“The Wilds” TV series questions if women are inherently better at working together,problem-solving and abnegating individual power to enable communal survival.
After watching Hemingway,Lynn Novick and Ken Burns’s three-part documentary,it turns out the man himself wanted to be Hemingway,too.
Once again tapping into the Millennial zeitgeist,Rooney captivates with her portrayal of the stress one writer suffers when her first novel gains success.
The dramatic tension in Hannah Bent’s novel arises from Marlowe’s determination to get her beloved sister the transplant she needs to stay alive,at any cost – even against Harper’s wishes.
Connor Ratliff uses his experience of being punted from a role by one of the Hollywood’s most beloved actors to investigate the broader issue of how we deal with failure.
This isn’t a show to binge. Many scenes are confronting and emotionally overwhelming,and so they should be.
Insider trading is a notoriously hard crime to prove,but The Sure Thing podcast explores how one particular fraud was undone – thanks to a lucky break.
Some poems are written in prose,some in more experimental forms,but crucially they are all linked by a sense of play,of barbed wit:Araluen is funny.
Every character in this seven-episode murder mystery,no matter how secondary,is imbued with depth and layers. And secrets.
If I’d been born a decade earlier,backpacked across Asia in the mid-’70s and crossed paths with The Serpent’s Charles Sobhraj,I might not have lived to tell the story.
I could see the British writer’s genius lurking beneath every sentence in this brilliant,witty book.