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His first novel has just won a prestigious Nebula Award; now John Wiswell puts his humorous and humanist spin on the labours ...
British historian Anne Sebba’s account of the Nazi death camp describes the dissonance of beautiful music in a place of ...
The French Open may be over for another year, but Roland-Garros will always belong to Rafael Nadal, its all-time champion.
Winner of a Queensland Literary Award, Steve MinOn’s debut novel charts the lives – and afterlives – of a family of Chinese ...
Emily Tesh’s magical fantasy The Incandescent is as much about the art of teaching as it is about dealing with demons.
Phillips’ debut novel fictionalises the early life of Anne Hamilton Byrne, the real-life leader of the notorious Australian cult The Family. Anne Hamilton Byrne invented her own philosophy, attracted ...
Melbourne author Fiona Hardy has broken very different ground with her crime fiction debut Unbury the Dead. Hardy is well-known in crime fiction circles as a Melbourne bookseller, crime fiction ...
In their introduction to Someone Like Me, editors Clem Bastow and Jo Case say: Spending time with these twenty-five essays, piecing them together, is a first step towards expanding your understanding ...
The dystopian new novel from the author of Mammoth imagines a shocking, and ongoing, tragedy to explore grief, community, and anger. Chris Flynn opens his new novel Orpheus Nine with a staggering, ...
Mark Ray’s third book of cricket photography captures in black and white the majesty of the game in its quieter moments. Top-level cricket in the modern era is all about crash, dash, flash and colour, ...
In her new novel, Panic, Catherine Jinks provides a timely take on online mobs, conspiracy theorists, and sovereign citizens. Bronte is a young woman who, along with most of her generation, records ...
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