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Lindy West says fat is still a feminist issue in her memoir Shrill

Lindy West:

Bethany Jean Clement 8:00pm The Seattle native is a crusader against the notion that the shape of your body dictates the worth of your being.

Lessons in word play for the work-experience kid

David Astle 8:00pm My son was a lawyer for a week. By that I mean he shaved each morning, he wore a tie and he caught the early bus. To be honest he seemed more the accused than the intern. But still, Finn fetched briefs and coffees for the week, he photocopied transcripts, ghosted the courts.

Canberra Writers' Festival announces more authors

Former Greens leader Bob Brown will be among the main attractions at the Canberra Writers' Festival.

April Dudgeon 8:00pm Former Senator and Greens leader, Bob Brown, and bestselling author and former Canberran, Sarah Wilson, are among the big names announced to headline Canberra's inaugural writers' festival. 

What's on at a writers' festival near you

Reese Witherspoon (right) with author Cheryl Strayed on location of the film <i>Wild</i>, based on Strayed's memoir.

SUSAN WYNDHAM 6:00pm Writers' festival round-up; tiny publishers come and go; 2015 winners and losers in the US book industry

The Gustav Sonata review: Rose Tremain on childhood friendship and betrayal

The Gustav Sonata, Rose Tremain.

Brenda Niall 3:28pm The interplay of character and place is skilfully and movingly managed in Rose Tremain's latest novel.

Append: A poem by Leah Muddle

Append is a poem by Melbourne poet Leah Muddle.

Leah Muddle 12:15am Append is a poem by Melbourne poet Leah Muddle

Shelter review: Jung Yun's fine drama about a family's different generations

Shelter
Jung Yun

Cameron Woodhead 12:15am The reversal of fortunes in Jung Yun's Shelter leads to dramatic revelations.

The Boy on the Tricycle review: Marcel Weyland's memoir of wartime escape

The Boy on the Tricycle by Marcel Weyland

Steven Carroll 12:15am Marcel Weyland's memoir is about wartime escape and the emergence of an artistic spirit.

Code of Silence review: Colin Dillon's account of revealing police corruption

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Steven Carroll 12:15am Colin Dillon's simple, but dramatic, tale of police corruption in Queensland.

The Dry review: Jane Harper's hot crime debut is mythic and valiant

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Sue Turnbull The Dry is a story about heroism, the sins of the past, and the struggle to atone. And it is a quintessential Australian story beautifully told.

Dying & In Gratitude review: Two writers come to terms with their looming deaths

In Gratitutde by Jenny Diski.

Drusilla Modjeska Cory Taylor and Jenny Diski write about their terminal illnesses in different but beautiful ways.

The Sun & The Moon & The Rolling Stones review: Rich Cohen's ravishing riff

Rich Cohen's remarkable book on the Stones.

Anson Cameron At last there's a book about the Rolling Stones with writing that matches their extraordinary talent.

Before the Fall review: A pacey thriller by the man who wrote Fargo for TV

Before the Fall
Noah Hawley

Cameron Woodhead A plane crash plus sinister secrets result in Noah Hawley's suspenseful thriller.

How To Be a Writer review: The John Birmingham way to improve your skills

How to be a writer by
John Birmingham

Steven carroll John Birmingham offers practical advice for anyone who wants to make a go with their writing.

BookShots: James Patterson pushes reading 'revolution' for smartphone generation

International best selling author James Patterson.

Karen Heller James Patterson doesn't write his books - and his newest readers don't read.

Three generations of Sydney women finalists for the 2016 Kibble Literary Award

Elizabeth Harrower, shortlisted in the Kibble Literary Award for her short story collection <i>A Few Days in the Country.</i>

SUSAN WYNDHAM Australia's oldest awards for women's writing see a rise in historical novels, thrillers, memoirs and "sick lit".

