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Landing in Accra

Landing in AccraLanding in Accra (book)

Print: $39.95

Download: $5.00

In her stunning sequel to Where the Cypress Rises, Virginia Ryan takes her readers to Ghana, Africa, in search of art which speaks to her heart. She finds it among the sign writers of the back streets and marketplaces and mounts a spectacular exhibition.

The Yarra Yowie

The Yarra YowieThe Yarra Yowie (book)

Print: $17.95

Download: $5.00

In the dark forests of 19th century Australia, something big and awful is lurking ... and super sleuths Burke and Wills are on its trail. If you loved Geoff Barlow's Avenger's fan fiction you'll love this fresh new story.

Blood Lines

Blood LinesBlood Lines (book)

Print: $29.75

Download: $9.95

William Ross invites his estranged family over for Christmas. Then he discovers that blood is really thicker than water. This contemporary thriller captures the magic of the ancient Greek tragedies and transports it to the equally magic Australian landscape.

The Year of the Dangerous Ones

The Year of the Dangerous OnesThe Year of the Dangerous Ones (book)

Print: $29.95

Download: $5.00

Political staffers close to the Premier of the Australian state of Queensland start turning up dead. Ex-cop Doug Morgan smells a rat, and so does crusading journalist Louise Prince. Together they begin to unravel the twisted knot which reveals a corrupt Police Minister, rampant intrusion of Japanese Yakuza crime bosses, and a trail of dirt which leads right to the top of the political stack. The stakes are higher than Morgan can imagine, and the chase leads all over Australia and even to Japan. Ultimately … only revenge will do!

Nuts and the Betel and other stories

Nuts and the Betel and other storiesNuts and the Betel and other stories (book)

Print: $29.95

Download: $5.00

Ung Van Anh was born in Vietnam in 1944 and has lived through some of the most turbulent years of Vietnam's recent history. He left Vietnam in 1962 for the US but was deported back there in 1968 during the major communist push we now know as the Tet Offensive. His writings were read during the war on Radio Hanoi and he now works as an English teacher in his home town Phan Thiet. Mr Ung's stories about boat refugees, Vietnamese village life and the challenges faced by US nationals in understanding the conflict will surely interest many readers, some of whom will have shared his experiences.