Welcome to my public notebook, where I’m thinking out loud to generate ideas, sharing what I know, and trying to be interesting. The philosophy behind this public notebook is very much based on Austin Kleon’s Show Your Work! which I go into more depth on here if you’re interested. The basic premise is that this is a place for me to do something – anything – to keep creative momentum up. Anything is better than nothing.
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I won the Steph Bowe Prize!?

From the official announcement of the Steph Bowe Prize 2025 on Instagram:
Congratulations to the inaugural winners of The Steph Bowe Prize for Young Writers, @elizabethbourkewriter and @scho.lydia 🎉
The Prize was established in memory of beloved #LoveOzYA author Steph Bowe, and honours her passion for fostering and mentoring emerging writers. Judges Lili Wilkinson (@liliwilkinsonauthor), Alison Evans (@alisonwritesthings) and Nicola Santilli (@acrophony) were so impressed with the quality of entries that it only seemed fitting to award the inaugural Prize to joint winners. Both winners will receive $1000, a 20-hour mentorship and a professional development package worth $200. Will Kostakis (@willkostakis) and @acrophony will be the mentors for the 2025 Prize.
‘Solace’ is a sapphic science fiction YA novel featuring androids, a future drowned Sydney and a search for answers that will change everything. It will appeal to readers of Becky Chambers and Xiran Jay Zhao. Elizabeth Bourke (she/her) is a young writer living on unceded Dharawal land. Her writing tangles nature, technology and queerness. She contributed to the queer speculative YA anthology ‘An Unexpected Party’ and has appeared at @emergingwriters and @nywf.
‘The Maggie Problem’ is a contemporary YA set in suburban Melbourne that explores the complexities of making friends, coming out and finding your people. It will appeal to fans of Alice Oseman, Melina Marchetta and Alice Boyle. Lydia Schofield (they/she) is a writer and artist from Melbourne Naarm. They write YA and middle grade fiction that revolves around friendships, queer experiences, magic and sometimes spaceships. Her work has appeared in the anthology ‘What You Become.’ They also run workshops in writing and comic-making.
Congratulations Lydia and Elizabeth! And thanks to everyone who submitted to The Steph Bowe Prize.
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Cosy admin? Legends and Lattes and other (actually) cosy books
Described as Dungeons and Dragons meets Animal Crossing meets a warm hug, Legends and Lattes by Travis Baldree is meant to be the cosy book of the century. But maybe it’s just admin?


Viv is an orc barbarian who’s hanging up her sword in search of a calmer life. She’s moved to the big city and is ready to set up a shop selling gnomish coffee. The novel follows her journey through the streets of Thune to find assistance, befriending Cal, a grumpy dwarf who works on the docks to help her transform stables into a chic coffeehouse, complete with new assistant, Tandri.
While many readers have found this novel’s low stakes relaxing, I found the mundanity confounding. While the setting is strong – especially the bustling markets full of building supplies, antiques, and tableware – Viv is unnervingly unemotional as her purse of silver grows empty and the tasks around setting up a shop pile up. I’m not convinced reading about people shopping and putting up shelves is interesting or cosy. And when conflict does arise, Viv stamps it out so quickly it’s irritating and, honestly, silly. (Can you really pay off the mafia with a muffin? I don’t think so.)
Meanwhile, although the tension between Viv and Tandri is definitely present, it is plonked onto the page so obviously and clumsily that I found it distracting and awkward. I love a good awkward romance, especially a queer one, but I did not get the impression the author meant for the reader to cringe at what should be sweet glances exchanged over a busy coffee counter.
So if you, like me, did not understand the appeal of this book, what should you read instead? Here’s my shortlist of the best actually cosy books to curl up with on a rainy day.
PSALM FOR THE WILD BUILT by Becky Chambers


It shares a lot of motifs with Legends and Lattes. A monk looking for a change of pace retrains as a tea monk and sets off into the world, offering advice and tea to villagers across the realm. This is a Ghibli-esque solarpunk socialist masterpiece that quietly examines what it is to seek meaning and connection, and questions – literally and gorgeously – what it means to be human. And there are robots and lush treehouse towns along the way.
Murder Most Unladylike by Robin Stevens
Mysteries are cosy. Boarding school books are cosy. Historical fiction is (depending on the time period and focus) cosy. Whack them all together with enigmatic eleven-year-old detectives, a diverse cast of queer and POC characters in 1930s England (and Hong Kong) and you have my go-to comfort series. For ultimate cosy vibes, start with the snowy Oxford Christmas book, Mistletoe and Murder.


Gwen and Art are Not in Love by Lex Croucher
Princess Gwen catches her brother snogging the boy she’s betrothed to. The female knight Gwen is crushing on is in town for a tournament. Also, the whole book is set in Camelot. There are hunts, there are feasts, there is intrigue and there are injuries nursed by worried lovers in fire-warmed castle rooms. What more do you want?
Pumpkinheads by Rainbow Rowell and Faith Erin Hicks
Rowell’s snappy, cute dialogue blends with Hicks’ warm illustrations to create a butterfly-inducing love story set in a pumpkin patch at the end of Autumn. Serving suggestion: consume with hot drink of choice and lots of marshmallows.
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Best Books of 2023
I always collect my reading stats for the year, so here’s a look at what I loved most and a breakdown of the kinds of books I gravitated towards.







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