The bookshelf: Top picks for your weekend reading
A dystopia set in 2041 and an examination into future family ties
A dystopia set in 2041 and an examination into future family ties
New York Times: John Kelly replied that Germany's generals 'tried to kill Hitler 3 times'.
In his last years at Kaurinui, Hundertwasser hiked to his Mountain Hut almost every day.
The Duchess of York's first book for Mills & Boon was a surprise hit with reviewers.
Including a witchy rom-com and the latest literary crime thriller from J.P. Pomare.
It's a remarkable, post-colonial crime novel that's more than just a page-turner.
Clementine Ford's new book introduces you to a mother, writer, activist and lover.
New York Times: Does the lack of major Asian stars matter?
A royal biographer claims Prince Harry sees Meghan as "an alternative" to his mother.
Times: The former president's champion is settling scores - especially with her husband.
Claire Alfree explores the modern political minefields of children's books.
Sit back to David Trubridge, Keri Hulme and three-ingredient recipes.
Author was "apprehensive" to hand over his story for prequel series House of the Dragon.
New York Times: Movie renews questions about author's involvement in 1995 murder.
The Duchess of Sussexes' rejection left Prince Charles and the Queen 'irritated'.
Teenage diary served as the basis for Kate Camp's book.
New Zealand's drinking culture, the 2019 Christchurch terrorist attack, and pirates.
Times: It takes only seconds for the latest AI computers to write like the Bard.
The story behind Qatar's riches - and the lives of the ordinary people.
A new memoir asks, what does it mean to be a woman in 2022?
The star who found fame from the raunchy films has spoken out.
SBW has copped more than his share of criticism along the way.
Harry Potter saved the industry – why are publishers pretending Rowling doesn't exist?
What's it like to survive a helicopter crash or an avalanche? A new memoir describes both.
The actress has a binder packed with notes from her therapist to use in the book.
Times: "Can you get a job? Yes. Is it harder? Yes. It's even harder for older writers."
On the wealth of Māori writers and their passionate readership.
Mohammed Hassan on slam poetry and the most pressing global issues, and more.