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Entertainment

Tony Abbott's Syria gamble will backfire: Tariq Ali

BIANCA HALL Prospect of Australia extending air strikes from Iraq into neighbouring Syria is an act of 'desperation' by a prime minister in urgent need of a byelection win, says the Pakistani-British intellectual.

News and interviews

Mark Latham brings bite to Writers Festival

Mark Latham.

TOM ARUP In a heated and hostile appearance, Mark Latham verbally clashed with audience members and refused to confirm whether he is behind a Twitter account that has attacked prominent Australians.

How this book designer made Penguin dance

Book designer David Pearson.

SUSAN WYNDHAM David Pearson delighted in repackaging Penguin's backlist of classics into beautiful collections that would make people want to own the lot.

Meet the successor to Indonesia's top writer

Eka Kurniawan's novel is helping to establish Indonesia's literary voice.

JEWEL TOPSFIELD Eka Kurniawan's Beauty is a Wound is wildly ambitious in its scope, telling the story of modern Indonesia.

How de Bernieres survived being a bestseller

Louis de Benieres

JASON STEGER Louis de Bernieres didn't turn to drink and drugs when Captain Corelli's Mandolin became a gigantic bestseller - but he might have.

Could Contagion's pandemic really happen?

Air of authenticity: Matt Damon in the thriller Contagion.

PETER SPINKS Most of us have sat through a science fiction movie, relished the plot and the suspense – and then got home wondering what was fact or fiction.

Comments 6

Rob Thomas on bliss of creating successful TV

Rob Thomas, Melbourne Writers Festival  guest.

JASON STEGER The Veronica Mars creator says it's a minor miracle anything good makes it through the studio system.

Why we're still not safe from atomic weapons

Mushroom cloud

Michael Coulter Eric Schlosser knows how many weapons litter the world, and that a gymbag full of uranium would allow you to improvise a Hiroshima-size bomb.

Dietland author lashes out at fat shamers

Sarai Walker:

LINDA MORRIS There are very few serious novels about fat women. So American writer Sarai Walker decided to write her own.

The best books I've never read

Books

John Bailey Authors reveal the great works they haven't got around to yet.

Gail Jones and Berlin's dark past

Author Gail Jones had no intention of writing about Berlin until she went there on a writing fellowship.

SUSAN WYNDHAM Behind a composed surface that seems as calm as a pond, Gail Jones never stops moving, thinking, writing.

Dark web doesn't have to be evil

<i>Illustration: Joe Benke</i>

Eileen Ormsby The deeper, secretive reaches of the net have their plus side, but there's no ignoring the evil.

Galassi has plenty to lose with debut novel

Jonathan Galassi likes to say that he has backed into things all his life.

Andrew Purcell Jonathan Galassi, the editor turned novelist, has written a love story for books, and for the people who write and publish them.

Bound to please: the book that changed me

Five guest authors reopen the books that shape them still.

Will Self, Peter Singer, Maxine Beneba Clarke, Graeme Simsion and Renata Singer unwrap the books that changed them.

Louis de Bernieres chases family shadow

Louis de Bernieres says if you've got fame and money and it can be hard to tell who your friends are.

JASON STEGER Family history was the inspiration for the author's latest novel, but he's quick to point out that he won't be sticking to the truth.

Honey Brown's sweet success after hardship

Victorian writer Honey Brown says writing about sex is an

CAROLYN WEBB Honey Brown has overcome dyslexia, a broken back and depression to become a successful thriller writer. Her new book is a romance.

Festival looks ahead with anniversary program

Melbourne Writers Festival director Lisa Dempster and inaugural chairman Mark Rubbo.

JASON STEGER The Melbourne Writers Festival is celebrating its 30th anniversary with a look at the writers who will be the literary names of the future.

Louis de Bernieres to open 2015 festival

Louis de Bernieres will be opening night attraction for the 30th Melbourne Writers Festival.

JASON STEGER Author of the bestselling Captain Corelli's Mandolin will deliver the opening address at the 30th Melbourne Writers Festival.

2014 Melbourne Writers Festival

Warnings of war against the West

Masha Gessen

JASON STEGER Masha Gessen's account of the rise to power of Russian president Vladimir Putin characterises him as a bully and a thug.

Comments 8

A long walk with Simon Armitage

The people's poet: Simon Armitage has a northerner's penchant for pricking pretensions and cutting things down to size.

Fiona Gruber Simon Armitage has been disabusing people of their prejudices about poets and poetry for the past 25 years.

Turning Pages

Critically acclaimed: Paddy O'Reilly explored the modern freak show in her novel The Wonders.

