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books
International
Seizing Washington
Graeme Dobell
9 September 2025
Gore Vidal’s message for Americans: “We are Trump; he is us”
Books & arts
All the lonely people
Nick Haslam
8 September 2025
A Nordic writer foregrounds the social and political causes of loneliness
Books & arts
Friends like these
Alecia Simmonds
5 September 2025
How did female friendship become subject to suffocatingly high standards?
Books & arts
Must all monuments fall?
Martha Macintyre
1 September 2025
An archaeologist makes the case for toppling statues and returning plunder
Books & arts
Cheer treatment
David Goodman
28 August 2025
Paul and Eslanda Robeson fused politics and music on their acclaimed Australasian tour
Books & arts
Pluralism exists; we just need to accept it
Harry Hobbs
27 August 2025
The European Union’s relations with its member states could help us navigate the process of treaty-making
Books & arts
An exceptional life in the law
Dean Ashenden
21 August 2025
Lawyer, educator, judge and royal commissioner Hal Wootten never lost sight of “those on whom the law bore harshly”
Other Voices
Bodies by Joe
Alma Guillermoprieto
20 August 2025
With his strange machines and uncanny understanding of muscles, Joseph Pilates created an entirely new technique
Books & arts
How The Leopard changed its spots
James Panichi
18 August 2025
Netflix’s struggle with Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa’s deeply conservative novel
Books & arts
Living recipes
Seumas Spark
14 August 2025
Collaboration is reconciliation, say the authors of
The Australian Ingredients Kitchen
Books & arts
If something can’t go on forever, it will stop
John Quiggin
14 August 2025
A pessimistic account of the world’s population future offers no good reasons to panic about low birth rates
Books & arts
Chock full of chutzpah
Brett Evans
13 August 2025
“Go to Australia.
Now
,” said the used car salesman in Toronto. And would-be impresario Lee Gordon did just that
Books & arts
A dose of reality for the “realists”
Mark Edele
12 August 2025
Zbigniew Brzezinski came to resist the great-power thinking that would later play out so tragically in Ukraine
Books & arts
Moments of exposure
Richard Johnstone
10 August 2025
Getting the most out of a photo means focusing on its uniqueness, says photographer Michael Collins
Books & arts
Australia in the world
Graeme Dobell
8 August 2025
An indispensable seventy-year record of foreign policy reaches its thirteenth volume
Books & arts
Eighty-nine seconds and counting…
Tessa Morris-Suzuki
6 August 2025
Hiroshima survivor Setsuko Nakamura Thurlow’s campaign against nuclear annihilation
Books & arts
Circling the manosphere
Nick Haslam
30 July 2025
A firsthand account of the emergence and deepening of a gender-fixated worldview
Books & arts
1155 days in the life of Cheng Lei
Hamish McDonald
23 July 2025
Australia’s latest book by a former political prisoner paints a vivid picture of survival inside one of China’s state security jails
Books & arts
A post-American world
Graeme Dobell
22 July 2025
The Australian flag faces the American eagle in the new world disorder
Books & arts
A kind of proto selfie
Richard Johnstone
18 July 2025
Like the technology it anticipated, the photobooth took the photographer out of the equation
Books & arts
How to resist a tyrant
Linda Jaivin
18 July 2025
If democracy is the goal, non-violence is a better bet
Books & arts
Richard Ellmann’s extraordinary achievement
Patrick Mullins
11 July 2025
An exhilarating account of a biographer at work
Books & arts
A stitch in crime
Jeremy Gans
9 July 2025
A prosecutor turned judge turned corruption czar looks back
Books & arts
Ghosts of dictatorships past
Andrew Bonnell
4 July 2025
Dictators don’t govern alone, which helps explain what happens once they’ve gone
Essays & reportage
A political world we still inhabit
Frank Bongiorno
2 July 2025
Historian John Hirst founded a career on a distinctive view of colonial Australian politics
Books & arts
Reeled in by the Reich
Philippa Hawker
1 July 2025
A sharp, grim, exhilarating novel engages with the real-life story of a filmmaker’s return to Nazi Germany
Books & arts
Imperialism’s stamping ground
Jim Davidson
30 June 2025
A new book explores the culture of philately
Books & arts
A kind of elegy
Susan Lever
27 June 2025
An award-winning memoir honours cultures old and new
Books & arts
Not alone in the dark tunnel
Tanya Dalziell
27 June 2025
Gail Jones’s latest novel echoes the preoccupations of much of her writing
Books & arts
Dropping out, burning out, tuning out
Andrew Dean
27 June 2025
Nobody’s happy about the state of Australian universities, but a seasoned academic has some remedies
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