‘The End of October’ by Lawrence Wright
Culture / Books
A ‘New Yorker’ journalist’s eerily prescient novel about public-health officials fighting a runaway pandemic
‘The End of October’ by Lawrence Wright
Culture / Books
A ‘New Yorker’ journalist’s eerily prescient novel about public-health officials fighting a runaway pandemic
Surrounded by pygmies: Malcolm Turnbull’s ‘A Bigger Picture’
Culture / Books / Politics / Federal politics
The former PM’s memoir fails to reckon with his fatal belief that all Australians shared his vision
Culture / Film
Melbourne-born, New York–based filmmaker Kitty Green’s powerfully underplayed portrait of Hollywood’s abusive culture
Snap-back: Dua Lipa’s ‘Future Nostalgia’
Culture / Music
The British singer’s serendipitous album delivers shining pop with a reigning attitude of fortitude
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The acoustic ecologists documenting our quieted world
Luca Guadagnino’s ‘Call Me By Your Name’ is a passionate, positive tale of first love
For Robyn Davidson, her acclaimed memoir ‘Tracks’ was an act of freedom whose reception hemmed her in
The discovery of Vashti Bunyan, Sibylle Baier and ‘Connie’ Converse
Into the slippery unknown: ‘The Gospel of the Eels’
Patrik Svensson’s eloquent debut is a hymn to the elusiveness of eels and an ode to family
Queer poetics: ‘Family Trees’ and ‘Throat’
Michael Farrell’s new collection exhibits his idiosyncratic technical strengths, while Ellen van Neerven’s asserts a more direct, and undeniable, voice
Gossip girl: ‘A Theatre for Dreamers’
Polly Samson’s depiction of Hydra’s famed cohort of artists in the ’60s suffers from being overly impressed by celebrity
‘Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982’ by Cho Nam-Joo (trans. Jamie Chang)
The coldly brilliant, bestselling South Korean novel describing the ambient harassment and discrimination experienced by women globally
‘Fathoms: The World in the Whale’ by Rebecca Giggs
The Australian writer’s lyrical consideration of our relationship with whales is a new and ambitious kind of nature writing
Carnage awaits: ‘The Animals in That Country’
Laura Jean McKay’s prickly novel burns with uncomfortable, difficult questions about animals and human nature
In the midst of a pandemic, people are reverting to the music they loved – and found solace in – as teenagers
The ripple effect: Cable Ties’ ‘Far Enough’
A big year turned on its head for the Melbourne band
The rapper and MC’s second album ‘Heavy Is the Head’ is another triumphant step bringing black British culture forward
The future was foreclosed: Post-punk and Use No Hooks’ ‘The Job’
Energetic cross-genre experiments power a scant retrospective from members of Melbourne’s ‘little band’ scene
The king in exile: Gordon Koang
The music of the South Sudanese star and former refugee offers solace and a plea for unity
‘I’m with the Band: Nasty Cherry’
This Netflix series pays lip service to female empowerment in the music industry, but ultimately reinforces its limits
A bellyful: ‘The Trip to Greece’
Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon continue to charm in their final food odyssey
Consolations in isolation: ‘The Platform’ and ‘Free in Deed’
What is the future of cinema without cinemas?
