Books
I Am Pilgrim review: Gripping mix of terrorist cliches
Review By Anne Susskind The US President is set to tell the population, on TV, to be on high alert for a nuclear attack. But that's only the cover story for something much worse, which he doesn't tell them about. A nuclear attack, unlike the chemical warfare that is only hours away, can be contained and localised, and won't panic them as much.
For Today I am A Boy: Author Kim Fu on her debut novel
Psychology studies shaped a debut novel about gender identity, writes Marc McEvoy.
Measured but vexing tangent
Review By Gerard Windsor A biographer turns his hand to the geometry of the Iron Age.
Veronica Roth: Out of the dark
She is young, talented and her star is on the rise, but Veronica Roth has battled demons on her road to literary success, writes James Kidd.
Lunch with... Richard Flanagan
JASON STEGER Richard Flanagan learnt early about the value of words, and life's upheavals have strengthened their hold.
Silence of the movie machine
Louise Adler The moral cost of doing business with Nazi film interests was high.
Report From The Interior review: The good, the bad and the execrable end in torpor
Catherine Ford Reading Paul Auster's fiction has never been satisfying, in my experience, but I put my dislike of the acclaimed New Jersey author's novels - when his post-modern parlour games failed to enthral, say, or his cheesy tough-guy dialogue made me smirk - down to inexplicable blind spots in my discernment.
The Everything Store: The infinite emporium
Jeff Sparrow 'Get big fast' was the slogan plugged by the online bookstore's founder. It worked.
Well-read: fiction's big sensations
Louise Schwartzkoff Literary crazes were driving fans into frenzies for centuries before J.K.Rowling dreamed of a boy wizard, or teenagers went batty over The Hunger Games. Here are some of literature's big hits.
Infinite emporium
Reviewer: JEFF SPARROW Brad Stone's account of Amazon's engagement with the publishing industry is particularly striking.
Inside story brings Auster to the surface
Reviewed by Catherine Ford Paul Auster's autobiography consists of plodding tales of being alive in mid-century America.
New focus on Hitler
Reviewed by Louise Adler Two new books examine the controversial relationship between the Hollywood film industry and Nazi Germany's film-loving leader.
Wotsername
Ric Hambleton A story about a woman's path to the top and the inadvertent help she gets from her husband's girlfriend has won Ric Hambleton third prize in the Age/ Readings short-story competition.
Bringing up the bodies
Reviewed by Owen Richardson The centenary of World War I is approaching and printing presses are going into action.
The man who sold the world
Reviewed by Jeff Sparrow Bezos started off selling books, but he always wanted Amazon to be an 'Everything Store'.
The word on Wolf Creek
Jane Sullivan He's a loveable larrikin, as Aussie as they come. He's also given to wearing human skin.
A big dip in the Atlantic
JASON STEGER Allen & Unwin takes on the Atlantic; Peter Temple's dog days; Scribe signs up in Britain; and Penguin and Random snuggle up closer.
Vale Oxlade
Death in Brunswick author Boyd Oxlade dies of cancer, aged 70
JASON STEGER Boyd Oxlade, the man who created one of the most darkly comic scenes in Australian film, died early on Friday. He was 70 and had been suffering from cancer. His 1987 novel Death in Brunswick was turned into the 1990 film of the same name, starring Sam Neill, John Clarke and Zoe Carides.
Girlfriend Guide to Life to help with birds and bees
KIM STEPHENS Uptight Australian parents are continuing to eschew the birds and the bees talk with their teenagers, Queensland researchers say.
Oxford blues
Tom Rachman The new man at the helm of the iconic dictionary wants to profit from a digital revolution, writes Tom Rachman.
Original slang … Whatever
Traditionalists lament the decline of the English language, but historical quotations in the Oxford English Dictionary show that many infamous terms of today are older than expected.
Oxford English Dictionary: Language by the book, but the book is evolving
Tom Rachman Oxford English Dictionary's new chief editor Michael Proffitt is looking to serve traditionalists and the users to come while ensuring relevance in an era of Googled definitions and text talk.
Relax books
Ann Patchett talks straight
The author and bookstore owner is something of a traditionalist, writes Janet Maslin.
Stephen Ward Was Innoncent, OK
Reviewed by Peter Craven Geoffrey Robertson QC, Australia's international celebrity silk, takes apart the Profumo Affair.
Bookshop
Reviewed by Thuy On On the shelf this week: Alphabetical, Hades, and the story of a dog, a hepcat and a crocodile.
Knowing Mandela
Reviewed by Owen Richardson Written before his death, this book deals with the effects Mandela had on those he met.
Barefoot snakes and ladders
Angie Schiavone Six months between release dates isn't the only thing that separates Nikki Gemmell's latest two books. The first, the Bride trilogy's final erotic instalment, was - as the author puts it - the most ''out-there'' adult book she'd written. The second, a Christmas-time mystery-adventure for children, is credited to N. J. Gemmell; a safeguard perhaps, against any young new fans mistaking Gemmell's The Bride Stripped Bare as another The Kensington Reptilarium.
