Our Book of the Week is Catherine Chidgey's latest inventive, acute and entertaining novel The Axeman's Carnival. Narrated by Tama, a magpie who very cleverly 'does all the voices' and mimics even an author's relationship to their story and characters, the novel treats life in the backblocks of rural Aotearoa as a scenario in which humans fail to suppress their inner faults and play out their ambivalences towards each other and toward the so-called natural world.
>>Book of the Week: Bird of the Year.
>>Life on the farm.
>>Pecky reviews the book.
>>An excellent conversation with Sara Baume (author of Seven Steeples).
>>"There's a fire under me."
>>The New Zealand 12" Championship.
>>Read Stella's review of The Wish Child.
>>Read Thomas's review of The Beat of the Pendulum.
>>Remote Sympathy was short-listed for the 2021 Acorn Prize.
>>Your copy of The Axeman's Carnival.
| >> Read all Stella's reviews. | |
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| >> Read all Thomas's reviews. | |
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NEW RELEASES
Click through to secure your copies on our website.

"Aftermath is a major landmark in British narrative non-fiction. It's a beautiful and profoundly important account of creative writing teaching as a radical act of trust and interrogation of power; its anti-racist and abolitionist stance makes it a vitally important as well as deeply moving book to read now in these dismal days for the British political project. It is fearless in the way it shows its agonised workings as it unfolds into a complex map of grief." —Max Porter

An ingeniously constructed pop-up book, throwing the alphabet into three dimensions.
VOLUME FOCUS : Libraries
A selection of books from our shelves.
| >> Read all Stella's reviews. | |
Oscar Mardell's freezing works poems are a clever addition to the tradition of New Zealand gothic literature. Think Ronald Hugh Morrison’s The Scarecrow and David Ballantyne's Sydney Bridge Upside Down and you’ll get a sense of the macabre that edges its ways through these poems like entrails. There’s the nostalgia for the stink of the slaughter yards, the adherence to the architects of such vast structures on our landscapes, and the pithy analysis of our colonial pastoral history. That smell so evocative of hot summer days cooped up in a car travelling somewhere along a straight road drifts in as you read 'Horotiu' with its direct insult to the yards and its references to offal. In these poems, there is the thrust and violence of killing alongside the almost balletic rhythm of the work — the work as described on the floor as well as the poetic structure of Mardell’s verse. “ th sticking knife th steel th saw “ the dull thud resonates Most of the poems note the architect and the date of construction for these ominous structures, which had a strange grandeur — simultaneously horrific and glorious. One of the outstanding architects was J.C.Maddison, a designer known for both his slaughterhouses and churches, alongside other stately public buildings. In 'Belfast', Mardell cleverly bridges these divides — the lambs, the worship, the elation. “ did he who set a compass There are plenty of other cultural references tucked away in these poems. Minnie Dean makes an appearance in Mataura and James K Baxter in Ngauranga Abattoir. In the latter, Mardell slips in Baxter's line "sterile whore of a thousand bureaucrats". Yet the poems go beyond nostalgia or clever nods to literature, to sharpen our gaze on our colonial relationship. 'Burnside' tells it perfectly: “ & ws new zealands little lamb Mardell’s collection, Great Works, is pithy and ironic with its clever nods to cultural and social history, gothic in imagery, and all wrapped up like a perfectly trussed lamb in our ‘God’s Own Country’ nostalgia, with a large drop of sauce and a knife waiting to slice. |
| >> Read all Thomas's reviews. | |
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>>Genius.
>>But who has the most cats?
>>Anyone can be a hero in their own back yard.
>>Look inside the book.
>>Hungry penguins.
>>See some images/buy the book!
NEW RELEASES
>>Have a look inside!
>>We see their work, but do we know their names?
>>Making spaces and making space.
>>Have look inside!
>>Look inside.

>>Look inside!

"A wild and gratifying literary ride." —Guardian
Laing explores the capacities and vulnerabilities of the human body, and sees it as the locus of a political struggle for individual and collective freedom and authenticity. Laing uses the body as a way to consider significant and complicated figures of the past, and to understand their relevance today, when our bodies are facing both established and new threats and opportunities. Now in paperback!
>>The problems of inhabiting a body.
>>William Reich and the 'sexual revolution'.
>>An interrogation of bodies.
>>The book came out of a moment of despair.
>>Laing discusses the book with Maggie Nelson.
>>On writing the global story of liberation.
>>Finding renewal in a precision haircut.
>>Of course the book has a playlist!
>>Laing's reading piles are far from organised...
>>Other books by Olivia Laing.
The Anomaly by Hervé Le Tellier (translated by Adriana Hunter) $37
VOLUME FOCUS : Work
A selection of books from our shelves.
BOOKS @ VOLUME #300 (14.10.22)
Celebrate our 300th newsletter with a new book! Find out about the latest new books, the latest book news, and what we've been reading and recommending.
Our Book of the Week is BEST OF FRIENDS by Kamila Shamsie. This powerful new novel from the author of Home Fire contrasts the fates of two school friends whose lives are set on different tracks by an incident in their teenage years. Bridging Karachi and London, the novel unpicks the operations of power through class and gender, both in Pakistan and abroad, and explores the tensions and bonds of friendship and culture. Another subtle and insightful novel from this fine writer.
>>Read Stella's review.
>>Stella reviews the book on RNZ.
>>Thorny issues.
>>Friendship, power, and ethics.
>>Does principle or loyalty make for the better friend?
>>Why friendship?
>>What kind of democracy is this?
>>Start reading!
| >> Read all Stella's reviews. | |
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| >> Read all Thomas's reviews. | |
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NEW RELEASES
Click through to our website for your copies!
The Axeman's Carnival by Catherine Chidgey $35
"Herzog's writing bristles with the same eerie and uncompromising energy as his films. His jungle pulses with hallucinatory life." —Sam Byers, Guardian



Papercuts: A party game for the rude and well-read $45
>>Find out more.
VOLUME FOCUS : Fabric
Fabric: The Hidden History of the Material World
Worn: A People's History of Clothing (Reviewed for RNZ Nine to Noon)
(For VOLUME reviews of Worn, Thread Ripper, Garments Against Women and The White Dress — follow the links.)
Author of the Week:
French writer Annie Ernaux has made herself the subject of her books, and, in doing so, has written the story of everybody. In spare, precise prose, she calibrates experience against memory and the personal against the universal, and provides deep insight into experiences that few writers face so honestly and directly.
>>Ernaux has just been awarded the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature.
>>Tuning in.
>>An introduction to the works.



































































