Non Fiction
Movie Journal: The rise of new American cinema 1959–1971 by Jonas Mekas
'Do you really want me to fall that low, to become a film critic, one of those people who write reviews?' asks Jonas Mekas, responding with typical brio to complaints ...
... (read more)Life of the Party: How the Remarkable Brownie Wise Built and Lost a Tupperware Party Empire by Bob Kealing
The foundation years of the Tupperware empire have all the elements of a great story. Earl Tupper, an introverted inventor determined to become a millionaire ...
... (read more)Money Changes Everything: How Finance Made Civilization Possible by William N. Goetzmann
Given the damage done to the global economy by the finance industry this century, and the apparent determination of its major players to keep on doing it, this would ...
... (read more)The French Revolution never ceases to fascinate. Marie-Antoinette and Robespierre, the storming of the Bastille and the 'Marseillaise', the Terror and its guillotine ...
... (read more)Lonely City: Adventures in the art of being alone by Olivia Laing
In her mid-thirties, British writer and critic Olivia Laing moved to New York City to live with her partner. When the relationship ended, Laing found herself alone ...
... (read more)One of the claims that is sometimes made for the memoir form is that it gives the author a degree of release from the past. Getting it down on paper can also be about ...
... (read more)Position Doubtful: Mapping landscapes and memories by Kim Mahood
At the bottom of one of Kim Mahood's desert watercolours, she scrawled, 'In the gap between two ways of seeing, the risk is that you see nothing clearly.' A risk for ...
... (read more)The Worst Woman in Sydney: The Life and Crimes of Kate Leigh by Leigh Straw
The Worst Woman in Sydney is the first biography devoted to the early twentieth-century Sydney underworld matriarch Kate Leigh. Leigh Straw attempts to tease out ...
... (read more)Constance Fenimore Woolson: Portrait of a lady novelist by Anne Boyd Rioux
If Constance Fenimore Woolson is remembered today, it is likely to be as a friend of Henry James, and a minor character in his much-chronicled life. Anne Boyd Rioux's ...
... (read more)The history of (not so) great men and women, their lovers, wars, and marriages is back. After social historians from the 1970s reduced kings and queens to 'clowns in ...
... (read more)