Planet Jackson: A saga of massive union corruption
Planet Jackson is a morality play that shook the union movement, affected the stability of the government and still begs questions within questions.
Planet Jackson is a morality play that shook the union movement, affected the stability of the government and still begs questions within questions.
Comeback is, first and foremost, the story of a large family, a story with as many simultaneous points of intimacy as a great battle, or orgy.
The Underground Railroad is the story of a woman who believes in her intrinsic right not to suffer to increase the wealth of those who already have too much.
Carmel Bird never loses the wry response to the mess people haplessly make of things.
How simple is it to write for television? Is it just a question of having the right ingredients?
Bruce Springsteen's song lyrics have injected more drama and mystery into the myths of the American road than any figure since Jack Kerouac. He knows this, of course. So it's one of the running jokes in his big, loose, rangy and intensely satisfying new memoir, Born to Run (what else was he going to call it?), that he didn't begin to drive until he was well into his 20s.
Author Paula Hawkins agrees with fans that Emily Blunt is 'too beautiful' to play the book's overweight, alcoholic divorcee, Rachel.
One of Christopher Robin's favourite stuffed animals never made it to the iconic tale until a family photograph changed everything nearly 90 years later.
In a move that brings together, and fuses further, Jedis Luke Skywalker, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Yoda, Star Wars comic writer Jason Aaron is set to tell young Yoda's tale.
Literary news and events in Canberra.
If I sound like an expert, I'm not. All this lore comes courtesy of hindsight.
During a backstage interview at this year's Emmys, the 67-year-old Game of Thrones author revealed there was a wealth of 'fake history' to mine.
The higher one's status, the better one's health.
Zoe Foster Blake was initially optimistic then lost hope that her bestseller The Wrong Girl would make it onto TV, she tells Kate Waterhouse.
Lionel Shriver takes mischievous pleasure in attacking arguments she considers politically correct. And that's where trouble starts.
Jimmy Barnes reveals harrowing childhood in new memoir Working Class Boy, saying: 'It's pretty traumatic, putting it all out there. I feel like a weight was lifted off my shoulders.'
Andy Griffiths and Terry Denton keep their spot on top of the Australian bestseller charts.
One of the more intriguing aspects of Never Never comes from trying to work out where James Patterson ends and Candice Fox begins.
Michael Collins was on the edge of giving up writing when he was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2000 for The Keepers of Truth, the sixth of his 10 works of fiction.
The Muse is the second novel by English author Jessie Burton, whose debut, The Miniaturist, sold more than 1 million copies worldwide.
Exploring the class and boys-own sexual dynamics of the Cambridge spy ring.
Helen Thurloe is an award-winning Australian writer and poet.
But why did he even get this far?
"Downsizing", "purging", "editing" are all buzzword cures for getting rid of material excess.
Gay Talese, famed for being one of the originators of New Journalism, acknowledges the affinity between the voyeur and the journalist.
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