Cool! Cloudstreet and Brooklyn are both really interesting novels - probably Cloudstreet more so but I'm just a biased Winton fan

The only trouble is, since they're both novels (Brooklyn's a bit shorter, but Cloudstreet is kind of dense) you might have a bit more of a workload than the plays and poetry which are much more digestible. However, if you were to get started with the readings over the summer (which everyone SHOULD do anyway

) that'll make the year go a lot smoother for you. Plus, if you're familiar enough with the general plot and read up on some general resources and analyses, you should be set.
And if you're doing Life of Galileo for your Context that means you're doing Conflict, which is a pretty good option since it's not quite as broad or theoretical as 'Landscapes' or 'Reality' but still has more to talk about than 'Identity and Belonging.' Context is more of a pain for most people than the standard essays, but it's only a third of the course and you should be able to mould it to suit you. And because it's the end of the study design, you'll have 8 years worth of notes and resources at your disposal!
You've got a pretty good selection for Lit too - Heart of Darkness is excellent and Doll's House is tailor made for Lit. Passage Analyses. I think Rossetti's poetry is either in its 4th year, or will be off the list next year, but it's been quite popular so far since a lot of people find it easier to analyse poems in exam conditions than huge slabs of novels. I don't know much about Stephen Crane; I think he's new to the list, and you'll have a couple of additional texts that you'll study for SACs but won't be on the exam.
I don't want to make the decision for you, and you should definitely wait until results come out to give up on Psych entirely, but my guess is that you'd gain more from doing a different subject than from repeating the same one again, and it looks like you'd have a pretty good year set out in English judging by those texts.
Then again, if your school allows it, you could wait until you find out who your teachers are (presumably they'll tell you in orientation/commencement week at the end of this year, or right at the start of next year) and then pick up/ drop whichever subjects you want then
