Simon & Schuster
Into the Rip: How the Australian way of risk made my family stronger, happier … and less American by Damien Cave
Rogue Forces: An explosive insiders’ account of Australian SAS war crimes in Afghanistan by Mark Willacy
Three recent novels by Australian women deal with current and increasingly urgent political questions about female identity and embodiment. They each use the conventions of popular realist fiction to provoke thought about the causes of female disempowerment and the struggle for self-determination. Coincidentally, they are also set, or partially set, in Australian country towns, although their locations are markedly different, and their plots culminate in the revelation of disturbing secrets.
... (read more)White Feminism: From the suffragettes to influencers and who they leave behind by Koa Beck
Truth Is Trouble: The strange case of Israel Folau or how free speech became so complicated by Malcolm Knox
Reaganland: America’s right turn 1976–1980 by Rick Perlstein
In year four of their respective terms, George W. Bush and Barack Obama enjoyed a mixed press. Some accounts lauded them, others were sceptical. The assessments were uniformly partisan. The titles of contemporary books reflected how Republicans backed Bush (he was ‘The Right Man’), Democrats Obama (for successfully ‘Bending History’). Donald Trump, on the other hand, stands as one of the most vilified presidents in American history, from all points of the spectrum. Indeed, these books together make the case that the forty-fifth president is a man so psychologically flawed he poses a clear and present danger to American democracy.
... (read more)