married to a Catholic, particularly one whose father and brother are marked as strike ringleaders. Tempers and violence flare on both sides of the dispute. Caught in the middle, Victor and Megan find themselves fighting for the right to love one another, remain together and build a future they can share. Good: Tidy condition.
$8.00
“1979. In the vast and often unforgiving city of London, two Irish outsiders seeking refuge find one another: Milly, a teenage runaway, and Pip, a young boxer full of anger and potential who is beginning to drink it all away. Over the decades their lives follow different paths, interweaving from time to time, often in one another’s sight, always on one another’s mind, yet rarely together. Forty years on, Milly is clinging onto the only home she’s ever really known while Pip traipses the streets of London, wrestling with the life of the recovering alcoholic. And between them, perhaps uncrossable, lies the unspoken span of their lives.”– Good: Very tidy condition.
$6.00
A contemporary saga of two dynasties who find themselves helplessly entwined when a brother and two sisters discover that they all have different fathers: none of them Alexander, Earl of Caterham, who was married to their mother for almost twenty years. The discovery of this lie at the heart of the family sets in motion a chain of events which will change their privileged lives forever, bring to the brink of ruin the great family banking business on which their fortunes are based, and awaked some very dangerous and conflicting ambitions… Fair: Tidy condition.
$8.00

#1 bestselling author Maya Banks continues her suspenseful and steamy Slow Burn series with this second book—a twisting tale featuring a strong yet vulnerable heroine in danger and the sexy alpha hero who must save her.

Abandoned as a baby to a young wealthy couple and raised in a world of privilege, Arial has no hint of her past or who she belonged to. Her only link lies in the one thing that sets her apart from everyone else—telekinetic powers. Protected by her adoptive parents and hidden from the public to keep her gift secret, Ari is raised in the lap of luxury, and isolation. That is, until someone begins threatening her life.

Beau Devereaux is no stranger to the strange. As the head of Deveraux Security, he’s more than familiar with the realities of physic powers. So when a family friend approaches him about protecting his daughter, he’s more than ready to jump on board. What Beau isn’t prepared for is the extent of his attraction to his beautiful and powerful client. What began as a simple assignment, just another job, quickly turns personal as Beau discovers he’ll do anything at all to protect Ari. Even if it costs him his life.

Good: Tidy condition.
$8.00
Outlander meets post-Civil War unrest in the conclusion to Melissa Lenhardt’s fast-paced historical series.
“A fast-paced page-turner, kill or be killed historical romance with bandits, Pinkerton agents, bounty hunters, mystery and more. Melissa Lenhardt writes with passion and does not hold anything back. Her research on the historical facts and people she portrays enhances the plot without overwhelming.” RT Book Reviews (4.5 stars, Top Pick!) on Blood Oath

Laura’s worst fears have been realized: Kindle has been taken into custody and she is once again on the run. The noose awaits her in New York, but Laura is realizing that there are some things worse than death. Finally running out of places to hide, it may be time for Dr. Catherine Bennett to face her past.
“Packs a big punch with grit and raw passion. There is mystery, murder, Indians, bounty hunters and intrigue. The women are brave, intelligent and don’t take crap from anyone. Lenhardt is a talented, creative writer; she has a grand slam out of the park with Sawbones.”RT Book Reviews (Top Pick!) 4.5 stars
“Raw, gritty and sometimes graphic, Melissa Lenhardt has crafted a page-turner. In Sawbones, the women are smart, brave and at times ‘incorrigible.’ The plot twists, unique characters and intriguing story of passion and betrayal make this a book well worth discovering.”— Jane Kirkpatrick, New York Times bestselling author of A Light in the Wilderness
“Absolutely loved it! I couldn’t tear myself away from Sawbones. An epic story of love and courage that sweeps from east to west, Sawbones will rip right through you.” – Marci Jefferson, author of Girl on the Golden Coin

“You will fall in love with Catherine, as I did, as she struggles to assert herself in a violent and treacherous world, fighting not only prejudice but evil.”— Sandra Dallas, New York Times bestselling author
Sawbones is a thoroughly original, smart and satisfying hybrid, perhaps a new subgenre: the feminist Western.” Lone Star Literary Life

Laura Elliston novelsSawbonesBlood Oath Badlands
Good : Tidy condition
$10.00
Adolph Hitler – Winston Churchill – Mohandas Gandhi – Franklin D. Roosevelt – Joseph Stalin – Harry Truman – Emperor Hirohito – Francisco Franco – Konrad Adenauer – Charles de Gaulle – Dwight D. Eisenhower – Josip Broz Tito – Gamal Abdel Nasser – David Ben-Gurion – Nikita Khrushchev – John F. Kennedy – Queen Elizabeth II (2nd) – Shah of Iran – Mao Tse-Tung.
$10.00
The Cat from Kitaly began life in the marble mountains of Carrara some 100 years ago. Renown Sculptor Antinio Bortone, a professor at the Florentine School of Art, bought together a young woman knitting socks for first World War soldiers and this little cat, whose delight was to play with the ball of wool before drifting off to sleep. Knitting for the front as the sculpture is now called, was part of 500 pieces of art bought to New Zealand in 1918 and sold to raise funds for soldiers blinded by mustard gas during the war. Visiting Paris, surviving a storm at sea, making friends with a rat, being shaken by earthquakes, and bought, not once but twice, by the people of Christchurch, New Zealand – these adventures are only part of his story. Little wonder he was offended when he heard himself described as “just a Cat”. It was then he decided he needed to tell his life’s story for he is and always well be THE CAT FROM KITALY. Fine: almost like new very tidy condition. Author Signed Copy