At the 2026 Sydney Writers' Festival I attended a panel session on crime writing with American author Shawn Andre Cosby. SA Cosby is best known for writing Southern Noir thrillers, set in his home state of Virginia. Reckoning I would enjoy his storytelling, I bought a couple of his novels and after the session I asked Cosby where I should start with his work. After discussing my reading preferences, Cosby recommended All the Sinners Bleed (2023) would be the best place to begin. So I started there, and it has been a perfect introduction to his work.
Set in the fictional Charon County Virginia, Titus Crown is the County's first Black sheriff. Titus is a former FBI agent who now leads a team of deputies as they break up bar fights in this small Southern town. The police are called out to a shooting at the local high school where a beloved teacher is killed by a former student. As Titus and his team investigate, tensions flare in the community, and they soon realise that there is serial killer, or killers, in their midst. Between the evangelical church groups, the sons of the confederacy, and the parents in fear for their children, Titus has his hands full as he races to solve this case.InaGuddle
About books of all kinds - random musings by Elizabeth Robinson
Saturday, 18 July 2026
The Last Wolf
Saturday, 11 July 2026
Booker Prize Longlist 2026 Predictions
The Booker Prize Longlist will be announced on 28 July 2026. It has been a wonderful year for books, but always a challenge to predict which novels will be chosen for the longlist as the Booker is known for its surprises.
To be eligible, the novel has to have been written in English and published in UK/Ireland between 1 October 2025 and 30 September 2026. While I am not entirely sure when novels were published in UK/Ireland, I am going to take a wild guess at who might appear on the longlist.
My predictions for the Booker longlist this year are:- Virginia Evans - The Correspondent
- Rozie Kelly - Kingfisher
- Min Jee Lee - American Hagwon
- Ben Lerner - Transcription
- Valerie Luiselli - Beginning Middle End
- Siang Lu - Ghost Cities
- Megha Majumdar - A Guardian and a Thief
- Daniel Mueenuddin - This is Where the Serpent Lives
- Doireann Ni Ghriofa - Said the Dead
- Maggie O'Farrell - Land
- Ann Patchett - Whistler
- Elizabeth Strout - The Things We Never Say
- Douglas Stuart - John of John
Friday, 3 July 2026
Where the Heart Is
Thursday, 25 June 2026
Miles Franklin Award Shortlist 2026
The Miles Franklin Award Shortlist was announced this week. The following six titles are up for Australia’s most prestigious literary prize:
- Randa Abdel-Fattah - Discipline
- Steve MinOn - First Name Second Name
- Konrad Muller - My Heart at Evening
- Omar Musa - Fierceland
- Josephine Rowe - Little World
- Sean Wilson - You Must Remember This
The judges said of this shortlist:
"This year’s Miles Franklin shortlist showcases the capacity of the Australian novel to grapple with the most vexing and profound questions of our time. Grand and intimate, these novels sing the Australian experience into new shapes.”
Wednesday, 24 June 2026
In Search of Free Will
Elizabeth Strout's latest novel, The Things We Never Say (2026) is an extraordinary, big-hearted story about an ordinary man.
Artie Dam is in his late fifties. He is a beloved history teacher at the high school in his Massachusetts town. He has been married for over thirty years to his therapist wife Evie. He enjoys sailing solo on the bay where he lives. His only child, Dan, is married and has a good job. Artie knows lots of people, but he is desperately lonely. In fact, he is so lonely, he wants to die. There is a weight of hopelessness bearing down on Artie as his country changes in the lead-up to the 2024 election. He feels an intense sadness that people cannot disagree agreeably and that they have forgotten the lessons of history. He wonders whether people have free will. Artie decides he doesn't want to live anymore in this world. But then an incident happens and a secret is revealed. This changes his perspective, introduces new people into his world, and brings about a deeper connection with his son. Artie has much to live for, and yet he doesn't want to live in the same way as before.Elizabeth Strout has pulled back the layers on male depression and loneliness, and with great empathy she reveals Artie's inner life. The novel explores how we restrain ourselves from asking for help, from reaching out, from saying how we feel, and how we lie overtly or by omission. When Artie begins to speak his truth he finds some people are receptive and others are not. He finds that people have become so impolite and impatient, and there is a decency that has been lost as reflected in the state of the nation.
