With a few exceptions (see ratings below), I really enjoyed reading these. Some I would have loved to see continued while a few I felt were too short for me to really connect with them.
I hadn't heard of most of these authors beforehand... the main reason I picked this up was because of Ellie Marney :) (Highly recommend her stuff). Will definitely be reading her story again.
Will I check out more from these authors? One day:).
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One Small Step... by Amie Kaufman
3.5 stars, that was cute:)
'You have a letter from Harvard,' my mum said, standing at the kitchen counter and tearing open a foil packet for lunch.
'I didn't know the postal service made it all the way to Mars,' Dad chimed in, raising his hands in pre-emptive self-defence. He's been making that joke at least since I was born, and presumably longer-- so that's a minimum seventeen years in circulation, or nine, if you're counting in Martian.
I can see the ending by Will Kostakis - 4 stars
"It's different, when you know it's ending. You have the chance to look at it properly, really study it. Whatever was weird at first that became normal becomes weird again. You start to miss it when you haven't quite lost it yet. And you have to work hard to stay present, really appreciate it, which only leads to more proper looking, more studying and more weirdness."
In a Heartbeat by Alice Pung - 3.5 stars
Ha, you can legitimately have the last word in every argument, you can use the excuse we've all been using with our parents since we were thirteen: 'I didn't ask to be born! In your case, you don't know how true that is. It feels weird, writing to something that exists but doesn't yet,if you know what I mean. "
First Casualty by Michael Pryor - 3.5 stars
The trouble with advertising was that a million other bozos were also advertising for people to share costs on the traditional post-graduation planet hopping tour--schoolies time, right?--and they had more to offer than I did.
Sundays by Melissa Keil - 3.5 stars
This is how it goes.
I am standing in a corner, 'cause I always seem to find myself standing in corners. Not in the center of the sweaty, heaving dancers, and not in the back sunroom with the stoners and smokers. Definitely not too close to the front door--that would imply that I'm eager to escape, or eager to be seen. "
Missing Persons by Ellie Marney : 4 stars ... so nice to visit with Rachel and Mycroft again:)
When you stand out in the front yard of your family's dilapidated white stucco house and look forward, and all you can see is a street view of more dilapidated houses, with a panorama of traffic, and warehouses, and power lines above and beyond that... it's safe to assume that your home is not what it was anymore. "
Oona Underground by by Lili Wilkinson - 2.5 stars
Oona stands at the mouth of darkness, her hair full of sunset and her mouth full of smiles. She belongs to the day, to fresh air and warm breezes.
The Feeling from Over Here by Gabrielle Tozer - 3.5 stars
Blisters burn the back of Lucy's ankles. She thuds along the footpath parallel to Northbourne Avenue, a veil of sweat decorating her forehead, but she doesn't bother to wipe it away. Turns out shoes fresh from the box and a school uniform aren't the best choices for sprinting through the streets of Canberra.
Last Night at the Mount Solemn observatory by Danielle Binks - 3.5 stars
The first word I ever learned was King , for my brother.
Fingertips and thumb to the top of my head in a circle, like a crown
Most babies learn survival signs first--drink, food, up, and hurt --words that get them what they want.
Competition Entry #349 by Jaclyn Moriarty - 3 stars
To enter, tell us in twenty-five words or less why YOU deserve to win an exclusive time-travel package consisting of five (5) ten-minute Time Journeys, return flights to Sydney from your nearest capital city, accommodation at the Novotel on Darling Harbour, and transfers to and from the Time Travel Agency (TM)
(my copy is 322 pages)