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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.
Margaret Cody belongs to two Catholic parishes, one in the city and one in the country. They offer a striking contrast in liturgical experience and congregational demographics.
I’m fine now, really. The nightmares are receding, the rash is responding to aromatherapy and I’ve cut back the shrink to once a day.
The Da Vinci Code would be a far more liberating experience for the reader if it was about asking questions, rather than unlocking answers.
Former South African Supreme Court Judge, Justice Laurie Ackermann spoke recently about how he struggled with his judicial role under apartheid.
Reviews of the books: Who did this to our Bali?; Off Course: From Public Place to Marketplace at Melbourne University; Dark Dreams, Australian refugee stories by young writers; A history of the devil: From the Middle Ages to the present.
The forthcoming presidential elections in Indonesia are certain to surprise.
Gillian Bouras looks at the role of the body in death
Thoughts from around the nation.
Hugh Dillon unravels the challenges of justice in Guantanamo Bay.
Kate Stowell visits Uzbekistan, a democratic republic still under the reign of its former communist party leader.
Jeffrey Grey challenges some of Cameron Forbes’s conclusions in Hellfire: The Story of Australia, Japan and the Prisoners of War.
121-132 out of 135 results.