Unlike other novels in the Strout universe, this novel does not take place in Maine or feature familiar characters, but it does feature a cheeky reference to Olive Kitteridge. This is a terrific standalone novel and a great introduction to Strout's writing. Artie is a fantastic character and in a world full of outrage and toxic masculinity, we need more Arties to balance the scales.
I absolutely loved this novel. It is short, sweet and uplifting. Beautifully written, tender and full of life. Highly recommend.
Saturday, 20 June 2026
Black Sheep
Madeline Cash's debut novel Lost Lambs (2026) is a satire centring on a dysfunctional American family. I had heard great things about it, and it sounded like the perfect novel to begin my holiday with. So I downloaded the audiobook, got comfy poolside and became immersed in the story of the Flynn family.
Outwardly the Flynns are a normal American family - Bud and his wife Caroline, raise their three daughters, Abigail (17 ), Louise (15), and Harper (12) in an unremarkable American town. But the Flynn's relationship is falling apart as Caroline has unilaterally declared they are in an open marriage so she can actively pursue their neighbour. But the 'arrangement' is not something Bud wants, and his anger about the situation is impacting his work and his parenting. The children have their own issues. Abigail is dating a former soldier known as 'War Crimes' Wes. Forgettable middle-child Louise has been chatting online with a person who may be leading her to commit terrorist acts. The youngest, Harper, has a penchant for outrageous lies and has been sent off to a reform camp after being suspended from school. Bud's anger and depression is causing him to fail at work, so his boss urges him to seek help. Bud joins the "Lost Lambs" support group at the local church run by Miss Winkle to work through his feelings.Ever curious, Harper has been messing around in her father's computer and has discovered dodgy dealings by her dad's employer. I won't say more about the plot for fear of spoilers, but suffice it to say the story is delightfully bonkers and laugh out loud funny. Ultimately, it is a story about family and the shared love among those we call our own.
Wednesday, 17 June 2026
Revisiting The Murder of Roger Ackroyd
My reviews of other Christie novels are available on this blog:
Murder on the Links (1923) Murder on the Orient Express (1934) The Body in the Library (1942)
The Labours of Hercules (1947)
Mrs McGinty's Dead (1952)
A Caribbean Mystery (1964)
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Women's Prize Winners 2026
The Non-Fiction prize was awarded to Canadian author Lyse Doucet for The Finest Hotel in Kabul while the Fiction prize was presented to American author Virginia Evans for her debut novel The Correspondent. Each author receives £30,000 and a statuette.
The winners were announced at a special event in London on 11 June 2026.
Women's Prize for Fiction
"A remarkable novel, with an exemplary combination of originality, excellence and accessibility. It is no mean feat to write a life in letters, but Evans makes this feel effortless, asking the reader to consider the choices we make, whilst elevating an ordinary life in the most heartfelt of ways. The sheer skill required to render an emotionally resonant and engaging work in this format is spectacular. This is a novel that captured our hearts, and should be read and savoured by all."
I am so happy Virginia Evans won for this novel. It will likely be one of my favourite books of 2026.
Women's Prize for Non-Fiction
"A perfect work of narrative non-fiction: it is not only cleverly constructed and brilliantly researched, but each and every element is handled with extraordinary sensitivity and warmth – it will move you to tears or make you laugh, or perhaps both. Informed by decades of excellent reporting, Doucet centres the real-life experiences of people – the staff and guests, alongside the hotel itself – and with the future of Afghanistan still being written, this book’s importance will only get stronger as the years go by."
I had thought that Arundhati Roy might win for her incredible memoir, Mother Mary Comes to Me, but I am happy for Doucet.
Sydney Writers' Festival 2026 - Day Four
Sunday 24 May 2026 is the last day of SWF2026.
Here's how I spent my day.
Whitlam and Howard: Leaders of Consequence
In this session, journalist and biographer Troy Bramston and political analyst Amy Remeikis spoke about former Prime Ministers Gough Whitlam and John Howard with Fran Kelly.![]() |
| Fran Kelly, Troy Bramston, Amy Remeikis |
Where Dunnit?