Burnt-out world where all but the horror disappears
Anne Susskind That Anthony Marra composed this book - and I say composed deliberately, because it is so full of lyrical imagery - in his 20s is astonishing. That's not the reason I admire it, because it stands alone but, for the record, it was started when he was 22, finished when he was 28 and, bar a few small irritations, a more polished book would be hard to find. It was named among the best books of 2013 by The New York Times and The Washington Post.
Interview: Simon Singh
NICK GALVIN It takes a scientific mind to decipher the link between maths and the world's most famous cartoon series.
Sounds that keep the soul young
Warwick McFadyen The landscape has changed irrevocably from Elvis to Gaga, but in that evolution an exuberant beat still matters.
Travel shapes a revolutionary
Christopher Kremmer South Africa turned a shy Indian lawyer into a freedom fighter.
A mother's cast of thousands
Reviewer: MIREILLE JUCHAU Author Elif Shafak draws on the female struggle for creative expression within patriarchal cultures.
Chilling crime novel breaks down facades
Reviewer: ANNA CREER This is a dark story that explores the nature of evil and how it can hide behind the most respectable of facades.
Republic shapes a revolutionary
Reviewer: CHRISTOPHER KREMMER A great man has found a great biographer in Ramachandra Guha, a wise and elegant historian.
Sounds that keep the soul young
Reviewer: WARWICK McFADYEN If you read only one book on the history of popular music, let it be this one, writes Warwick McFadyen.
Science and Springfield
Simon Singh is one of Britain's best-known science writers. So why is his new book about The Simpsons, asks Nick Galvin.
India under the microscope
Reviewer: VERONICA SEN The assassination of Indira Gandhi are at the centre of works by Jhumpa Lahiri and Jaspreet Singh.
Barefoot snakes and ladders
Reviewer: ANGIE SCHIAVONE The Reptilarium is impressive with its deadly reptiles and foreboding signs like "enter at own risk, death may follow".
Forging a fighter for freedom
Reviewed by Christopher Kremmer That a shy, pious, food-fussy lawyer from India would lead one of the 20th century's great uprisings to victory remains one of history's most counter-intuitive narratives.
More than rock 'n' roll and we like it
Reviewed by Warwick McFadyen If you read only one book on the history of popular music, let it be this one by Bob Stanley.
Blood and Bone
Lisa Jacobson's story of a son, his taciturn father and the family dog has won second prize in the Age/Readings short-story competition.
Words at the heart of it all
JASON STEGER Short-story winner Lisa Jacobson fell in love with words when she was in primary school.
A long journey to lose yourself in
Jane Sullivan It's my time of year for reading a Big Book, and how could I go past the The Luminaries?
Gone Girl gets a facelift
JASON STEGER Going missing from Gone Girl; how Simon & Schuster embraced the crossword; a clue to David Astle, and talking about Bill Green.
Apps
Cowzat wins international award for best children's app
Sonia Harford If Australians require even more cricket glory this year they could look no further than Cowzat.
Welcome to the fiction factory
Clover Stroud Is it soulless to create a children's book by committee? Clover Stroud asks.
16th-century manuscript could rewrite Australian history
Charli Newton A tiny drawing of a kangaroo curled in the letters of a 16th-century Portuguese manuscript could rewrite Australian history.
The roo that could rewrite history
Charli Newton A tiny drawing of a kangaroo curled in the letters of a 16th century Portuguese manuscript could rewrite Australian history.
Books
Is this a video I see in front of me?
Charles Isherwood Trying to instill in students a passionate interest in Shakespeare (or even a passing one) has never been a teacher's easiest task.
Columns
Bookmarks
A look at what's going on in the books world at home and abroad.
Undercover
News and views on books, writers and publishing.
Competitions
The Age Short Story Award
Find out who won this year’s Age/Readings short-story award.
Video
King's Speech book unveiled
Grandson of Lionel Logue, King George VI's speech therapist, releases book of treasures which fills in the movie gaps.
'Borat' to play Iraqi dictator
Sacha Baron Cohen will portray an Iraqi dictator in a film based on a book believed to have been penned by Saddam Hussein.
Joe Jackson promotes conspiracy book
Joe Jackson hopes to uncover the conspiracy behind his son's death, helping promote a new book 'What Really Happened to Michael Jackson'.
Palin wins Gawker injunction
US federal judge orders Gawker Media to pull leaked pages of Sarah Palin's forthcoming book from its blog.
Former President Bush book tour
Former President George W. Bush has kicked off his book tour with a signing of his book, "Decision Points".
The evolution of the bogan
A new book argues that bogans have transformed into celebrity-mimicking racists.
President Obama pens children's book
A children's book authored by US President Barack Obama hit bookstores across the US on Tuesday.
Magazine under fire for plagiarism
Recipe author Monica Gaudio explains how she first learnt about the US cooking magazine Cooks Source's act of plagiarism.
Keith Richards launches autobiography
Keith Richards signs copies at London book launch.