Instapoet Rupi Kaur, an internet sensation
"He only whispers I love you as he slips his hands down the waistband of your pants," Rupi Kaur writes.
"He only whispers I love you as he slips his hands down the waistband of your pants," Rupi Kaur writes.
Overseas crime thrillers have dominated an annual list of Australia's most borrowed library books.
To mark 25 years of the classic Australian coming-of-age novel, the Sydney Writers' Festival will bring author Melina Marchetta together with the stars of Looking for Alibrandi.
Chris Kraus' first novel hit a niche audience when it was first published, but it has exploded in recent years, culminating in the release of a new Amazon miniseries.
They're loud, they're fierce, and they don't care what you think. Meet the new-wave feminists.
Testing may damage children's love of reading, authors Lauren Child and Kate DiCamillo say.
Literary news and events.
After a successful inaugural year, the Canberra Writers Festival has attracted some big names.
Octopuses like connecting with humans and will keep objects they're given, a leading expert says.
Helen Fielding's latest Bridget Jones book has won Britain's Wodehouse Prize for comic fiction. The prize includes champagne and a pig.
To read Down the Hume, Peter Polites' fierce first novel, is to step into the literary wilds.
Writers appointed to work side-by-side with researchers tackling some of the biggest public health scourges of modern times.
Award-winning novelist Eliza Henry-Jones has been inspired by the work of Tim Winton.
Just as hair follicles spell our DNA, so do semicolons and adjectives unmask authors.
Young Irish writer Lisa McInerney's storytelling is clever, rich and dark.
This historical romance explores some intriguing possibilities about the Romani people in 19th century Australia.
Social researcher Hugh Mackay's seventh novel recalls the fiction of David Lodge.
This polished first novel treads a delicate and frightening line between the present and the future
Henry Marsh has prised tumours from brains for more than 40 years as a leading neurosurgeon and still has no idea how that mass gives rise to consciousness, thought and feeling.
A fictional 11-year-old spy inspired Mariko Tamaki to write novels and graphic novels
An entertaining chronicle of Europe as seen through the famously kitsch contest.
Elegantly written essays explore the melancholy of post-natal depression.
A moving memoir about the arbitrariness of binary gender divisions and how they box us all in.
The remarkable true story of a penniless young man who transforms himself into the "uncrowned king of Simla".
The story of Jewish-Australians in almost every Australian military conflict up to the present day.
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