Publisher to book industry: we have a price problem

Richard Flanagan--to be credited to Colin Macdougall

LINDA MORRIS An Australian publishing insider says overpriced books are bigger threat to Australian writers than open market.

Bestsellers: Dominic Smith tops the independent bookshop charts

<i>The Last Painting of Sara de Vos</i>, by Dominic Smith.

A novel that spans Holland, New York and Sydney and follows the mystery of a replica of a 17th-century painting and the original is delighting buyers at independent bookshops.

Hermione Granger

J.K. Rowling hits out at 'racists' after Harry Potter play casts black Hermione

J.K. Rowling says people outraged over the casting of a black Hermione  are

J.K. Rowling has slammed as a "bunch of racists" online critics who complained about the casting of a black actor to play Hermione.

The Big Issue: Making a difference for 20 years

A vendor of <i>The Big Issue</i>.

Thuy On Every vendor has their own story. In their yellow hi-vis vests and dotted like fluoro mushrooms around city and major regional centres of Australia, they position themselves and prepare for another day of hustling for custom.

The Big Issue: a magazine and much more

Andy, who is  homeless, is one of more than 6500 vendors of <i>The Big Issue</I> in Australia.

Thuy On The Big Issue is Australia's longest-standing and most successful social enterprise.

Turning Pages: The joy to be discovered in the boom in art books

There were grand books, obscure books, cheeky books, subversive books.

Jane Sullivan If you've ever worried that young people don't go for books any more, here was evidence that many of them love books with anything to do with art and design.

Chasing Asylum review: Eva Orner's account of making her refugee documentary

Author and documentary maker Eva Orner.

Deborah Zion The ability to look closely and constantly at suffering is one that takes an immense toll, and Eva Orner manifests this steadfastness in relating story after story.

How to Vote Progressive in Australia review: principles instead of power

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Fiona Capp What these essays reveal is widespread desire for a reinvigorated political system.

The Grass was Always Browner review: a new style of memoir – the aspirational

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Fiona Capp A new form of writing focuses on the ordinary.

The Patch of Wasteland: A Poem by Long Quan

A Chinese farmer works the soil.

Long Quan Long Quan's poem imagines a couple's long relationship with their home and the land.

Bookmarks: News and views from the book world

A.S. Patric.

JASON STEGER The power of the Miles Franklin and the odds on the Miles Franklin.

Election 2016: Labor pledges $60 million to ABC, but won't rule out changes to copyright

Labor arts spokesman Mark Dreyfus  has pledged $60 million to the ABC for local drama.

ANDREW TAYLOR Labor has promised more than $140 million in additional spending on arts funding and the ABC, but it has not ruled out changes to copyright laws.

Book review: Can My Pony Come Too? by Rosemary Peterswald

Can My Pony Come Too? By Rosemary Esmonde Peterswald.

Robert Willson A family's migration tale.

Litbits June 4 2016

Emeritus Professor Ian Lowe.

RON CERABONA Literary news and events.

Sue Williams: books that changed me

Author Sue Williams.

Sue Williams has a PhD in marine biology and has worked as a science writer and chartered accountant.

Review: A Whole Life by Robert Seethaler

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Kerryn Goldsworthy PICK OF THE WEEK A Whole Life

Kids show their love of language in a creative Fictionary

David Astle's Dinkus

David Astle A chilly afternoon off Tamarama Beach. You bob on the ocean swell, waiting for the humpbacks to migrate.

Interview: Children's author Jeannie Baker follows an endangered bird's path

Jeannie Baker in her Balmain studio. Her collage illustrations are held in public collections and have been exhibited internationally.

LINDA MORRIS Jeannie Baker is a superstar of Australian children's literature. In her new book, she champions the conservation of an endangered Australian migratory bird.

Book review: My Italian Bulldozer by Alexander McCall Smith involves Tuscan adventure

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Kerryn Goldsworthy Alexander McCall Smith's latest novel has his usual light-hearted gentleness and keen perception.

