Skip to content
Inside Story
About
Donate
Sign up
Search
Search
Menu
About
Donate
Sign up
Search
Search
books
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
Books & arts
Seize the day!
Caitlin Mahar
26 June 2025
Classicist Robert Garland leads a tour of ancient attitudes to death and the afterlife
Books & arts
Something else
Sara Dowse
26 June 2025
Francis Picabia had never come across a woman like Gabriële Buffet
Books & arts
Are we getting in our own way?
John Edwards
24 June 2025
The American bestseller
Abundance
is making waves in Australia, but its key argument has less force on this side of the Pacific
Essays & reportage
Quincentenary of a revolution
Klaus Neumann
17 June 2025
Commemorating the German Peasants’ War and an early charter of human rights
Books & arts
Alone like a finger
Nick Haslam
13 June 2025
It was writing that “separated me from everything,” says German writer Judith Hermann in a captivating collection of biographical essays
Books & arts
Democracy in an age of emergencies
Stephen Mills
12 June 2025
Can democracy respond effectively when the future is breathing down our necks?
Books & arts
Essential services
Paddy Gourley
12 June 2025
Celebrated American author Michael Lewis brings together an emblematic group of public servants
Books & arts
Okay, you’re hired
Patrick Mullins
5 June 2025
A biographer’s apologia raises as many questions as it answers
Books & arts
What are we talking about when we talk about AI?
Campbell Wilson
5 June 2025
Applying the term to everything from dishwashers to medical breakthroughs masks both its benefits and its harms
Books & arts
The price of pleasure
Zora Simic
5 June 2025
A journalist explores the “sexual wellness industry”
Essays & reportage
The American clever man
Martin Thomas
5 June 2025
How an Arnhem Land community distilled the 1948 American–Australian Scientific Expedition into a figure with unusual powers
Books & arts
Empire of the southern seas
Alessandro Antonello
27 May 2025
Australia is better seen as a vast archipelago, according to a new exploration of its iciest reaches
Books & arts
How little one knows, really, of one’s parents
Caitlin Mahar
26 May 2025
French sociologist Didier Eribon goes in search of his working-class mother
Books & arts
Ben Chifley versus the banks
Stephen Mills
26 May 2025
The former Labor PM’s battle with the banks still matters — for both sides of politics
Books & arts
Empire’s end
Ken Haley
23 May 2025
Old ties were broken forever by the time the second world war drew to a close
Essays & reportage
The ecological revolution
Tom Griffiths
20 May 2025
How a new moral consciousness began to stir in Australia
Older posts