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Juliette Hughes tells it like it is (or, how it should be).
2:41 am. There was an luminescence in the room. I made one of those random, unaccountable mental connections that such occasions often evoke.
Strange times, Cooling off in Tasmania, Where now for reconciliation?, Tides of history, Being scared of GM
The power of nature has been dominant this summer—the heat, the drought, the dust and the terrifying spectacle of the bushfires, sweeping away all in their path.
It has been one of those Australian summers where nature has been dominant. The heat, the drought, the dust and the ever-present, terrifying spectacle of the bushfires, sweeping away all in their path.
In the biblical narrative, priests and prophets are more chalk and cheese than birds of a feather.
Peter Davis examines progress on the road to peace in the Solomon Islands
Matthew Lamb examines Bob Brown’s Memo for a Saner World.
Peter Pierce reviews Colin Dyer’s The French Explorers and the Aboriginal Australians 1772–1839 and Bruce Poulson’s Recherche Bay: A History.
Samuel Pepys’s diaries chronicling London life in the 17th century—now on the internet—remain as fresh and engaging as ever
25-34 out of 34 results.