As readers of this blog will know, I love a good crime thriller. So I was keen to attend this session with crime writers Michael Bennett, S.A. Cosby and Chris Hammer discussing the importance of place, in conversation with Hayley Scrivenor.![]() |
| Chris Hammer and me |
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| Hayley Scrivenor, Michael Bennett, SA Cosby, Chris Hammer |
Mick Herron in Conversation
While I had already seen Mick Herron earlier in the festival talking about adaptations, I was keen to attend this session to hear him talk about his latest novel in the Slough House series, with one of my favourite facilitators Michael Williams (seriously, I think Williams is one of the best interviewers around).This was an interesting discussion as they spoke about Herron's career. I did not realise he was a poet, but Williams and he spoke about how poetry has influenced his writing. Herron described how he came up with character River Cartwright's name - he had already chosen Cartwright as it sounded like an established British surname, and he knew he wanted a two syllable first name. On a commute to Oxford the train was paused at a river, and he suddenly thought 'River Cartwright' and when he landed on that, he immediately came up with a back story about River's upbringing.
Closing Address: A Braver Australia
Since I had attended the opening night gala, I thought I would go to the closing address as well. The ones I had attended previously were single author addresses (e.g. Jennifer Egan in 2018), but this year there were six people each giving a ten minute address on the topic of 'a braver Australia'. Host Sisonke Msimang introduced the speaker.![]() |
| Sisonke Msimang, Jack Toohey, Amy Thunig-McGregor, Amy Remeikis, Shankari Chandran, Ben Quilty and Anne Mossop |
So that's a wrap on my time at SWF2026. I thoroughly enjoyed each of the 23 sessions I attended. I missed attending with my festival friend this year, but I loved catching up with friends between sessions and meeting fellow book lovers throughout the festival.
One of the things I love about SWF is how accessible and friendly it is. It is great fun to mingle with writers, publishers, and fellow book nerds.
Book Signings
Books signed by authors today:
- S A Cosby - Razorblade Tears and All the Sinners Bleed

SA Cosby - Chris Hammer - Legacy
- Mick Herron - Dead Lions, Real Tigers, and Spook Street
- Hayley Scrivener - Dirt Town
My SWF2026 Experience
- Early Sessions - Lorena Allam, Robbie Arnott, Avani Dias, Lyse Doucet, Anton Enus, Nikita Gill, Lily King, Kate McClymont, Michael Pedersen, and Patrick Radden Keefe.
- Day One - Robbie Arnott, Nick Bryant, Barrie Cassidy, Rosalind Dixon, AC Grayling, Tayari Jones, Yann Martel, Amy Remeikis, Niki Savva, David Szalay, Tasma Walton
- Day Two - Michael Mohammed Ahmed, Matt Alt, Jacinda Ardern, Rebecca Armitage, Susan Choi, Bora Chung, Roddy Doyle, Mariana Enriquez, Kate Evans, Mick Herron, Yann Martel, Charlotte McConaghy, Suzie Miller, David Szalay, and Charlotte Wood.
- Day Three - Randa Abdel-Fattah, Michael Mohammed Ahmad, Roddy Doyle, Kate Evans, Jan Fran, Lev Grossman, RF Kuang, Antoinette Lattouf, Dervla McTiernan, Garth Nix, Hayley Scrivenor.
- Day Four - Michael Bennett, Tony Birch, Troy Bramston, Shankar Chandran, SA Crosby, Chris Hammer, Mick Herron, Fran Kelly, Sisonke Msimang, Ben Quilty, Amy Remeikis, Hayley Scrivenor, Amy Thunig-McGregor, Jack Toohey, Michael Williams.
Saturday, 13 June 2026
Sydney Writers' Festival - Day Three
After two full days at SWF, and four late nights, I took it easy on Saturday 23 May 2026.
