<p>âThe book has a pleasant tone. Its authors, Jacqueline Kent and Tom Roberts, give a lesson in amiable tolerance and handle other thorny subjects without a touch of militancy. Their lesson seems to be that only fools rush in to judge what they cannot understand.â</p>
- Richard Davenport-Hines, The Times
<p>âI lapped up <em>Bonjour, Mademoiselle</em>.â</p>
- Roger Lewis, The Spectator
<p>âAprilâs extraordinarily courageous and pioneering personal journey is the story of a trans life well lived. At times heartbreaking, this book documents her setbacks â and also her ultimate triumph as a much loved trans hero!â</p>
- Peter Tatchell, LGBT+ and human rights defender,
<p>âThis book is about Aprilâs triumphant journey to be the woman she was born to be.â</p>
- Boy George,
<p>âA dazzling account of a unique life woven into the wider story of dramatic social change across the best part of a century. It is also a story which resonates to the present day.â</p>
- Paul Baker, author of <i>Fabulosa! the story of Polari, Britainâs secret gay language</i>,
<p>âMore twists and turns to it than the maze at Hampton Court!â</p>
- Sir Roy Strong ch, former director of Victoria and Albert Museum,
<p>âFrom Smithdown Road, Liverpool to London high society, this entertaining biography does her extraordinary story justice.â</p>
- Paul Burston, author of <i>We Can Be Heroes</i>,
<p>âA thoroughly entertaining ride through swinging London and beyond.â</p>
- Sophia Blackwell, ResonanceFM
<p>â[An] Intriguing and first-class biography.â</p>
- Roger Lewis, The Oldie
<p><b>Praise for <i>A Certain Style: Beatrice Davis, a literary life</i>:</b></p>
<p>âA sharp-eyed and warm-hearted biography ⌠the pleasure of Davisâ company is further enlivened by Kentâs own quietly witty take on her material.â</p>
- Kerryn Goldsworthy, The Age
<p><strong>Praise for <em>Beyond Words: a year with Kenneth Cook</em>:</strong></p>
<p>âThere is nothing âbuttonedâ about Jacqueline Kentâs memoir of her brief relationship with Kenneth Cook, author of <em>Wake in Fright</em> (1961). Indeed, she brings a striking degree of verisimilitude â an almost eerie recall â to the project.â</p>
The Sydney Morning Herald
<p><b>Praise for <i>The Making of Murdoch</i>:</b></p>
<p>âTo unpeel the layers of âthe man who owns the mediaâ, it's difficult to think of someone more qualified than Tom Roberts ⌠Here, Roberts again applies his forensic approach and scholarly rigour.â</p>
Spearâs Magazine
<p><b>Praise for <i>Before Rupert</i>:</b></p>
<p>âIn this engrossing study Tom Roberts draws on a remarkable range of sources, many for the first time, to show how Keith Murdoch succeeded in his ambition.â</p>
- Stuart Macintyre, author of <i>The History Wars</i>,