
Book of the day: A Land of Two Halves
Returning to places he visited 20 years ago, Joe Bennett hasn't seemed to notice changes.
Returning to places he visited 20 years ago, Joe Bennett hasn't seemed to notice changes.
It's been a tough year for book sales, but big titles still shine.
Recipes for success: NZ's favourite cookbooks of 2024 revealed.
Nature has never been pristine, as shown in engaging account of our planet's past.
Dunedin-based doctor's debut novel offers revealing peek into life in Thatcher's Britain.
Character-centric journeys intimate and epic in three new crime novels.
Buying books this Xmas for the young ones? Check out our guide to 2024's best kids' books.
What Wendy Parkins learned about marriage, trauma and defiance in the 19th century.
Former MP Derek Quigley stood up to Muldoon but fought in vain for his free-market vision.
Erebus is a place where ice meets inferno and tragedy strikes.
Malcolm Gladwell returns to his Tipping Point thesis with trademark vigour.
Clever, beautifully written debut explores death, beauty and their relationship with time.
This 'horrible history' takes a lighthearted look at Britain's evolution through conflict.
The Listener asked the voracious reader to create a visual diary of her reading.
The very best from acclaimed Aussie writer and the charm of Japanese short stories.
On the eve of the Booker prize announcement, our reviews of the six shortlisted finalists.
Television seemed like magic to Diana Wichtel, one of our greatest TV reviewers.
The Enemy Within: Personal story of how NZ state surveillance targets political activism.
Melding a spy novel with anthropological discussion struggles to convince.
The latest poetry books reviewed.
The fundamental interest of Samantha Harvey's novel lies in what makes us human.
Niall Williams' third novel sees father and daughter fighting to keep an abandoned child.
Our Evening novel pays tribute to the defiance and courage in the most moving way.
Second novel is a richly drawn story about the women who supported our WWII troops.
Mark Manson on why social media and online dating aren't worth spending your f*cks on.