Jane Sullivan As much as anything, the first weekend of the 2014 Melbourne Writers Festival was about the joys and hazards of writing.

How is the publishing industry faring?

Henry Rosenbloom.

Sonia Harford With the GFC, tighter advances and that pesky e-publishing issue it's not all lazy days and easy living for authors or their publishers reports Sonia Harford.

Dave Eggers: Don't write off publishing yet

Dave Eggers

KYLIE NORTHOVER American  publishing's wunderkind believes rumours of the printed word's demise are greatly exaggerated.

Imaginary tales: books that might have been

<i>Illustration: Jim Pavlidis.</i>

Various As readers descend on Melbourne for the annual writers festival, seven literary Australians envision the books that might have been.

An accent on truth

Cross-art collaborations: Dante Soffra and Kominos Zervos, stars of Poetic License.

Patricia Cornelius As the Melbourne Writers Festival revels in the power of words, an innovative theatre group gives poetic voice to those silenced by mainstream culture.

Chris Hadfield and lessons from outer space

Canadian astronaut and writer Chris Hadfield will speak at the Melbourne Writers Festival.

JASON STEGER Chris Hadfield spent five months on the International Space Station and made his mark in several unusual ways.

Bringing old Melbourne back to life

Sands & McDougall directories

ANDREW STEPHENS Melbourne's population was once traced via thick directories compiled by weary doorknockers.

Urban explorers uncover hidden gems

Photo ops: Stormwater drains in Melbourne are among some of the sights checked out by urban explorers.

John Bailey If you're one of the 50,000 people who crossed forbidden thresholds and explored abandoned places as part of this year's Open House Melbourne series, you know the lure of ruins.

Helen Garner: Into the darkness

Helen Garner

SUSAN WYNDHAM The horrific death of three young brothers shocked the nation and put their father in the dock. Helen Garner watched the case unfold.

Interview: Joan London

Joan London.

Jane Sullivan For her third novel, the acclaimed writer has revisited `50s Australia and the threat of polio.

NoViolet Bulawayo: A cry for home

NoViolet Bulawayo.

JASON STEGER NoViolet Bulawayo's first novel is a remarkable rendering of life in Zimbabwe and the consequences of leaving.

Jessie Cole: Life in a secret world

Jessie Cole.

Susan Chenery Jessie Cole's novels are the expression of her deep connection to the natural world.

Nick Earls returns to his comedic roots

Nick Earls.

LINDA MORRIS Nick Earls first found readers writing about the angst of single-men. Now the Brisbane novelist returns to his roots to skewer the male middle-age crisis.

The interview: Philip Hensher

Philip Hensher

Fiona Gruber Philip Hensher's unfashionable passions.

Festival aims to serve up a world of words

Lisa Dempster.

JASON STEGER Melbourne Writers Festival announces 400 guests, with Helen Garner to deliver the opening night address.

Salman Rushdie to be a festival guest

Salman Rushdie

JASON STEGER The acclaimed and controversial author, who was subject to a fatwa in response to his novel The Satanic Verses, will discuss freedom of expression.

Digital guide

What's on at the festival

Your guide to the key events at the Melbourne Writers Festival.

MWF top five

Claudia Karvan, Ita Butrose, Jason Steger & more pick their highlights.

Reviews

Close Your Eyes

Michael Robotham in top form in latest Joe O'Loughlin instalment.

Breakthrough

Jack Andraka's geeky charm comes through in his memoir.

Catch and Kill

Joel Deane on four ALP amigos who took control in Victoria.

Santamaria

Gerard Henderson on a great polariser of political life.

When We Were Young and Foolish

Greg Sheridan's account of an Australia we've forgotten about.

New Asia Now

Griffith Review delights in collection of new Asian writers.

Eating My Grandmother

Krissy Kneen's strong first book of poetry.

Dust that Falls From Dreams

Louis de Bernieres' novel sows seeds from his own family history.

The Good Story

Exchanges between J. M. Coetzee and Arabella Kurtz.

Shining: Story of a Lucky Man

Abdi Aden escaped war in Somalia to live rough in Romania.

The War on Journalism

Andrew Fowler's look at the intersection of politics and media.

Ardennes 1944

Antony Beevor's examination of Hitler throwing his last dice.

Archipelago of Souls

Gregory Day novel set on two different islands.

The Truth According to Us

Annie Barrows looks at what happens when we bury our sins.

The World Without Us

Mireille Juchau's fine novel of grief and nature.

Australia's Boldest Experiment

Stuart Macintyre's account of Australia in the aftermath of WWII.

The Subject of Feeling

Peter Rose's latest collection of poetry has wit and humanity.

The Short Long Book

Martin Flanagan's portrait of Michael Long.