
Mockingbird sequel draws concerns
The announcement that Harper Lee is to revisit the characters of To Kill a Mockingbird has been greeted with delight and suspicion.
The announcement that Harper Lee is to revisit the characters of To Kill a Mockingbird has been greeted with delight and suspicion.
Many writers resist national labels. Like Salman Rushdie, we'd rather belong to "the boundless kingdom of the imagination ... the unfettered republic of the tongue".
As we head into the Waitangi Day circus, Titewhai and her whanau have been gazumped by literary prima donna Eleanor Catton, writes Brian Rudman.
Je suis hua, writes Deborah Hill Cone, as she asks: "weren't we all just gargling on about free speech in the wake of the Charlie Hebdo massacre?"
What is normal? And what if you don't fit in with society's idea of it? Those are the issues raised by US author Amy Hatvany's thoughtful and compelling new novel
Christchurch crime writer Paul Cleave, whose books have sold more than half a million copies, has no qualms killing people on the page. But now online piracy is killing him, he tells Linda Herrick.
Lucy Wood’s first novel is a magic realist ghost story set in Devon. Lucy Popescu went there to meet her.
Eleanor Catton's Man Booker Prize-winning novel The Luminaries shows she knows a thing or two about astrology, but I doubt she foresaw the stoush triggered by her remarks.
A popular book store remains closed after it was flooded today and hundreds of books were damaged.
New Zealand's original Booker Prize winner has defended her successor after Eleanor Catton was criticised for speaking out against the Government and some Kiwi attitudes.
A man twice acquitted for the sexual violation and murder of his adopted niece says a new book tells the truth about how she died.
As the film of their life is released, Jane Hawking recalls how she fell in love with the legendary physicist against the haunting backdrop of his developing motor neurone disease.
Every September 1, Lee Child begins work on another of his massively popular Jack Reacher mysteries. this time, he had Andy Martin looking over his shoulder.
"Tell you what", write the editors of this excellent collection, is a phrase that promises "a revelation, a shift, a new truth".
I can see it plainly now. Stephen King has been playing me. The old Stephen King, the real one. I'd forgotten about him. That was his plan all along.
Jodi Picoult has written 23 novels, eight of them No 1 bestsellers. Just don’t call her work ‘women’s fiction’, says Bryony Gordon.
When a computer virus hacks into the Australian prison system in 2010, it also infects the American corporations that licensed the software.
The quintessential guide book for the scene of New Zealand's most significant war effort covers everything you need to know about the Gallipoli Peninsula.
Word-lovers are being encouraged to ditch new coinages for long-lost words that may have fallen out of favour.
New images of Hagrid, Hermione, Ron and Draco Malfoy have been released ahead of October's release of the Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone illustrated edition.
Down a driveway in a modest house in Hamilton's university suburb is where the magic happens.
Linda Herrick delves into four new cookbooks that transport the palate around the globe.
Mussolini hated pasta and Hitler, famously a vegetarian, liked to eat baby pigeons. A new book tells us what tyrants liked for tea. John Walsh reports.
Lena Dunham found it "very, very painful" to be criticised for revealing she was date-raped.
Facebook's boss is the latest to hail an ancient pleasure, but he may have missed the point, writes James Walton.