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Candid cameras in wartime
Clandestine photos have been unearthed and turned into a documentary showing Kiwi soldiers during World War II as they have never been seen before.
Return of the queen
Beth Orton brings the personal songs of her career-reviving album to NZ.
Fanny, the musical
How do you turn Jane Austen into opera and why pick Mansfield Park, her most demanding novel? Composer Jonathan Dove explains his approach to Richard Betts.
It's in the blood
Michael Bennett returns his Maori detective to her roots ina convincing, highly anticipated second novel.
Touchstones
Ahead of the Aotearoa Art Fair, Sally Blundell asks New Zealand artists about their favourite local artwork and why it moves them.
Room at the Top
The Opportunities Party could well be a force to be reckoned with as a centrist voice - it's just lacking a leader, a campaign and a lot of money.
Brought to book
He's rich, opinionated and believes in doing good for the community. Property developer Mark Todd is a study in contrasts.
'Why aren't you listening to me?!"
To really understand each other, our brains need to be in sync, says author Charles Duhigg. And, yes, there are ways to get on to the same wavelength.
The virus that came to stay
With current funding for our Covid response drawing to a close, there’s growing recognition that many people are suffering debilitating long-term effects. What’s the next move?
The chips are down
It's a forecast no Irish person with a sense of history expected ever to hear again: a severe potato shortage looms.
Faces turned to the horizon
In a public library in Wellington, I said to the librarian, \"I'm losing my mind.\" He was a kindly young man, unfazed as he showed me what to do. He was so helpful my spirits began to rise.
Money down the drain
At the end of last month, the annual Oxford-Cambridge boat race took place on the River Thames.
All stuffed up
New Zealand requires more than a strong decongestant to clear the circuitous routes to effective change.
A recipe for life
On the shelves here at Lush Places are fusty-smelling two old books. One is a green contacts book. Its cover is faded and the edges battered. The other is an equally faded maroon recipe book. It has a chunk out of the spine.
Walking the plank
On November 19, 2023, a helicopter operated by the Houthi-controlled Yemeni navy hovered over the vehicle carrier Galaxy Leader, passing through the Red Sea.
Familiar faces into the fray
The government’s new consultants and advisers have decades of experience between them, but do they also come with vested interests?
In tune with the times
What's a tune worth? Not as much as previously anticipated for Hipgnosis Songs Fund, the Guernsey-registered company that launched in 2018 on the promise of the song as an unbeatable financial asset.
Advance Australia, without NZ
At nearly 70, Don Farrell is the oldest minister in the Australian government-a wily backroom tactician who has spent 16 mostly invisible years in Parliament.
Flights of fancy
Peter Walker cleverly weaves Arabian tales, early Chinese and Persian voyages, eccentric amateur fossil hunters and a colonialist hardman” into one intriguing story.
Shots in the mist
Early photography was regarded as magic when it arrived in New Zealand. But soon, everyone was doing it.
A sight for Sora eyes
OpenAl’s latest text-to-video tool takes AI to a new level but raises some troubling questions in the process.
My great admirer
Narcissism is characterised by a deeply ingrained sense of deserving respect - yet some narcissists lack self-esteem.
Slice of the action
As a good source of meatless protein, mushrooms are hard to beat but be careful where you get them from, as not all wild varieties are edible.
A country with no borders
Guest reviewer TAMI NEILSON gets to grips with the sound and significance of Beyonceé’s country album Cowboy Carter.
Off the gravel
The new album and tour by Delaney Davidson takes the Christchurch artist down a smoother road.
At the top of his game
After his big brother’s atomic bomb movie, Jonah Nolan blows up the world in Fallout, another milestone ina screen career he says he owes to reading the classics while living in New Zealand.
Now where did I put my keys?
Improving your memory is not about remembering more, it’s about remembering better, says neuroscientist Charan Ranganath. And sometimes, less is more.
The quiet wave
Maori and Pasifika artists are at the heart of a new movement that is having its moment, and one gallery is leading the charge.
Bedtime stories
In this extract from his new book, Dr Michael Mosley traverses learning to live with insomnia and the links between snoring, sleep apnoea and being overweight.
Pillow talk
A quarter of all Kiwis have trouble sleeping, unable to find solutions to this age-old problem. And researcher Dr Michael Mosley says it can be fatal.