An obituary, not an intervention
A new account of Tony Abbott’s Prime Ministership, hurriedly rewritten, drips with facts and sarcasm.
A new account of Tony Abbott’s Prime Ministership, hurriedly rewritten, drips with facts and sarcasm.
Elizabeth Harrower’s short stories depict middle-class Australian mores but with an undertaker-ish glint.
In his language and memories, Tim Winton reveals a deep attachment to Western Australia.
Jonathan Bate’s biography is an exquisite tribute to former UK poet laureate Ted Hughes’s memory, poetry and grief.
Like Wallace Stevens’s poem Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird, each chapter is told from a different perspective.
To say Sleeping With Other People is When Harry Met Sally ‘for assholes’ is unfair to those very people in our midst.
It was a decade we’d rather forget but, in Australia, those years were good for one thing: politics.
In his language and memories, Tim Winton reveals a deep attachment to Western Australia.
Writing, by and large, remains a lowly paid profession, so how can anyone advocate the abolition of literary prizes?
Writing, by and large, remains a lowly paid profession, so how can anyone advocate the abolition of literary prizes?
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/stephen-romei/page/178