Review: Happy People Read & Drink Coffee by Agnès Martin-Lugand

Happy People Read & Drink Coffee by Agnes Martin-Lugand.

Kerryn Goldsworthy Happy People Read & Drink Coffee

Dying in the First Person by Nike Sulway

Dying in the First Person by Nike Sulway.

Kerryn Goldsworthy Dying in the First Person

Review: Svetlana Alexievich's Secondhand Time tells of Soviet life from Stalin to Putin

Nobel Prize winner Svetlana Alexievich vividly brings to life the speakers in <i>Secondhand Time</i>.

Andrew Riemer Svetlana Alexievich's books reveal the dark underside of contemporary Russian nationalism, the often toxic alliance between the Orthodox church and Putin's regime and the resurgence of anti-Semitism.

The Convict's Daughter review: Kiera Lindsey's account of a scandalous affair

Author Kiera Lindsey.

Babette Smith He had all the characteristics of a colonial Mr Rochester - just the kind of gentlemen who would fascinate a teenage girl.

Turning Pages: The festival guests who delighted us at the Wheeler Centre

Jonathan Franzen has a reputation for being prickly but was laid back during an appearance in Melbourne.

Jane Sullivan Thanks to a collaboration with the Wheeler Centre, several of the top names attending the 2016 Sydney Writers' Festival dropped in to various venues in Melbourne.

Bookshelf review: Why where we put our books is so important

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Fiona Capp Despite predictions of the demise of the book, Lydia Pyne is surprisingly upbeat about the future of the structure that houses them.

The Mandibles review: Lionel Shriver's family saga of the world going bung

Lionel Shriver: Exhibits ferocity of intelligence and boldness of imagination.

Peter Craven In her new novel about money and the near-future, Lionel Shriver exhibits ferocity of intelligence and boldness of imagination.

The World Repair Video Game review: The return of David Ireland, genius

<i>The World Repair Video Game</i> by David Ireland.

MALCOLM KNOX Did David Ireland go off the unreadable deep end? Hardly. The World Repair Video Game is a magnificent novel of ideas in the purest, simplest language.

The Last Painting of Sara de Vos review: Dominic Smith's brilliant art novel

Dominic Smith weaves his tale with a light touch in <i>The Last Painting of Sara de Vos</i>.

Louise Swinn Dominic Smith is a great writer, particularly adept at atmospheric detail, and this book is reminiscent of Donna Tartt's The Goldfinch in its familiarity with the art world.

Better Living Through Criticism review: A.O. Scott on why criticism is an art

<i>Beter Living Through Criticism</i>, by A.O. Scott.

Tom Ryan A.O. Scott submits that criticism ought to be understood as an art because the works it contemplates are always themselves a form of criticism.

What Happened to the Car Industry? review: How a manufacturing sector collapsed

What happened to the Car Industry?
Ian Porter, Mark Knight & John Spooner.

Fiona Capp The car industry was thriving 20 years ago, but then it stalled.

Richard Flanagan, Tom Keneally tussling with paper tigers

Peter Martin dinkus

PETER MARTIN Leading authors concerned about cuts to copyright don't seem to have done their homework.

Comments 16

Book industry unites against Productivity Commission changes to copyright rules

Writers, printers, literary agents, publishers and booksellers have united for war on proposed copyright provisions.

LINDA MORRIS Writers, printers, literary agents, publishers and booksellers unite for war on proposed copyright provisions.

Speed-dating your own literary creation: Hazel Edwards meets her famous cake-eating hippopotamus

There's a Hippopotamus on Our Roof Eating Cake!: Out in the Jungle.

Hazel Edwards  It's not easy being a hippo - even one who lives on the roof of most kids born after 1980, eats cake and gets to do anything it wants all day long.

Columns

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A look at what's going on in the books world at home and abroad.

Undercover

News and views on books, writers and publishing.

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