Off Track

Embark on a remarkable journey through Australia's 1970s with Lucy in Off Track. When Lucy finds herself in the back of a panel van with the larrikin Scotchie, her life takes an unexpected turn. From love and beach adventures to protesting the Vietnam War, Lucy's story captures an era of profound transformation. Based on a true story, Liezl Shnookal's captivating novel vividly portrays a time when life veered off its intended course and ventured completely OFF TRACK. Liezl Shnookal is an Australian author of two novels - Off Track and [read more...]

Armoured

Famous, highly decorated aviator and war hero - Sir Basil Embry - decided to live out his dream in retirement, carving out the family fortunes in heavily timbered bush in Western Australia. Challenges and hardship were already in his DNA and seizing opportunities had always been his philosophy in life - whether leading his airborne squadron on flak ridden raids, or diving into a manure heap to escape from his German captors. Later in life he became politically active, trying to improve the lot of fellow farmers, as the wool and [read more...]

The Murder Stone

One by one the bodies of five women are discovered in a remote part of Queensland. They share nothing in common except the apparent cause of death, and the lack of any obvious motive. In The Murder Stone by P.K. Kaplan, it is only when the local police are told of an ancient story by the Japanese poet Basho, that they finally understand how to find the killer.

[Testimonial] Author: Adi Kjolen

As a would-be first time author, I found myself frustrated and disheartened by the traditional publishing process. After spending countless hours hunting down potential online literary agents, only to find that my manuscript either didn’t fit their strict genre criteria or would be subject to up to a year’s worth of delay before it was even considered, I almost gave up on my dream. Upon discovering the Australian Self Publishing Group and reaching out to William, I soon realised that rejecting the traditional publishing route was [read more...]

Bulletproof!

In A.D.1345, four immortal alien rock stars crash land on a parallel Earth, accidentally impregnate a Norwegian farm girl and inadvertently kick-start Armageddon... Six hundred and sixty-six years later, the End Times begin proper when Preston Stevenson, sole survivor of a brutal car wreck, begins to obey the voice inside her head. This voice has shadowed Preston since the accident, protecting her from strife and unseen dangers. Now, it's ordering her to behave bizarrely: insisting she crash the concert of a band she detests, [read more...]

William: A Somerset Man

While researching my ancestry I discovered that my great-grandfather had been widowed twice and married three times with three children before the age of 26 Intrigued, the first Covid lockdown gave me the opportunity to write a book based on facts known. I have changed the names, except for William, and fleshed out the characters. William was born in Somerset in 1828, one of generations going back to 1722 and beyond skilled with woodcarving and model making. He was a great inventor, engineer and designer, and adventurous, too. He [read more...]

Petrichor

The novel is Australian fiction, set in the early 2000's, with three main characters: A young doctor who takes on a contract in an outback town in WA, escaping career and relationship disappointments, an Indigenous young man coping with too many assessments and no understanding, and a boy who sees the people and nature through a different lens. Each has to deal with their own role when two deaths occur, and everyone in the community their responsibility. Against a savagely intruding landscape, the novel is a homage to the [read more...]

David Hunter Webster Changi

Sergeant David Hunter Webster served in the AIF Royal Park Convalescent Unit from 1940 to 1945. In February 1941, he was one of thousands of Australians imprisoned by the Japanese in "Changi" until liberation in September 1945. He kept a diary of activities that went on within the camp. This is his story as he wrote it.

Our Adventurous Times in Antarctica

Leaving Macquarie Island and the 1979 expeditioners was a mixed bag of emotions. I witnessed the grieving of some of the expeditioners from losing one of their mates, a biologist. I felt for them and wondered what wintering on the Island was going to be like for them. Casey Station, 1981 was a unique year for all the expeditioners who served there for the 12 months in such an inhospitable, isolated, frozen, and barren environment found only in Antarctica. A special bond was formed within this year between the expeditioners, and [read more...]