• The morning star

    Alexander Howard     |      December 21, 2023

    Much of the art – and art criticism – of today is a vapid exercise in politically correct posturing rather than an imaginative exploration of the human condition, but the success of Karl Ove Knausgaard’s challenging works shows the public’s hunger for something more.

  • Swallows on Amazon

    Julian Novitz     |      December 14, 2023

    “Critic Swallows Book” collects 22 diverse essays from the long form, online only Sydney Review of Books to celebrate its ten-year anniversary.

  • The Conversation’s best books of 2023

    Open Forum     |      December 5, 2023

    The Conversation asked 20 of its regular contributors to nominate their favourite books of the year. Their choices were diverse, intriguing and sometimes surprising.

  • The great Australian novel

    Nicholas Jose     |      December 1, 2023

    The newly published Cambridge History of the Australian Novel considers the role of Australian fiction at home and abroad, its perspectives on the nation’s history and the ever changing landscape of writing, publishing and reading.

  • Face to face

    Tyne Daile Sumner     |      November 8, 2023

    New research looks at how the human face is represented in writing from the medieval to contemporary eras, revealing how we have interpreted human emotion over the centuries.

  • The other side of George Johnston

    Derham Groves     |      October 30, 2023

    Though little read these days, George Johnston was once one of Australia’s best known writers, and a new book explores his life and writing career, including a series of crime novels penned under the pen name of Shane Martin.

  • Books, balderdash and bowlderisation

    Dan Dixon     |      August 18, 2023

    The censorship of books by Roald Dahl, Enid Blyton, Ian Fleming and Agatha Christie to remove potentially “offensive” and addition of content warnings and disclaimers to books by Ernest Hemingway, Virginia Woolf, Raymond Chandler and P.G. Wodehouse have provoked much debate about the balance between delicate modern sensibilities and artistic integrity.

  • On the beach

    Alexander Howard     |      July 20, 2023

    Nevil Shute may fallen out of literary fashion but he remains one of Australia’s best and most popular writers, as a theatrical revival of his most famous book attests.

  • Remembering Milan Kundera

    Jen Webb     |      July 15, 2023

    The death of Milan Kundera, that remarkable novelist, essayist, poet, philosopher and fearless critic of Soviet tyranny deprives the literary world one of its brightest stars.

  • Roald Dahl and the woke censor

    Jason Beale     |      February 28, 2023

    Rewriting children’s books written over 40 years ago to conform to overwrought modern sensitivities is disrespectful to authors and readers alike.

  • A brief history of the beach read

    Julian Novitz     |      January 4, 2023

    This year’s summer reading lists – literary, historical, fantasy, thriller, and more – probably contain many novels that are “good of their kind”, regardless of their genre or cover design. And if they’re not, then you might enjoy them anyway.

  • A fine romance

    Beth Driscoll     |      October 8, 2022

    Romance novels seldom garner much critical interest but it remains one of the most popular genres of fiction, boasting sales which dwarf those of literary fiction.