Books & arts
Are we still living in the Age of Hitler?
Andrew Bonnell
3 June 2026
An epitome of evil might not be the best standard to measure ourselves against
Books & arts
Walter Benjamin reloaded
Klaus Neumann
3 June 2026
Three books shed new light on a dazzling and peripatetic thinker — and a motley cast of his contemporaries
Books & arts
Cracks in the firmament
Sara Dowse
2 June 2026
Journalist Julia Cooke brings together three women writers as fearsome as they were fearless
Books & arts
On the margins
Geoff Wilkes
1 June 2026
Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz’s first novel struggles to engage with the self-destruction of the Weimar Republic
Books & arts
The self-servers
Gordon Peake
29 May 2026
A former World Bank economist takes aim at the West’s “civilising mission”
Books & arts
Asia between peace and war
Graeme Dobell
28 May 2026
Can the region avoid a cycle of competition, nationalism and disintegration?
Books & arts
Collateral damage
Jacinta Halloran
27 May 2026
Writer Martin McKenzie-Murray probes beneath the highly trained professionalism of first responders
Books & arts
Geopolitical dreams and nightmares
Mark Edele
18 May 2026
How do the “West” and “Eurasia” look from Australia?
Books & arts
Liberated but not yet free
Andrew Bonnell
12 May 2026
Australian writer Nadia Wheatley traces a year in the life of refugees at the former Belsen concentration camp
Books & arts
Passionate spell
Anne-Marie Condé
7 May 2026
How libraries made us
Books & arts
Beyond the looking-glass
Gary Werskey
7 May 2026
Reflections on antisemitism
Books & arts
Murdoch versus Murdoch
Rodney Tiffen
7 May 2026
Family dynamics dominate a new account of the attention-grabbing dynasty
Books & arts
Grammarian of the real
Tony Hughes-d’Aeth
5 May 2026
The first biography of a key figure in Australia’s twentieth-century literary life
Books & arts
Bombast of Botany Bay
Frank Bongiorno
30 April 2026
Patrick Mullins coaxes big themes out of the story of one of Sydney’s great thrusters
Books & arts
In the midst of life
Martha Macintyre
30 April 2026
Talking about death isn’t going to kill you, says anthropologist Hannah Gould
Books & arts
Strange days
Peter Brent
30 April 2026
A Liberal voter who hopes Labor will win? The Hawke–Keating era temporarily turned Australian politics on its head
Books & arts
The woman and the men
Zora Simic
23 April 2026
Gisèle Pelicot finds “my words, the thread in my history, an old story, deeply anchored in me”
Essays & reportage
Memento mori
Gordon Peake
22 April 2026
In the footsteps of Beatrice Grimshaw, bestselling author, and her biographer
Books & arts
Papua New Guinea’s complicated inheritance
Graeme Dobell
20 April 2026
A son of two nations combines optimism and pessimism
Books & arts
It’s the pictures that got small
Philippa Hawker
18 April 2026
A pair of legendary movies emerged from another of Hollywood’s turbulent eras
Books & arts
Going the distance
Rob Hoffman
17 April 2026
A political scientist argues that democratic institutions need to stand up to authoritarians. But does that simply kick the can down the road?
Books & arts
First casualties
Mark Baker
20 March 2026
A new account of Australia’s brutal first world war occupation of German New Guinea
Books & arts
Soaringly together
Alecia Simmonds
11 March 2026
Romantic love gets all the headlines, says writer Andrew O’Hagan, but just as often it is friendship that describes the shape of our lives
Books & arts
To the barricades!
Klaus Neumann
11 March 2026
A thought-provoking (and entertaining) new book about revolutions doesn’t answer a question that has had our reviewer puzzled
Books & arts
The other Mitford
Patrick Mullins
7 March 2026
The future “queen of muckraking” fled the rigid class system of her home country for a high-profile career in investigative journalism
Books & arts
Mementos Menzies
Paul Rodan
6 March 2026
A sixteen-year prime ministership leaves more than a few traces
Books & arts
Get a life
Nick Haslam
6 March 2026
Psychoanalyst Adam Phillips circles around the question of what attracts us, and why
Books & arts
Strange ride
Matthew Ricketson
27 February 2026
“If writing always made sense to the writer, it wouldn’t be nearly as interesting,” says journalist Susan Orlean
Books & arts
Bumping into the right people
Graeme Dobell
26 February 2026
A memoir in the Oz-diplomat tradition
Books & arts
Reading “Discipline”
Anne Freadman
24 February 2026
Everyone knows about the controversy, but what about the novel?
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