Dervla McTiernan - Three Reasons for Revenge
Internationally bestselling author Dervla McTiernan has written some excellent crime thrillers, including her Cormac Reilly series (The Ruin, The Scholar, The Good Turn and The Unquiet Grave). Last month she published her latest thriller, Three Reasons for Revenge (2026). She spoke with Hayley Scrivenor, author of Dirt Town and Girl Falling.![]() |
| Dervla McTiernan and me |
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| Hayley Scrivenor and Dervla McTiernan |
Silenced
This sold out session featured Palestinian-Australian Randa Abdel-Fattah, and Lebanese-Australians Michael Mohammed Ahmad and Antoinette Lattouf in conversation with journalist Jan Fran. I was keen to attend this session as I have been unnerved by the attempts to silence Abdel-Fattah at other writers' festivals. The whole point of book festivals is to explore ideas, even those one finds disagreeable. I was also interested to hear from Lattouf after her legal battle with the ABC and novelist Michael Mohammed Ahmad.![]() |
| Randa Abdel-Fattah |
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| Jan Fran, Michael Mohammed Ahmed, Randa Abdel-Fattah and Antoinette Lattouf |
Fantastical Worlds
My next session was on fantasy novels featuring international bestselling writers Lev Grossman, R.F. Kuang and Garth Nix in conversation with Carody Culver. I chose this session because I do not read fantasy novels and am not really familiar with the genre, so wanted to expand my reading horizons.![]() |
| Carody Culver, Garth Nix, Lev Grossman, RF Kuang |
Roddy Doyle in Conversation
While I had heard Irish author Roddy Doyle speak as part of the Booker Prize panel the day before, I was keen to attend this session to hear more about his life’s work and latest novel, The Women Behind the Door. He spoke with Kate Evans (ABC Radio National).![]() |
| Kate Evans and Roddy Doyle |
Book Signings
Books signed by authors today:
- Randa Abdel-Fattah - Discipline
- Dervla McTiernan - Three Reasons for Revenge
My SWF2026 Experience
- Early Sessions - Lorena Allam, Robbie Arnott, Avani Dias, Lyse Doucet, Anton Enus, Nikita Gill, Lily King, Kate McClymont, Michael Pedersen, and Patrick Radden Keefe.
- Day One - Robbie Arnott, Nick Bryant, Barrie Cassidy, Rosalind Dixon, AC Grayling, Tayari Jones, Yann Martel, Amy Remeikis, Niki Savva, David Szalay, Tasma Walton
- Day Two - Michael Mohammed Ahmed, Matt Alt, Jacinda Ardern, Rebecca Armitage, Susan Choi, Bora Chung, Roddy Doyle, Mariana Enriquez, Kate Evans, Mick Herron, Yann Martel, Charlotte McConaghy, Suzie Miller, David Szalay, and Charlotte Wood.
- Day Three - Randa Abdel-Fattah, Michael Mohammed Ahmad, Roddy Doyle, Kate Evans, Jan Fran, Lev Grossman, RF Kuang, Antoinette Lattouf, Dervla McTiernan, Garth Nix, Hayley Scrivenor.
- Day Four - Michael Bennett, Tony Birch, Troy Bramston, Shankar Chandran, SA Crosby, Chris Hammer, Mick Herron, Fran Kelly, Sisonke Msimang, Ben Quilty, Amy Remeikis, Hayley Scrivenor, Amy Thunig-McGregor, Jack Toohey, Michael Williams.
Friday, 12 June 2026
Sydney Writers' Festival 2026 - Day Two
Back again for another full day at SWF2026 on Friday 22 May 2026.
Found in Translation
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| Daniel Hanh, Matt Alt, Mariana Enriquez Bora Chung |
In the Club
Next up I went to a free session to see Charlotte McConaghy (Wild Dark Shore) and Rebecca Armitage (The Heir Apparent) talk about being selected for Reese's Book Club.
Armitage is a journalist with the ABC who was working on the royal beat. She had an idea for a book in which a scandal means the British crown is passed on down the line of succession to a woman who has been out of the royal orbit, happily living and working in Australia, when she suddenly finds herself next in line to become Queen. Armitage spoke about the rejection her book had from publishers before she learned how to pitch, and how being selected for Reese's book club suddenly opened up her world.
McConaghy is an established writer who has been quietly beavering away with moderate success. Her novel Wild Dark Shore was unexpectedly chosen by Witherspoon and has given her a much wider audience. She spoke about how this has given her earlier books a new audience as well.
