The Monthly | Australian politics, society & culture

The parable of Lyle Shelton and Dianne Thorley

When Christianity, climate change and drought collided in Toowoomba


The Latest

Surplus of cynicism

Today

Tomorrow’s budget is especially politicised

ScoMo is no Gladiator

Politics

The Coalition’s win in NSW only highlights the PM’s shortcomings

The sentencing of George Pell

Society

It took a judge to explain power to a cardinal

Streaming highlights: March 2019

Culture

‘The OA’ amplifies the intrigue, Gregg Araki’s streaming debut ‘Now Apocalypse’, and the wealth porn of ‘Billions’ returns

One Nation vs the Greens

Today

Comparisons between the two parties are unfair

The Monthly music wrap: March 2019

Culture

Koffee’s debut EP brings a jolt of youthful energy, and new releases from local projects with global sensibilities


The Nation Reviewed

The sentencing of George Pell

It took a judge to explain power to a cardinal

The Murray–Darling’s dry mouth

Scientists are witnessing the ecological collapse of South Australia’s Coorong

The F45 gym revolution

The Australian fitness franchise is high-fiving its way around the world

An AFL 2019 census

A droll-call of the season’s best and brightest


The Monthly Essays

How Australia’s coal madness led to Adani

The real reasons keeping the Carmichael mine alive

Report from India: Tracing Gautam Adani’s ruthless ambition

The parallel rise of the coal baron and Prime Minister Narendra Modi

The parable of Lyle Shelton and Dianne Thorley

When Christianity, climate change and drought collided in Toowoomba


Arts & Letters

David Malouf’s new worlds

Consciousness is at the heart of the celebrated author’s body of work

Missing witnesses: Valeria Luiselli’s ‘Lost Children Archive’

The Mexican ‘documentary fiction’ writer delivers a polyphonic road trip

Haruki to Highsmith: Lee Chang-dong’s ‘Burning’

Mr Ripley echoes through a masterful tale of class tensions in Seoul

A black woman in space: Solange’s ‘When I Get Home’

Songs distilled from the quiet expanses of high art and black culture



Noted

‘Islands’ by Peggy Frew The bestselling author delivers a nuanced examination of family tragedy By Helen Elliott

‘Who Killed My Father’ by Édouard Louis (trans. Lorin Stein) Political rage fuels the French author’s account of a fraught father–son relationship By Emma Fajgenbaum


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