Middle East correspondent for The Economist Gregg Carlstrom on what Trump’s plan for Gaza means for the next phase of the ceasefire. In a press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin ...
Michael chats with Rachel about her new book and she shares her thoughts on luck, science, and the ultimate unknowability of each other and sometimes, even ourselves. In 2017, Rachel Khong released ...
When the case concludes, the essay will be made available to readers once again. The Monthly stands by Louise and her journalism and remains extremely proud of the essay as vital and compelling ...
National correspondent for The Saturday Paper Mike Seccombe, on Australia’s biggest political donors and the roadblocks to reform. Tens of millions of dollars in “dark” donations to political parties ...
Managing editor of The Saturday Paper Emily Barrett on the DeepSeek crash, and what it means for the present day tech titans. The arrival of DeepSeek wiped more than $1 trillion off the value of ...
Having found his idealism betrayed in America, Serbian-born screenwriter and playwright Steve Tesich produced an unlikely and ...
Investigative journalist and contributor to The Monthly Louise Milligan shares the stories of two survivors who want the world to know what Pell did to them, and how a legal strategy deployed by the ...
Depending on your passion for driving, Canberra’s Summernats weekend is either a festival of craft and engineering or a noisy inconvenience ...
A community of semiretired scholars debating Ancient Greek translation provides a model of dedication in an attention-poor world ...
The Chicago indie trio’s new album of infectious weird pop unaffectedly wears its ’80s and ’90s influences on it sleeve Horsegirl is a three-piece indie band from Chicago that formed in 2019 when they ...
In the tradition of Australian crime dramas about fatherless young men, the writer-director’s debut feature is a prison film derived from difficult personal experience The father is a presiding ...