The stunning new narrative by Australian writer Winton (The Riders, nominated for the Booker), a tale of three characters' perilous journey into the Australian wilderness in efforts to escape and ...
Seventeen talented Australian directors from diverse artistic disciplines each create a chapter of the hauntingly beautiful collection of short stories The Turning by multi-award winning author Tim ...
It is more or less impossible to imagine Australian literature of the past half century without Tim Winton. It was 1981 when his debut ... Seventeen intertwined short stories, set in and around the ...
Neighbours will introduce a surprise new resident ... a Halloween party at the house before she moves out following her short-term stay. But when Byron and Nicolette put a dampener on Sadie's ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. Certain aspects of Juice will feel familiar to dedicated Tim Winton readers. Its narrator is a rueful middle-aged man, separated ...
As Tim Winton’s latest novel progresses, the cause of the apocalypse that has wrecked the Earth is less mysterious than the source of devastation in The Road; it wouldn’t do to give too much ...
Richard Winton is an investigative crime writer for the Los Angeles Times and part of the team that won the Pulitzer Prize for public service in 2011. Known as @lacrimes on Twitter, during almost ...
Neighbours kicks off an exit storyline for guest character Felix Rodwell next week. The ex-convict has been rebuilding his life in Erinsborough since being released from prison two months ago, but ...
Country dwellers are happier than city people - and getting on with neighbours and friends is key. New research suggests well-being in urban areas is impacted because of lower social bonding ...
Short selling lets investors profit from declining stock prices by borrowing and selling shares, then repurchasing them at a lower cost. If the stock price rises, short sellers must buy back ...
In his latest novel, Juice, Tim Winton imagines a future world where an inhospitable climate has made life precarious.
And surely we need to work out ways to do something, to do more, a lot more, fast. This is where Tim Winton's electrifying, sobering, grimly compelling new book Juice comes in. In writing it ...