
Oprah tells staff to call her Mary
Talkshow star Oprah Winfrey's father is not actually her biological father, no one is allowed cellphones in her presence, and her staff call her Mary.
Talkshow star Oprah Winfrey's father is not actually her biological father, no one is allowed cellphones in her presence, and her staff call her Mary.
One of the special joys of touring New Zealand these days is the number of places you find that sell great food.
A new book covers the former First Lady's marriage and years in the White House, as well as the 1960 campaign and JFK's thoughts on a second term.
Thirty years after the Korean War, an American veteran and an Asian woman are still confronting the conflict that briefly brought them together.
This full and funny first novel, set around a Rome-based English-language newspaper, comes with faux reporters' room coffee stains on the cover.
Readers will need both stamina and stomach to get through Lionel Shriver's 480-page So Much for That.
New author D.J. Connell talks to Stephen Jewell about her hilarious novel which has been optioned for a film.
Despite her carefully cultivated "woman of the people" image, Oprah Winfrey takes a dim view of any outsider impertinent enough to wonder what makes her tick.
Natasha Solomons skilfully weaves refugee tales into a novel about adjusting to life in a new land.
Being green doesn't have to mean deprivation and sacrifice. Eco-journalist Francesca Price shows us how.
A children's bookshop is working with security staff of a nearby tavern and casino over the growing problem of parents leaving children to read while they gamble.
Novels, for all their categorisation as fiction, must, to some extent, draw on the writer's own experiences. Or they must, at least
Dylan Horrocks, author of newly published graphic novel Hicksville, said he grew up in two places: In New Zealand and in comics.
Mitch Albom has realised people are hungry for stories that touch them deeply.
Writer Peter Nowak starts his survey of technology by linking war, porn and fast food - the idea surfaced after he saw the lurid sex tape of Paris Hilton.
McEwan shows us all the fear and loathing of the modern world in a packet of crisps.
Artist Don Binney has been attracted to the Waitakere coast since childhood. He tells Alan Perrott how the diverse landscape can mean so much to so many
Booker Prize-winning novelist Ian McEwan tells Boyd Tonkin how a trip to the Arctic helped inspire his new satirical novel about science, scientists and climate change