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Jenny Zimmer looks at Patrick McCaughey’s The Bright Shapes and the True Names.
It is interesting and somewhat disturbing to discover how readily popular novelists regard politics as an appropriate background for crime stories. Tony Smith previews two novels that get much mileage from the intrigue of the political sphere.
Kevin Summers reflects on art for arts sake in Silencia.
The Federal Government abhors workers using unions to bargain collectively. But there is different thinking for small business.
Frank O’Shea reviews Andrew Moore’s Francis De Groot: Irish Fascist, Australian Legend.
Reviews of the films Inside Man, V for Vendetta, Capote, and The March of the Penguins.
David R. Jones reviews A Tradition of Giving: Seventy-Five Years of Myer Family Philanthropy by Michael Liffman, and Mr Felton’s Bequests by John Poynter.
When Labor marched to defeat in 2001, it is thought that more than half of the paid-up members of the party voted for the Greens.
Tony Smith reviews Ian Rankin’s Fleshmarket Close; Garry Disher’s Kittyhawk Down and Alexander McCall Smith’s The Sunday Philosophy Club.
The old firm is now entirely back in charge of the Labor Party. Not just Kim Beazley but the NSW Right.
Jack Carmody reflects on the life of Fr Ted Kennedy, pastor to Sydney’s urban indigenous community.
Gillian Bouras examines the intertwined lives of two extraordinary 19th-century sisters.
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