Privacy Policy

For each visitor to our Web page, our Web server automatically recognizes no information regarding the domain or e-mail address.

We only collect customer details in relation to purchases made on the site.

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We will not share any information collected during your purchases on this website with any third party organisation.

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Persons who supply us with their telephone numbers on-line will only receive telephone contact from us with information regarding orders they have placed on-line.

With respect to Ad Servers: We do not partner with or have special relationships with any ad server companies.

From time to time, we may use customer information for new, unanticipated uses not previously disclosed in our privacy notice. If our information practices change at some time in the future we will contact you before we use your data for these new purposes to notify you of the policy change and to provide you with the ability to opt out of these new uses.

Customers may prevent their information from being used for purposes other than those for which it was originally collected by e-mailing.

Upon request we provide site visitors with access to information that we have collected and that we maintain about them.

Consumers can access this information by e-mailing us at the above address.

Upon request we offer visitors the ability to have inaccuracies corrected in contact information. Consumers can have this information corrected by sending us e-mail.

With respect to security: We have appropriate security measures in place in our physical facilities to protect against the loss, misuse or alteration of information that we have collected from you at our site.

If you feel that this site is not following its stated information policy, you may contact us by phone or email.

What readers say

‘I liked the surprise of it, the feeling that anything could happen. There is a time in life when one enters any open door. I guess that’s how you grow up.’ 

R.W. Leura, NSW
Wanderlust

‘Nostalgic as well as immediate… and thoroughly engrossing.’

A.T. Glebe, NSW.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘An absolutely delightful read from beginning to end. Funny, moving, insightful – and your authorial voice instantly appealed to me.’

K.P. St. Leonards, NSW.
A Saucepan in the Sky

'Many of us have memories of our own innocence abroad.'

E.B. Roseville, NSW
Wanderlust

‘Brian Nicholls creates an array of memorable characters. A lack of sentimentality is a strength of both McCourt’s (Angela’s Ashes) and Nicholls' memoir, but the national humour and idioms of A Saucepan in the Sky stand out as unmistakably Australian.’

Independent Scholars Association of Australia Review
A Saucepan in the Sky

A Saucepan in the Sky has a lot more going for it than just a great title. Nicholls gets the child’s voice just right, no mean feat without getting mawkish.'

Marrickville Heritage Society Newsletter
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘It has everything: humour, pathos, history, laughter, tears.’ 

C. McG. Perth, WA.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Paints a vivid picture of a colourful extended family. A compelling tale.’

Sunday Age
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Had me in fits of laughter in the train en route to work.’

R.H. Wavell Heights, Qld.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Details the mapping of a moral universe…a wry, humorous approach to living. ‘Uncle’ Stan is my all-time favourite character – a man with a unique worldview. I thoroughly recommend it.’

Sylvia Rosenblum, East Side Radio
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Your book has helped me understand the men in my life so much more… and recognise the enormous value of parenting and mentoring the unique nature of boys.’

C.S. Pymble, NSW.
A Saucepan in the Sky

'The humour and the entertaining bits make one laugh out loud, but underlying this is the layer of pathos and longing. Hyperbole confronts understatement; sensitive and poetic passages of intense sympathy contrast with brutal reality.'

A.R. Applecross, WA
Wanderlust

‘So much of it seemed very familiar to my own struggles and wow moments.’

A. A. Devon, UK.
A Saucepan in the Sky

'Highly entertaining.'

R.I Paddington, NSW
Wanderlust

‘I absolutely enjoyed your book and couldn’t put it down. I had so many laughs along the way.’ 

J.J. Mt. Isa, Qld.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘A wonderful story beautifully told.’

D. B. Campbelltown, NSW.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Some of the book was comfortably close to home for me: some uncomfortably so.’

Bookchat
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘I really did enjoy it and – the mark of a good book – I definitely did not want it to end.’

D.R. Melbourne.
A Saucepan in the Sky

'Philosophical but not academic. A good read. A tribute to women.'

