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Voices of dissent

Micah White says he has an ongoing project to shift the paradigms of protest by challenging the activist orthodoxy.

Revolution is the theme for this year's Melbourne Writers Festival. A whirlpool of discussion about protest, oppression and war will dominate the stage but the program also promises ideas for change and new directions.

In praise of Georgia Blain and her final words

Georgia Blain: Looked chaos in the face.

Georgia Blain died 13 months after being diagnosed with a brain tumour, In those months, she wrote almost continuously and her final book, The Museum of Words, will be published later this month.

Books that Changed Me

<i>The Lord of the Rings</i> was a seminal book for fantasy writer Michael Pryor.

It was Dava Sobel's delicate depiction of obsession, Longitude, that encouraged Michael Pryor to start reading non-fiction again.

Kids rule in post-apocalyptic world

Anna, by Niccolo Ammaniti.

Niccolo Ammaniti's visions of a post-apocalyptic landscape are written with gusto and imagination, and the young heroine is an endearing figure.

How a handsome young man with a silver tongue became PM

Alfred Deakin, the home handyman.

By 1888, when the centenary of the First Fleet's arrival was celebrated, Victoria was far and away the leading Australian colony and Marvellous Melbourne a world-class metropolis. Thirty-two-year-old Alfred Deakin was chief secretary, a political wunderkind who had been a member of parliament for almost a decade. Ned Kelly was already dead, hanged on November 11, 1880 for murdering a policeman. Deakin saw the hanging, most likely as a reporter for The Age, one of the 50 men allowed inside the Melbourne Gaol to witness the drop.