![Tziporah Malkah is on <i>I'm a Celebrity</i> to raise funds for a homeless woman's shelter.](/web/20170202215844im_/http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/content/dam/images/g/u/3/p/2/x/image.related.wideLandscape.620x349.gu3m8l.gmelat.png/1486009084851.png)
![Backroads features the WA town of Katanning, where many refugees found work in the 1970s and which has has continued to ...](/content/dam/images/g/t/h/t/v/1/image.related.landscape.120x80.gth43a.gmeih6.png/1482704253002.jpg)
It was a night of mixed emotions as Georgia Blain won a posthumous Victorian Premier's Literary Award and playwright Leah Purcell took out the $100,000 Victorian Prize for Literature.
Veronica Roth will be distracted from her concern at the advent of President Donald Trump by the launch of Carve the Mark, the follow-up to her trilogy.
She's already sold the film rights to her first novel, Dry, but praise from the New York Times is more than welcome to Jane Harper.
The incredible untold story of Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson, brilliant African-American women working at NASA, who served as the brains behind one of the greatest operations in history: the launch of astronaut John Glenn into orbit.