Number 3 chiller
‘A delightful take on what it means to be family’: Craig Sherborne’s Tree Palace reviewed on the Hoopla.
‘Write what you know'—helpful advice or idle cliché?
Nobody tells you, “This is how to edit. Follow these steps.” A Read more
This incredible debut novel is a sensation: since its publication, A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing has received rapturous critical acclaim, with all reviewers agreeing that it is a book unlike any other.
‘Fiction that matches the complexity of history’: Rabih Alameddine’s An Unnecessary Woman in the New York Review of Books.
Your book sucks: are authors being bullied by one-star Amazon reviews?
The neurological similarities between successful writers and the mentally ill.
‘Brutal and touching detail’: The Lost Child reviewed in the Guardian.
Lloyd Jones’s memoir, A History of Silence, is ‘a knockout…one of the bravest and best-written memoirs I have read’, says Nicholas Shakespeare in his five-star review in the Telegraph.
When lit becomes a science: culturomics and results-based reading.
Celebrated novelist Rana Dasgupta’s first work of non-fiction, Capital: A Portrait of Twenty-First Century Delhi, is the inside story of India’s fastest-growing megacity.
Text is seeking a Finance and Administration Coordinator.
Clare Wright’s The Forgotten Rebels of Eureka has been shortlisted in the 2014 Stella Prize. Clare spoke to the Age about gender equality in literature and her own brand of ‘retail sabotage’.
Clare Wright’s remarkable history of one of Australia’s foundation legends, The Forgotten Rebels of Eureka, has been shortlisted in the 2014 Stella Prize.
Now in its second year, the Stella Prize aims to recognise great books by Australian women.