Lists

Picture of a book: Boy Swallows Universe
Picture of a movie: The Lure
Picture of a TV show: Ragnarok
Picture of a TV show: Kleo
Picture of a TV show: The End of the F***ing World
Picture of a TV show: Masameer County
Picture of a game: Hollow Knight
Picture of a game: Baldur's Gate 3
Picture of a TV show: Cunk on Earth
Picture of a TV show: Tokyo Ghoul
Picture of a game: Assassin's Creed Valhalla
Picture of a game: Disco Elysium
Picture of a movie: The Last Unicorn
Picture of a TV show: The Boys
Picture of a game: Little Nightmares: Complete Edition
Picture of a TV show: Life on Mars

32 Shows, 12 Games, 3 Movies, 1 Book, 1 Podcast

In Progress

Sort by:
Recent Desc

The developers need to sort this out cause everything is confusing and broken now

Inspired by this list

Picture of a book: Taboo
books

Taboo

Kim Scott
From the two-times winner of the Miles Franklin AwardFrom Kim Scott, two-times winner of the Miles Franklin Literary Award, comes a work charged with ambition and poetry, in equal parts brutal, mysterious and idealistic, about a young woman cast into a drama that has been playing for over two hundred years ...\ Taboo \ takes place in the present day, in the rural South-West of Western Australia, and tells the story of a group of Noongar people who revisit, for the first time in many decades, a taboo place: the site of a massacre that followed the assassination, by these Noongar's descendants, of a white man who had stolen a black woman. They come at the invitation of Dan Horton, the elderly owner of the farm on which the massacres unfolded. He hopes that by hosting the group he will satisfy his wife's dying wishes and cleanse some moral stain from the ground on which he and his family have lived for generations.But the sins of the past will not be so easily expunged.We walk with the ragtag group through this taboo country and note in them glimmers of re-connection with language, lore, country. We learn alongside them how countless generations of Noongar may have lived in ideal rapport with the land. This is a novel of survival and renewal, as much as destruction; and, ultimately, of hope as much as despair.LONGLISTED FOR THE MILES FRANKLIN LITERARY AWARD 2018LONGLISTED FOR THE ABIA LITERARY FICTION BOOK OF THE YEAR 2018LONGLISTED FOR THE INDIE BOOK AWARDS FICTION 2018SHORTLISTED FOR THE VICTORIAN PREMIER'S LITERARY AWARD FOR FICTION 2018SHORTLISTED FOR THE COLIN RODERICK AWARD 2018PRAISE FOR TABOO"If Benang was the great novel of the assimilation system, and That Deadman Dance redefined the frontier novel in Australian writing, \ Taboo\ makes a strong case to be the novel that will help clarify - in the way that only literature can - what reconciliation might mean" Australian Book Review"Scott's book is stunning - haunted and powerful ... Verdict: Must Read" Herald Sun"Remarkable" Stephen Romei, Weekend Australian"Stunning prose" Saturday Paper"This is a complex, thoughtful, and exceptionally generous offering by a master storyteller at the top of his game" The Guardian"Undaunted, and daring as ever Scott goes back to his ancestral Noongar country in Western Australia's Great Southern region; back in time as well to killings (or a massacre, the point is contested) of whites and Aborigines there in 1880. . . Taboo never becomes a revenge story, whether for distant or recent wrongs . . . The politics of Taboo - not to presume or simplify too much - are quietist, rather than radical. Ambitious, unsentimental [and] morally challenging" Sydney Morning Herald"Scott is one of the most thoughtful, exciting and powerful storytellers of this continent today, with great courage and formidable narrative prowess- and Taboo is his most daring novel yet" Sydney Review of Books
Picture of a book: Infinite Splendours
books

Infinite Splendours

Sofie Laguna
Lawrence is a bright, kind and talented boy of ten years old when he is groomed and raped by his damaged uncle. The act severs Lawrence from himself. Like the stammer Lawrence develops, where words collide and are blocked, so is he. When Lawrence reaches early adulthood, he starts a friendship with the son of one of his workmates. He connects with the boy he once was, damaged beyond repair. At the heart of Lawrence's desires is the longing to be made whole. But after he is savagely beaten by the boy's father and his workmates, Lawrence decides to retreat from the world. He stays on in his mother's country home, and lives as a hermit for the next thirty years. When a single mother moves into the abandoned farm next door to Lawrence with her teenage daughter and ten-year-old son, his isolation is shattered and he withdraws completely. But the mother asks him to get back to work on the vegetable garden he'd been tending on their land before their arrival. Her boy David is left alone at home a lot, and he and Lawrence begin a friendship. The sense of tension and foreboding is almost unbearable as we witness the boy's growing interest in Lawrence and the older man's blossoming at the chance of the tenderness he has been denied his whole life. In the end, an act of breathtaking courage and sacrifice will save both Lawrence and the boy, but by then your heart will have shattered into a million pieces. Miles Franklin-award winner Sofie Laguna's new novel is both dark and confronting, but transformative through the light, redemption and joy the author so masterfully conjures in its pages. You finish the book with a sense of wonder and exhilaration for what she has achieved and what the book has given you as a reader.