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Lynne Olson documents how, within the horrors of a Nazi concentration camp, the women of the French Resistance continued to ...
Sarah Gilbert’s account of this religious order offers a rare insight into the women who chose to separate themselves from ...
The new novel from the author of Dyschronia and The Airways is climate fiction focussed on human adaptability.
Deidre O’Connell recounts how an American jazz band caused panic in White Australia. In the latter part of the 1920s, the JC Williamson Company was on the lookout for American talent to attract ...
This debut is a sharp plunge into dark water. Bad things happen in Tasmania: from Marcus Clarke to Richard Flanagan and Carmel Bird, our novelists have been delivering stories inspired by the island’s ...
The lyrical second novel from the author of The Burial criss-crosses through time following one girl’s parallel lives. Bird is the pensive, defiant 14-year-old protagonist of Courtney Collins’ new ...
Bad Art Mother, Australian author Edwina Preston’s second novel, conjures a rich portrait of the artist as a young woman.
This All Come Back Now, edited by Mykaela Saunders, showcases the range of First Nations speculative fiction.
There’s a ton of great writers appearing at this year’s Sydney Writers Festival, which opens next week, and we have a very special book pack to give away. To go into the draw to win all FIVE titles by ...
Andrew Fowler argues that the AUKUS submarine deal compromises Australia’s sovereignty and exposes the country to the danger of nuclear waste.
Diana Reid’s debut novel poses some philosophical dilemmas. University campus culture was fresh for Diana Reid when she began writing Love & Virtue. She had recently graduated from The University of ...
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