Remembering Max von Sydow, the greatest actor of his generation
Properly British: Armando Iannucci’s ‘The Personal History of David Copperfield’
A multicultural vision underscores the acclaimed British satirist’s endearing Dickensian romp
Alliance Française French Film Festival 2020
This year’s showcase of French cinema features combustible social realism, unmissable zombie-teen drama, an unofficial tribute to the iconic Catherine Deneuve, and more
Mark Ruffalo is at his understated best in Todd Haynes’ take on this real-life environmental legal drama
In search of emes (truth) in ‘Unorthodox’
The masterful Netflix series addresses the struggle to articulate female desire
A lot to be desired: ‘Normal People’
The screen adaptation of Sally Rooney’s novel is a piercing portrayal of young lovers
A nation’s convulsions: ‘The Plot Against America’
HBO’s adaptation of the Philip Roth novel is a contemporary allegory with a terrifying slow burn
A probing drama about Australia’s mandatory detention regime focuses on the dehumanisation experienced on both sides of the razor wire
Party of three: ‘Everything’s Gonna Be Okay’
Australian comedian Josh Thomas brings his unique brand of comedy to the classic American sitcom format
Streaming highlights: November 2019
‘The Crown’, ‘For All Mankind’ and ‘Dickinson’ offer new perspectives on history, and pragmatism meets pyramid schemes in ‘On Becoming a God in Central Florida’
Grotesqueries: Adelaide Biennial 2020
Leigh Robb’s absorbing curation, ‘Monster Theatres’, is both artistically and politically coherent
The NGV’s virtual show is a playful celebration of Japan’s moga (modern girls) and mobo (modern boys), full of optimism for the future
Desert bloom: The Tennant Creek Brio
The brazen art movement born out of the troubled legacies of substance abuse and dispossession
Wildlife’s whispered traces: ‘Extinction Studies’
Lucienne Rickard’s durational art performance at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery reckons with extinct species
Stopped in the street: ‘Keith Haring | Jean-Michel Basquiat: Crossing Lines’
Early death meant the work of these renowned artists never fully emerged from ’80s New York subcultures
‘Matisse & Picasso’: National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
Hanging works by the two masters together highlights their artistic rivalry and mutual influence
Reimagining ‘Breaking the Waves’
The creators of this opera on how it adds new depths and agency to von Trier’s 1996 film
Director Robert Icke on rewriting the classic Austrian play to explore contemporary moral conundrums
Celebrating beauty’s passing: ‘Requiem’
Italian director Romeo Castellucci on his radical reimagining of Mozart’s classic
A dream within a dream: ‘Tao of Glass’
Theatremaker Phelim McDermott on his highly personal collaboration with Philip Glass
‘Hecate’: honouring two storytelling traditions
Australia’s first major Shakespearean production in Noongar language will retell ‘Macbeth’ at Perth Festival
Joan Didion’s eerily contemporary ‘The White Album’
The seminal essay’s ongoing resonance is explored in this interactive production coming to Sydney Festival
A study in contrasts: ‘Trois Grandes Fugues’ and ‘Black Velvet’
These performances by the Lyon Opera Ballet and Shamel Pitts at the Adelaide Festival explore the body’s formidable potential
Form and content collide at Dance Massive
Choreography meets politics at this contemporary dance festival
Teatro alla Scala Ballet Company is bringing light and shade to Australia
A conversation with members of the Italian company ahead of their tour to Brisbane
Bangarra’s latest production explores Aboriginal Australians’ sophisticated farming practices
Dance and the digital: An interview with Wayne McGregor
The Sydney Festival-bound show’s choreographer loves mixing the body with technology
‘Bennelong’ by Bangarra Dance Theatre
Sydney Opera House (touring Canberra, Brisbane, Melbourne)
Plans never imagined: Architect Timothy Hill
The ‘Longhouse’ and the ‘Multihouse’ confirm the director of Partners Hill as the country’s most important and influential architect of the past 30 years
Two worlds at the 16th Venice Architecture Biennale
The consumption of space, land and habitat is Australia’s focus at the world’s pre-eminent architecture event
A new four-day tour in Tasmania is owned and guided by Aboriginal people
Beautiful on the outside … the tragedy of Bennelong Point
Brutalist masterpiece or harbour eyesore? Sydney’s Sirius building faces an uncertain future
The Australian Islamic Centre is notable for what it isn’t as much as for what it is
Victoria Lee takes on the Victoria’s Secret runway
‘The Fashion World of Jean Paul Gaultier’ at the National Gallery of Victoria
‘Modern Love: Fashion visionaries from the FIDM Museum LA’
At the Bendigo Art Gallery
The iconic Australian brand has a new co-owner
Romance was born - ‘The Oracle’, 2011
Unfinished business: A short story
Can a young wartime couple pick up where they left off?
Hamish Hamilton; $32.99
The pencil and the damage done
The perverse attraction of autobiographical fiction
‘All the Light We Cannot See’ by Anthony Doerr
HarperCollins; $29.99
Karl Ove Knausgaard’s ‘Boyhood Island’
The third volume of the epic autobiographical novel ‘My Struggle’
Barron Field and the myth of terra nullius
How a minor poet made a major historical error
Clive James’ ‘Sentenced to Life’ and Les Murray’s ‘Waiting for the Past’
A century of Dylan Thomas
Meeting Ko Un
'Radar' by Kevin Brophy and Nathan Curnow
Peter Steele (1939–2012)