Armitage says that the Reese's Book Club is like a seal of approval. Readers don't know or trust the author, but they do trust Reese. Apparently Witherspoon's team gets novels in advance and they read and cull before recommending them to her. She then reads and decides whether it will be part of her selection. Witherspoon is an extraordinary business woman who knows her audience. Her production company, Hello Sunshine, also buys the rights for books with female appeal to make into television series.
I have read and enjoyed McConaghy's work but was not familiar with Armitage's book. While The Heir Apparent is not the sort of book I normally read, it sounds like a great holiday read. So perhaps....
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| Holly Wainwright, Rebecca Armitage and Charlotte McConaghy |
Dark Materials
In this session, novelists Michael Mohammed Ahmed (Bugger) and David Szalay (Flesh), and non-fiction author Sarah Krasnostein (The Trauma Cleaner) talk about how they write about trauma and abuse. It was facilitated by journalist and author Jacqueline Maley (The Truth About Her). I had booked this session because it included Florence Knapp (The Names), but she unfortunately had to pull out and be replaced by Krasnostein. While disappointed I would not see Knapp, I always enjoy hearing Krasnostein speak about her work.![]() |
| Jacqueline Maley, David Szalay, Sarah Krasnostein, Michael Mohammed Ahmed |
Great Adaptations
In this session, authors Mick Herron (Slow Horses) and Suzie Miller (Prima Facie) talked with Benjamin Law about having their works adapted for stage and screen.![]() |
| Miller signing Prima Facie |
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| Benjamin Law, Suzie Miller, Mick Herron |
Jacinta Ardern
I had to rush from Carriageworks into Sydney Town Hall for my next session. Former Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern spoke about her memoir, A Different Kind of Power, in conversation with Holly Wainright. I recently read this memoir so was thrilled to hear her speak about it.![]() |
| Holly Wainright and Jacinda Ardern |
State of the Art - Booker Prize
Raced back to Carriageworks for my final session of the day. This panel featured authors that had been shortlisted for or won the prestigious Booker Prize. ABC Radio National’s Kate Evans moderated the session featuring Susan Choi (Flashlight), Roddy Doyle (Paddy Clark Ha Ha Ha), Yann Martel (Life of Pi), David Szalay (Flesh), Charlotte Wood (Stone Yard Devotional).
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| David Szalay, Charlotte Wood, Susan Choi |
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| Yann Martel, Roddy Doyle, Kate Evans |
Book Signings
Books signed by authors today:
- Roddy Doyle - Paddy Clark Ha Ha Ha (for my Booker collection)
- Mariana Enriquez - The Dangers of Smoking in Bed
- Mick Herron - Slow Horses
- Suzie Miller - Prima Facie
- Charlotte Wood - Stone Yard Devotional and The Weekend
My SWF2026 Experience
- Early Sessions - Lorena Allam, Robbie Arnott, Avani Dias, Lyse Doucet, Anton Enus, Nikita Gill, Lily King, Kate McClymont, Michael Pedersen, and Patrick Radden Keefe.
- Day One - Robbie Arnott, Nick Bryant, Barrie Cassidy, Rosalind Dixon, AC Grayling, Tayari Jones, Yann Martel, Amy Remeikis, Niki Savva, David Szalay, Tasma Walton
- Day Two - Michael Mohammed Ahmed, Matt Alt, Jacinda Ardern, Rebecca Armitage, Susan Choi, Bora Chung, Roddy Doyle, Mariana Enriquez, Kate Evans, Mick Herron, Yann Martel, Charlotte McConaghy, Suzie Miller, David Szalay, and Charlotte Wood.
- Day Three - Randa Abdel-Fattah, Michael Mohammed Ahmad, Roddy Doyle, Kate Evans, Jan Fran, Lev Grossman, RF Kuang, Antoinette Lattouf, Dervla McTiernan, Garth Nix, Hayley Scrivenor.
- Day Four - Michael Bennett, Tony Birch, Troy Bramston, Shankar Chandran, SA Crosby, Chris Hammer, Mick Herron, Fran Kelly, Sisonke Msimang, Ben Quilty, Amy Remeikis, Hayley Scrivenor, Amy Thunig-McGregor, Jack Toohey, Michael Williams.




































