Stone Yard Devotional’ author Charlotte Wood decompresses on the west coast of Scotland ahead of the Booker Prize ...
Journalist and author of Murder on Easey St Helen Thomas, on the killings that haunted Melbourne and the suspect – known as “the boy with the knife” – that police overlooked for decades. If you ask a ...
0 ENTRIES is a journalist and author of Murder on Easey St.
Special correspondent for The Saturday Paper Jason Koutsoukis on whether TikTok is actually a threat – or just an opportunity for political embarrassment. Peter Dutton is now on TikTok, and his first ...
Special correspondent for The Saturday Paper Jason Koutsoukis on how the deal unravelled and what it means for the future of the Reserve Bank. When Jim Chalmers said that interest rate hikes were ...
While activists shine a light into the dark corners of the meat industry, new legislation seeks to protect business as usual and criminalise efforts to expose it ...
Roxane joins Michael for a conversation about what it means to be a public intellectual and how this has shifted throughout her career. As if finding the time to read wasn’t hard enough, working out ...
The Melbourne-based architects whose focus on sustainability and landscape continuity means they hope to never produce a new building Mauro Baracco and Louise Wright are in the future. From where they ...
A courageous and honest examination of memory, loss and grief from the esteemed Australian writer, whose teenage brother died in a car accident Writer-director Rich Peppiatt’s debut feature film is a ...
Welcome to the Monthly Book. Each month Ramona Koval chooses a book, provides reading notes and posts a video interview. The author of The Crimson Petal and the White returns with a new novel that is ...
Please login to download the e-book edition of the Monthly from the library below (in ePUB format, which is not compatible with Kindles). Access is complimentary for ...
While activists shine a light into the dark corners of the meat industry, new legislation seeks to protect business as usual and criminalise efforts to expose it ...