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fiction
Books & Arts
A fragment of a life
Susan Lever
28 March 2024
Charmian Clift’s most ambitious but unfinished work illuminates her childhood in coastal New South Wales
Books & Arts
Grand days
Patrick Mullins
27 March 2024
James Bond creator Ian Fleming’s war never ended
Books & Arts
A dynamic of acceptance and revolt
Paul Gillen
27 February 2024
Why the extraordinary Jack Lindsay deserves to be better known
Books & Arts
Writing life
Susan Lever
3 January 2024
A new biography of Frank Moorhouse approaches its subject differently
Books & Arts
Double-sighted in the deep south
Jim Davidson
18 December 2023
Richard Flanagan’s latest book is an extraordinary meditation on Tasmania in the world
Books & Arts
A kind of autobiography
Sylvia Martin
29 November 2023
A novelist’s correspondence gives rare insights into his life and work
Books & Arts
Neverending story
Peter Marks
25 October 2023
Gabrielle Carey gives us James Joyce in eighty-four bite-sized pieces
Essays & Reportage
The voice of Alexis Wright
Tony Hughes-d’Aeth
11 October 2023
Her novels paradoxically activate readers’ critical faculties while compelling us to trust the narrative voice
Books & Arts
Grand days
Susan Lever
1 September 2023
Frank Moorhouse’s first biographer captures a life in motion
Books & Arts
A triumph and a burden
Sylvia Martin
30 August 2023
“My Country” shadowed the career of poet Dorothea Mackellar
Books & Arts
Sense and sensibility
Sara Dowse
17 July 2023
Philosopher Clare Carlisle chronicles the interaction of George Eliot’s public voice and private life
Books & Arts
The self-fashioning of George Orwell
Peter Marks
13 July 2023
A new biography probes the gap between the kind of person the writer was and the kind of person he imagined himself to be
Books & Arts
Portraying the age
Geoff Wilkes
4 October 2022
Joseph Roth’s restless journeying produced an idiosyncratic depiction of central Europe in the twenties and thirties
From the archive
The simplicity of Simenon
Richard Johnstone
28 September 2022
What explains the Belgian novelist’s enduring popularity?
Books & Arts
The Magician’s many guises
Glenn Nicholls
20 October 2021
Colm Tóibín’s novelised life of the German writer Thomas Mann bridges a cultural gap
Books & Arts
Feeding the machine
Susan Lever
11 October 2021
In what ways did the typewriter affect how — and how much — writers wrote?
From the archive
Self and Other
Zora Simic
4 October 2021
In a previously unpublished novel, Simone de Beauvoir traces a life-changing friendship
Books & Arts
The many selves of Gillian Mears
Drusilla Modjeska
25 September 2021
A new biography captures the enigmatic Australian writer
Books & Arts
A mania for reality
Jane Goodall
20 September 2021
Have the addictive qualities of Elena Ferrante’s novels distracted readers from their literariness?
Books & Arts
The lives of others
Sara Dowse
15 September 2021
Leïla Slimani vividly reimagines her grandmother’s life as a young French woman in Morocco
From the archive
A town not quite like Alice
Hamish McDonald
13 August 2021
The past meets the future in the town that inspired Nevil Shute’s bestselling novel
Books & Arts
Sydney’s modernist wave
Meg Brayshaw
18 June 2021
Linked by its famous waterway, the city’s interwar fiction proved remarkably prescient
Books & Arts
Letting the repellent in
Patrick Mullins
30 April 2021
The biographer who promised not to be prim or judgemental has his own scandal to deal with
Books & Arts
Reckless game
Brian McFarlane
11 February 2021
Books
| A lifetimes’s flirting with danger lay behind the fictions of Graham Greene
Books & Arts
A hard nut in the centre
Susan Lever
18 December 2020
Books
| A writer’s complex life emerges in Helen Garner’s diaries
Books & Arts
From cold warrior to Tory radical
Peter Love
14 December 2020
The long writing career of John le Carré, who died on Saturday
Books & Arts
Imaginative affinities
Susan Lever
10 September 2020
Books
| Australian modernist literature looks a little different through an international lens
From the archive
What more can we expect?
Susan Lever
21 July 2020
Elizabeth Harrower’s fiction vividly evokes mid-twentieth-century Australia
Books & Arts
Iannucci gets inside Dickens
Brian McFarlane
10 July 2020
Cinema
| An unlikely coupling produces a vivid two hours of cinematic storytelling
Books & Arts
Deeper truths
Susan Lever
6 April 2020
Books
| What can novels tell us about how political ideas circulate?
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