Wednesday, 17 September 2025

Review: The Path Through the Coojong Trees by Leonie Kelsall

 The Path Through the Coojong Trees follows single mother Natasha as she arrives in Settlers Bridge to hopefully live a quiet life. Just her and her nine-year-old daughter Zehra.
When she meets Hamish she wonders if it just might be the chance she needs for a fresh start. That is until her past comes back into her life. Now Natasha must decide if she can forgive and be open to a second chance at love.

The Path Through the Coojong Trees is narrated through a dual timeline. The "now" had the reader returning to the familiar backdrop of Settlers Bridge with all the characters I have grown to love. Here we see Natasha settling into the area, meeting all the locals who are welcoming and friendly.

The "then" timeline is ten years previous in another small town with a young Natasha living in a dysfunctional family and working through her last year of high school.

There was much more "then" than "now" and Natasha's story was quite sad which I think spoilt the romance theme I was expecting.
The Path Through the Coojong Trees is a story about an all consuming first love and heartbreak. With themes of racism, dysfunctional families, xenophobia and family duty. I did find the story a bit heavy going.

What I did love was the atmosphere of living in nature and the slower pace of life in Settlers Bridge.
I was expecting The Path Through the Coojong Trees to be Natasha and Hamish's story and I feel a little misled by the blurb.
Overall I liked the story but it's not my favourite by this author. I liked that Leonie Kelsall featured a main character with a hearing impairment and showed how this was perceived by those around her. 

I am looking forward to Hamish's real love story, The Ironbark Promise, coming in January 2026.

My rating 3 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐

Publisher: Allen & Unwin
Publication date: 1st July 2025
Genre: Contemporary Fiction / Rural Romance
Pages: 373
RRP: AU$32.99
Source: Courtesy of the publisher

Other books I've read by Leonie Kelsall:





Saturday, 13 September 2025

Review: Twelve Post-War Tales by Graham Swift

Twelve Post-War Tales wasn't quite the collection of stories I was expecting. The stories were set post-war but not necessarily about the after effects of the war.
 
Graham Swift's short stories were diverse in era, location and characters. Most had a reminiscent feel with the narrator looking back on past events in their life.

I enjoyed how Swift infused different moods into each short story - some were melancholy, humorous and tranquil with themes of loss, childhood memories and reminiscence. 
 
 
Some of my favourites were:
The Next Best Thing - a story about a soldier stationed in Germany in 1959 and inquiring about the fate of his Jewish relatives during the war.
 
Chocolate - a group of 70 year-old men chatting in a pub and ribbing each other as one tells the story of a sweet girl he met back in the 70's.
 
Passport - Anna-Maria waking on her birthday and can't remember if she's 81 or 82. She finds her passport which has her thinking about all the journeys she never took and how she became an orphan during the blitz.
 
All the stories are different in their telling however all have an element of history through memories.
 
My rating: 3.8 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (averaged over the twelve stories) 
 
Publisher: Scribner Australia
Publication date: 30th April 2025
Genre: Short Stories
Pages: 304
RRP: AU$35.00 (hardcover)
Source: courtesy of the publisher