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books
Essays & reportage
Pursuing the wild reciter
Peter Kirkpatrick
23 December 2024
Whatever happened to the communal enjoyment of poetry?
Essays & reportage
Beyond words
Iain Topliss
18 December 2024
Whether comical or conceptual, political or geographic, Saul Steinberg’s drawings extend the viewer’s horizons
Books & arts
Map-making and myth-busting
Zora Simic
14 December 2024
Joni Mitchell’s latest biographer creates a new geography of her work and influence
Books & arts
The good fight
Gary Werskey
11 December 2024
How two political consultants pushed the Democratic Party towards their imagined middle ground
Books & arts
Does Xi’s ideology matter?
John Fitzgerald
11 December 2024
Kevin Rudd sees a clear line between the Chinese president’s worldview and his country’s path. But is it as simple as that?
Books & arts
Things that want to be heard
Andrew Ford
9 December 2024
Musicologist Lawrence Kramer wants his readers to think differently about the sound of music and the music of sound
Books & arts
History’s hinge
Jon Richardson
9 December 2024
How will competition and cooperation between Russia and China in Central Asia affect the global balance of power?
Essays & reportage
Zealots of the reading room
Anne-Marie Condé
6 December 2024
Great Australians
brought freshly researched history by fine writers and historians to a generation of Australians
Books & arts
Boris levels up
Joshua Black and Frank Bongiorno
5 December 2024
The former British PM’s highly readable memoir is just a little too tidy
Books & arts
Resisting resolution
Sara Dowse
3 December 2024
A novelist reflects on “exile as agony but also as ethical position”
Books & arts
Forgotten war
Bernard Wasserstein
2 December 2024
Strategies and the battlefield take centre-stage in an often gripping history of the First World War’s eastern front
Essays & reportage
What the West forgot about democracy
Erica Benner
29 November 2024
Outsiders promoting political liberalisation in an impatient or immodest spirit shouldn’t be surprised by a backlash
Books & arts
After the factory girls
Antonia Finnane
25 November 2024
Yuan Yang profiles a new generation of Chinese women
Books & arts
What have the Romans done for us?
Ken Haley
24 November 2024
A new history of the original superpower
Essays & reportage
The phoenix
Helen Ennis
22 November 2024
Photographer Max Dupain returned from the war determined to reinvent himself and his work
Books & arts
Bark diplomacy
Marian Quartly
22 November 2024
Could the Yirrkala Petitions best be understood as an attempt at communication between nations?
Books & arts
Uglifying the universe
Andrew Dodd
20 November 2024
Once a “writer’s paper,” the
New York Post
pushed the wrong boundaries under Rupert Murdoch
Books & arts
AI through the looking glass
Kurt Johnson
11 November 2024
Could artificial intelligence make us less human?
Essays & reportage
What is a library?
Kieran Hegarty
6 November 2024
Targeted by hackers and sued by publishers, the Internet Archive continues to push boundaries
Books & arts
Trade’s political problem
Susan Stone
6 November 2024
A former trade negotiator sets out to improve trade’s profile and reputation
Books & arts
A kind of social architecture
Frances Flanagan
5 November 2024
The case for valuing and protecting “connective labour” in an increasingly automated and disconnected world
Books & arts
In the face of death
Jacinta Halloran
1 November 2024
Life’s binaries bleed into each other in a spirited memoir shadowed by a terminal illness
Books & arts
Have you been working hard recently?
John Docker
1 November 2024
Our reviewer savours an idiosyncratic account of the Queen, on and off duty
Books & arts
Opening doors in Central Australia
Glenn Nicholls
1 November 2024
A Lutheran pastor introduced to remote communities a different way of thinking about schooling for Aboriginal children
Books & arts
Let them not eat Tip Truck Cake
Anne-Marie Condé
31 October 2024
Triple-tested in its own kitchen, the
Women’s Weekly
’s recipes helped shape Australian tastes. But it had its rivals
Books & arts
“Got a light?”
Jim Davidson
24 October 2024
Peter Parker has trawled widely to produce a documentary history of gay life in London from postwar repression to the hope induced by 1957’s Wolfenden report
Essays & reportage
White lies, archival truths and R.J.L. Hawke
Michael Piggott
17 October 2024
What the record reveals about the future prime minister and the ornamental pond
Books & arts
Dizzying paralysis
Dean Ashenden
17 October 2024
Two sociologists and a teacher wrestle with meritocracy
Books & arts
Man in the middle
Paul Rodan
16 October 2024
A new biography assesses the record of Labor’s first prime minister
Books & arts
The impress of war
Gary Werskey
12 October 2024
How Paris’s “Terrible Year” shaped impressionist art
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