S.A Glebe, NSW
Wanderlust

'The world that Nicholls evokes is vivid, full of laughter, triumph and tears.’

Authortalk, Berkelouw Bookshop
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Dry, witty, sad, funny and amazingly frank.’

E.M. Rozelle, NSW
Wanderlust

'What a mixture! An awkward Aussie, a few screwball mates and four fascinating women. I don't think I've ever read a book before that so revealingly describes the influence a woman can have on a man - for better and for worse!'

J.P Murrumbeena, Vic
Wanderlust

‘Wanderlust talks about things that people think but do not say.’

M.B. Coogee, NSW
Wanderlust

‘I reluctantly read the last page and immediately wished for more.’

J. D. Paddington, NSW.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘An utterly readable account of a memorable ‘ordinary’ environment. Uncle Vic is a ‘funny bugger’ with a Conradian outlook. ‘Uncle’ Stan is wonderfully disreputable. A charming book…as tender a maternal portrait as you will ever read.’

Australian Book Review
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘I really liked the subtext as well as the story.’

K.S. Annandale, NSW
Wanderlust

‘I’m definitely going to be reading your book over and over because as well as the history behind it there are the constant stories of mischief and humour.’

G.P. Healesville, Vic.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘A classic. A lovely book.’ 

A.M. Canberra.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘This is the first time in my long life that I have felt IMPELLED to convey to a writer my opinion of his/her work. I began reading A Saucepan in the Sky at 6 am and finished it at 11.30 am. Couldn’t put it down. Haven’t been able to do anything else since then except think about it and read extracts to my husband over tea and lunch breaks.’

J.W. Tumbarumba, NSW.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Comic and loving…the reader is hooked from the beginning. You’ll want to raise your glass to Brian and his gang of relatives.'

Geelong Advertiser
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Never a dull moment.’

50 something
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘An absolutely delightful read…fascinating.’

Sally Loane, ABC Radio
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘I particularly empathised with the days which for no reason at all become mood days and that thing about times where nothing “happens”.’

M.T. Glebe, NSW.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘I laughed the whole afternoon as I read it. How delightful in this grim world to find such humour.’ 

P.W. Berwick, Vic.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Your book is an affirmation of something or other that is probably too big to put a label on.’

P.J. Paddington, NSW.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Thank you for your story and your style.’

J.A. Greenwich, NSW.
A Saucepan in the Sky

'I enjoyed A Saucepan in the Sky immensely – it stirred filed-away memories and refreshed the affection held for early relationships.’

M. H. Tathra, NSW.
A Saucepan in the Sky

‘Simple experiences imbued with charm… dilemmas presented clearly in a way that should strike chords of recognition…this is worth reading’

Canberra Times
A Saucepan in the Sky
Wanderlust

Tess is experienced and erotic.
Gretl wilful and illusive.
Vicky perverse, vulgar and wounded.
Julie a tantalising trickster...

A provocative and disarmingly honest memoir of a young Australian’s romantic misadventures in 1960s London at the beginning of the Permissive Age. A beguiling and powerful story of love, infatuation, folly, despair and guilt.

Read more...

A Saucepan in the Sky

‘The most you can expect,’ Uncle Stan said, ‘is for things to almost make sense.’

A Saucepan in the Sky is the story of a boy who thinks anything can be explained if you have the right word − hence his quest for a really big dictionary. But through his family he gets an inkling that a thing called paradox plays a great part in the workings of the world.

Read more...

A Suitcase in the Desert

Two lost children
A man in search of himself
An unforgiving land
An unlikely romance
A murder...

Matt Hudson is an emotionally damaged homicide detective who has dented his code of honour and lost a clear purpose in life.

Read more...

Darkling

A Journey Among Heroes in Search of Final Things.

On a plane bound for London George Brent reveals to a stranger-confidant a plan that is calculated and rational yet filled with poetic imagination. He becomes a knight-errant believing his death is the last remarkable thing that will happen to him.

Read more...

ClarrieMay Publishing