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How claims against one of the world’s biggest authors have scuttled screen productions

How claims against one of the world’s biggest authors have scuttled screen productions

Studios and streamers have become skittish about projects based on Neil Gaiman’s work after sexual misconduct allegations.

  • by Garry Maddox

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The controversy that revealed how AI has become a red rag to a bull for many authors

The controversy that revealed how AI has become a red rag to a bull for many authors

National Novel Writing Month, better known as NaNoWriMo, has become mired in controversy over its stance on AI.

  • by Jane Sullivan
Ten new books we’re excited to read in October

Ten new books we’re excited to read in October

Christmas always comes slightly early for book lovers.

  • by Melanie Kembrey
Can Tim Winton’s new book save us? With six grandkids, he had to try

Can Tim Winton’s new book save us? With six grandkids, he had to try

The acclaimed author’s 500-page novel is something of a departure – a cli-fi thriller set 200 years from now.

  • by Jane Sullivan
For a whole year, I didn’t write a single sentence: Matt Haig

For a whole year, I didn’t write a single sentence: Matt Haig

The author of the phenomenally successful 2020 novel The Midnight Library had intended to give up writing - until he faced up to his past.

  • by Kylie Northover
The perfect man does exist, says Dolly Alderton. He’s just a bit hard to find
Exclusive
Spectrum

The perfect man does exist, says Dolly Alderton. He’s just a bit hard to find

The rock-star author reckons she now knows what Millennial women want … just don’t call her “the voice of her generation”.

  • by Kylie Northover
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In praise of Edna O’Brien, the woman who changed the Irish book world

In praise of Edna O’Brien, the woman who changed the Irish book world

Reading the Irish novelist’s first book, The Country Girls, was an eye-opener for many readers around the world.

  • by Jane Sullivan
Sally Rooney’s new book is out in a few days. So, is it any good?

Sally Rooney’s new book is out in a few days. So, is it any good?

Like her previous novels, Intermezzo is a very straight, very white, very middle-class and unproductively hyped love story. But something’s different this time.

  • by Beejay Silcox
After a troubled year, former volunteer takes reins of Melbourne Writers Festival

After a troubled year, former volunteer takes reins of Melbourne Writers Festival

Veronica Sullivan, most recently head of programming at the Wheeler Centre, sees the recent wave of personnel change as an opportunity for a fresh start.

  • by Jason Steger
When art and politics collide: The battles tearing our cultural bodies apart

When art and politics collide: The battles tearing our cultural bodies apart

Sackings, boycotts, sponsorship withdrawals: arts organisations across the country are in turmoil. So who has the right to say what?

  • by Kerrie O'Brien
My Age letters keep getting rejected. Don’t people realise I’m Erudite of Aireys Inlet?
Opinion
The Age

My Age letters keep getting rejected. Don’t people realise I’m Erudite of Aireys Inlet?

I’ve been studying the most successful letter writers from across Victoria and I think I’ve cracked the code. For a start, live near a large body of water.

  • by Megan Stoyles

Original URL: https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/topic/literature-1m4g